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M. KNOEDLER & CO.
III
fH ® ' ?»5'i5'? vnnm (ifm!
111
5?6 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY
LONDON
15 Bond Street
PARIS
17 Place Vendome
MACBETH GALLERY
ESTABLISHED 1892
PAINTINGS
BY
AMERICAN ARTISTS
among them the following —
Betts
Fuller
Miller
Blakelock
Groll
Murphy
Carlsen
Hassam
Olinsky
Carlson
Hawthorne
Ranger
Daingerfield
Henri
Ryder
Davis
Homer
Sartain
Dewing
Howe
Symons
Dougherty
Hunt
Tryon
Eaton
Inness
Twachtman
Foster
Martin
Weir
Frieseke
Melchers
Wiggins
Fromkes
Metcalf
Wyant
WILLIAM MACBETH
INCORPORATED
450 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY
AT FORTIETH STREET
N. E. MONTROSS
WORKS OF ART
PAINTINGS
DRAWINGS SCULPTURE
MONTROSS GALLERY
550 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
ABOVE FORTY-FIFTH STREET
in
Established 1848
F. KLEINBERGER. Pres't E. M. SPERLING, Vice Pres't
F. Kleinberger Galleries, I
nc.
HIGH CLASS PRIMITIVES
nn , OF THE I , ,
ITALIAN AND FLEMISH SCHOOLS
Dutch Paintings
of the 1 7 th Century
Ancient Furniture and Objects of Art
PARIS NEW YORK
9 rue de TEchelle 725 Fifth Avenue
Near Avenue de I'Opera Between 56th and 57th Streets
FRENCH & CO.
Antique Tapestries
Furniture y Textiles
Works of Art
6 EAST 56th STREET, NEW YORK
DEMOTTE
27, RUE DE BERRI, PARIS
lllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllll
Works of Art of
the Middle Ages
De Luxe Publications on Art
LA TAPISSERIE GOTHIQUE
LE MUSEE DU LOUVRE, 1914-1920
LES CHEFS-D'CEUVRE DU PORTUGAL
LES DESilNS DE DEGAS, Etc., Etc.
Il!llll!lllllllll!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
8 East 57th Street NEW YORK
VI
Sir Thomas Lawrence, P. R. A.
The Countess Gower
^rt (galleries
(oQ>7 Jf iftf) mtmt
vu
The Ehrich Galleries
707 Fifth Avenue
at 55th Street New York
(Bib iWasterS
AND
Modern American Paintings
Mrs- Ehrich
707 Fifth Avenue
New York
Antique Furniture and Textiles,
Cantagalli, Venetian Glass,
Italian Linens
vin
FEARON
jirty without artificial
values, and without
those artifices of selling
so often used in the
name of art! That is
my aim and intention
in conducting the
Fearon Galleries.
{/D^.'if^
GALLERIES
25 West 54th Street, New York
IX
H o w:ar,d
GALLER.IES
Jmportani (s>:>ca722pies
AMERICAN
FOREIGN MASTERS
620, Sififipiv
EN 49.TH AND 50"
venue
BETWEEN 49~TH AND 50th STREETS
g^£^lM^
■li^^ll^lt^
WE BUY
PAINTINGS
By
INNESS
HOMER
WYANT
TWACHTMAN
MARTIN
WEIR
BLAKELOCK
MURPHY
and other
fine
paintings
AINSLIE GALLERIES
Dealers in
FINE AMERICAN PAINTINGS
615 Fifth Avenue NEW YORK
Near 50th Street Telephone— Plaza 6886
XI
JOHN LEVY GALLERIES
HIGH CLASS
AMERICAN
AND
FOREIGN
PAINTINGS
559 FIFTH AVE. NEW YORK
PARIS: 28 PLACE VENDOME
The American
Magazine of Art
An Illustrated Monthly
Published by
THE AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS
Leila Mechlin, Editor
Authoritative articles on the leading artists, Reviews of
Exhibitions, News Notes, Editorial Comment,
Bulletin of Exhibitions
Painting, Sculpture, Architecture
The Handicrafts
Beautiful Illustrations
Subscription price $2.50 a year
Publication office, 1741 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C.
American Art Sales
Published by the
SALES service BUREAU
of the
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS
American Art Sales is a bulletin issued 4 times a year
during the art season, giving detailed account of sales of
paintings, prints, drawings in New York, Chicago and
Philadelphia. Advance Notices of forthcoming sales are
also included. Publication dates : December, February,
April and June.
Subscription: Four issues and the American Art Annual, $25.
Four Issues American Art Sales, . . $20.
Single copies of the American Art Sales, $ 5.
American Art Annual, per Vol., . . $ 7.50
The Sales Service Bureau will execute carefully orders for purchases in New
York auction galleries at a charge of 1%. Arrangements can also be made
for purchases in other cities.
Publication Address: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City.
THE GORHAM FOUNDRIES
have exceptional facilities
for rendering into bronze
heroic life size and smaller
sculpture at remarkably
favorable prices considering
the service extended.
THE GORHAM GALLERIES
are a continuous exposition
of the latest and best pro-
ductions of our American
Sculptors exclusively.
GORHAM
FOUNDRIES: GALLERIES:
PROVIDENCE 386 FIFTH AVENUE
RHODE ISLAND at 36th St., NEW YORK
Jdsii'ii li(>iM,i I iioAii. T)V TIfrpfrt AnA^[S. N.A.
Union League Club, New York City
AM E R I CAN
ART ANNUAL
Founded 1898 by Florence N. Levy
VOLUME XVIII
THE AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS
1741 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C.
1921
COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY
THE AMERICAN FEDERATION
OF ARTS
HAROLD B. LE^ LIBRARY
BRIGHAa? Y JNiVERSITY
Contents
N. B. — For full index with cross-references see page 652
PAGE
Illustrations, List of 5
Editorial Board 7
The Year in Art 9
Museums 13
Associations and Societies :
The American Federation of Arts 11
National Societies 91
State Groups 99
European 186
Schools of Art in the United States 187
Obituaries of American Artists, 1920-1921 225
Magazines of Art Published in the United States 231
Press List of Daily and Weekly Publications Having Art Notes 233
Auction Sales, 1920-1921 234
Paintings Sold at Auction, 1920-1921 241
Drawings Sold at Auction, 1920-1921 287
Prints Sold at Auction, 1920-1921 290
Sculpture Sold at Auction, 1920-1921 320
Abbreviations Used in Who's Who 331
Who's Who in Art 329
List of Sculptors 621
List of Illustrators 625
List of Portrait Painters 635
Who's Who Among Art Dealers 637
Classified Trade List of Advertisers 649
Index with Cross-References 652
Illustrations
FACING
PAGE
1. Joseph Hodges Choate — A work in sculpture by Herbert Adams
(Frontispiece)
2. Reflection — A painting by Frank W. Benson 18
3. Marshal Joffre — A painting by John C. Johansen 19
4. Torn Lingerie — A painting by F. C. Frieseke 114
5. Gallery of the Lyme Art Association 115
6. Pilgrim Maiden — A work in sculpture by Henry S. Kitson 130
7. Allegresse — A work in sculpture by Bessie Potter Vonnoh 131
8. Pictorial Map of the South Seas — A mural painting by Barry
Falkner 146
9. Fleet of Columbus — A mural painting by Ezra Winter 147
10. In the Hills— A painting by Leon Kroll 162
11. American Handicraft 163
12. Hindu Temple, Pennsylvania Museum 224
13. "Abbott H. Thayer, portrait 225
14. Edward VV. Redfield— A painting by Wayman Adams 328
15. Lorado Taf t — A painting by Ralph Clarkson 329
16. Robert Aitken — A painting by Sidney Dickinson 482
17. Walter McEwen, portrait 483
THE AMERICAN ART ANNUAL
Frances R. Howard, Editor
1741 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C.
EDITORIAL BOARD
STATE REPRESENTATIVES
California — Blanche Marie d'Harcourt,
Chismore Apartments, 999 Bush St., San Francisco.
Colorado — Henry Read,
1311 Pearl St., Denver.
Connecticut — James G. McManus,
86 Pratt St., Hartford.
Illinois — Mrs. Martha E. Jenkins,
5538 Cornell Ave., Chicago.
Indiana — Mrs. H. B. Burnet,
1864 North Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis.
Louisiana — William Woodward,
Tulane University, New Orleans.
Maine— Oliver P. T. Wish,
Sweat Memorial Art Museum, Portland.
Maryland — Henry H. Wiegand,
Charcoal Club, 1230 St. Paul St., Baltimore.
Michigan — Lulu F. Miller,
Hackley Gallery of Fine Arts, Muskegon.
Missouri — Mary Powell,
St. Louis Public Library, St. Louis.
Nebraska — Paul H. Grummann,
University of Nebraska, Lincoln.
New York City — Florence N. Levy,
215 West 57th St.
New York State — Royal B. Farnum,
Massachusetts Normal Art School, Exeter and Newbury Sts., Boston.
Oregon — Margaret Dillingham,
Portland Art Association, Portland.
Pennsylvania— Mrs. M. W. Talbot,
"Talbot Hall," Norfolk, Va.
Philadelphia — Mary Butler,
2127 Green St.
Rhode Island — Mrs. Gustave Radeke,
11 Waterman St., Providence.
Texas— Mrs. Charles Scheuber,
Carnegie Public Library, Fort Worth.
Utah — J. Leo Fairbanks,
1228 Bryan Ave., Salt Lake City.
Virginia — M. May Baker,
408 Raleigh Ave., Norfolk.
Washington — Andrew C. P. Willatzen,
208 Columbia Street, Seattle.
Wisconsin — Mrs. William Mayhew,
Art Institute, Milwaukee.
Note.— Please report desired changes to the respective editors.
7
The Year in Art
In a general survey of the field of art for the year 1921 certain events loom
as not only memorable but indicative of real progress. Such, for example
as the completion and dedication of the Harkness Memorial Quadrangle at
Yale University. These buildings, designed by James Gamble Rogers in the
Gothic style, are comparable in beauty to the great buildings of the world and
are destined to exert a subtle and perhaps unsuspected influence upon the young
men and boys who will attend this great University.
Owing to post-war conditions there has not been a great deal of building,
despite the pressing need of houses and of structures of business and semi-
public character. Most conspicuous in the division of architecture are two
great competitions that were held during the summer of 1921, one for a
State Capitol for Nebraska, the other for a great War Memorial for Kansas
City. The first was won by Bertram Goodhue, of New York, the second by
H. Van Buren Magonigle, of the same city. These competitions were ad-
judged by juries comprising the foremost architects of the country, and the
winning designs have been declared of exceptional merit, as well as unique
in character.
The Fifth Avenue Association in New York makes a custom of awarding
two prizes annually for the best buildings architectually erected during the
year. These prizes in 1921 went to the Textile Building, 299 Fifth Avenue,
Sommerfield and Steckler, architects, and the New York Bible Society, 5
East 48th Street, W. E. Anthony, architect.
An exceedingly notable business building was added to New York's already
large quota of such this year — the Cunard Building, at 25 Broadway, opened
May 1st. The architect of the building was Benjamin Wister Morris. A
special feature of the interior is the decoration of the Great Hall, planned
by Ezra Winter and executed under his direction by a group of co-operating
artists. The series of pendentive paintings and rondels are by Winter. The
pendentives, representing the ships of the great explorers : Ericson, Columbus,
Cabot, and Drake, are executed in "fresco secco", which process eliminates
the possibility of unpleasant reflections of light. Striking features of the
walls are maps painted in rich decorative colors by Barry Faulkner. A bronze
ring in low relief and two inserts in the niches were miodelled by John
Gregory. Mr. Winter, Mr. Faulkner, and Mr. Gregory are all Fellowship
men of the American Academy in Rome.
In the State Capitol of Missouri a series of mural paintings illustrative
of American history and the history of Missouri, by the following artists
have been completed: Oscar E. Berninghaus, Nathan C. Wyeth, Adolph Blond-
heim, Richard E. Miller, Frank Brangwyn, Henry Reuterdahl, Charles Hof-
bauer, and Frederic Carpenter.
A series of mural decorations, paintings and sculptural work in low relief
by John S. Sargent in the rotunda of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, com-
missioned in 1916, was completed and unveiled, with appropriate ceremonies
in November.
A painting by William Woodward for the ceiling of the United Fruit Com-
pany's building in New Orleans, deserves special mention in this category.
During the summer of 1921 a National Gallery Commission was formed to
promote the development and assist in the administration of the National
Gallery of Art, at Washington. This commission, appointed by the Regents
of the Smithsonian Institution, consists of five public men interested in art)
five experts, five artists and the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, Mr.
9
10 THE YEAR IN ART
Charles D. Walcott, ex-officio. The five public men are W. K. Bixby, president
of the St. Louis Art Museum ; Joseph H. Gest, director of the Cincinnati Art
Museum; Charles Moore, chairman of the Commission of Fine Arts; James
Parmalee, of Cleveland and Washington, and Herbert L. Pratt, of New York,
secretary of the National Art Committee. The five experts are John E.
Lodge, of Boston, director of the Freer Gallery; Frank Jewett Mather, Jr.,
Marquand Professor of Art at Princeton University; Charles A, Piatt, of
New York, architect ; Edward W. Redfield, well-known landscape painter of
Center Bridge, Pa., and Denman W. Ross, of the Boston Museum of Fine
Arts and Harvard University, The artists are Herbert Adams, sculptor; E.
H. Blashfield, painter; Daniel Chester French, sculptor; William H. Holmes,
painter and director of the National Gallery of Art, and Gari Melchers,
painter.
A notable series of portraits of Leaders of the Allied Countries, in the
Great War, commissioned by a National Art Committee (Hon. Henry White,
Chairman, and Herbert D. Pratt, Secretary), and proposed as a nucleus for
a great National Portrait Gallery in Washington, had first showing in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in January, 1921. The collection, which com-
prises twenty portraits, later went on tour of the leading museums under the
auspices of the American Federation of Arts.
The Phillips Memorial Gallery, Washington, D. C, founded in 1920 by Mrs.
Duncan C. Phillips and her son, Duncan Phillips, and organized by the latter
'- m memorial to his father. Major Duncan C. Phillips, and his brother, Mr.
umes Laughlin Phillips, has been established, and the collection, comprising
chiefly paintings by American artists, temporarily set forth in a small gallery
erected for the purpose at 1606 21st Street, adjacent to the Phillips' residence.
In the Library of Congress at Washington, in May, the collection of
Whistleriana assembled, during Whistler's lifetime and since his death, with
utmost care and untiring devotion, by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pennell, and by
them presented to the Nation, was formally placed on exhibition. A vote in
appreciation of the collection and of Mr. and Mrs. Pennell's generosity was
unanimously given by the Convention of the American Federation of Arts at
its annual meeting. May 18-21, 1921.
At Lyme, Connecticut, was erected and formally opened during the summer
of 1921 a small gallery, specially intended for summer exhibitors, designed
by Charles A. Piatt and admirably adapted for its purpose.
In Provincetown, Massachusetts, an old residence was secured and remodeled
as an exhibition gallery. The first exhibition was held therein in August.
An association was formed of southern art organizations, in the early part
of 1921, and under its auspices an All-Southern Exhibition of high standard
of paintings and sculpture by southern artists was held in the Gibbes Memorial
Building, at Charleston, S. C, in March.
The Boston Museum of Fine Arts this year abolished all entrance fees,
making admission to the Museum free to the public at all times. A number of
the Western museums, while continuing the custom of charging visitors a
small fee upon certain days, agreed to exchange courtesies in the way of
admitting each other's members without charge, upon the presentation of
membership cards.
A notable exhibition of British Arts and Crafts was brought to the United
States and circulated during 1921 under the auspices of the Detroit Society
of Arts and Crafts.
Likewise in the spirit of international friendliness an exhibition of Swiss
art, assembled under the patronage of the Swiss Government, was brought
to this country and circulated by the Brooklyn Museum.
The University of Pennsylvania formally established this year a School
of Fine Arts, with Professor Warren P. Laird at its head.
• The American Academy in Rome added to its school of .classical studies and
Its fellowships in painting, sculpture, architecture, and landscape architecture,
THE YEAR IN ART 11
a department of music, thus opening its doors to musicians. Mr. Felix Lamond
was appointed first head of this department.
Among the notable works in sculpture completed and permanently placed
during the year 1921, mention should be made of the following :
Equestrian statue of Stonewall Jackson, by Charles Keck. Unveiled at
Charlottesville, Virginia, Octooer 19th, 1921. Gift of Paul Goodloe Mc-
Intire.
Monument of George Rogers Clark, by Robert Aitken. Unveiled at Charlottes-
ville, Virginia, November 3, 1921. Also the gift of Paul Goodloe Mclntire.
Bronze Equestrian Statue of General Simon Bolivar, the South American
liberator, by Sallie James Farnham, unveiled in Central Park, New York.
April 19, 1921. Gift of the Government and people of Venezuela.
War Memorial, Exedra and group of two figures by Augustus Lukeman, Grand
Concourse, Brooklyn. Unveiled in June.
War Memorial, Exedra and Figure of a victorious soldier waving an over-
seas cap, by Augustus Lukeman, Red Hook Park, Brooklyn.
Statue of Benjamin Franklin, by Paul Bartlett, erected at Waterbury, Conn.,
after being conveyed by dray from Baltimore where it was cast, and
stopping in several cities en route.
Statue of Lafayette, by Daniel Chester French, erected at Lafayette College,
Easton, Pa.
Statue of Edgar Allan Poe. by Moses Ezekiel. Erected and unveiled at
Baltimore, Md., October 20, 1921.
Statue of General Russell A. Alger, by Daniel Chester French, Grand Central
Park, Detroit, Mich.
Statue by Henry M. Shrady, in honor of General Alpheus Williams, placed
on Belle Isle, Detroit.
Statue of Massasoit, by Cyrus E. Dallin, erected on Cole's Hill, Plymouth,
Mass.
Pilgrim Maiden, statue, by Henry W. Kitson. Erected at Plymouth, Mass.,
at the time of the Tercentenary Celebration.
St. Luke's Battle Cloister, with statue of a doughboy, by Emil Zettler, Evans-
ton, 111.
Indian fountain figure by A. Phimister Proctor, presented to the State Res-
ervation at Saratoga Springs by Conservation Commissioner Pratt.
Portrait of Joseph Hodges Choate, by Herbert Adams, Union League Club,
New York, N. Y.
Bas-relief of Dante, by F. E. Triebel, commemorating the Sexcentenary of
Dante's death.
Medal by John Flanagan commemorating the presentation of the Statue of
Lafayette to the city of Metz, by the Knights of Columbus.
Medal by John Flanagan given by the United States to the city of Verdun
in appreciation of the valor of its defenders.
Medal by Robert Aitken, commemorating visit of Marshal Foch to the United
States.
Replicas of the statue of Joan of Arc by Anna Vaughan Hyatt, erected
some years ago on Riverside Drive, New York, have been erected in
Gloucester, Mass., as a War Memorial, and in Blois, France.
There is evidence of a steady increase in the interest in music in the museums,
and an inclination to relate music to the arts of painting, sculpture and design.
In the Boston Museum of Fine Arts during the early part of 1921 three free
symphony orchestral concerts were given. At the Metropolitan Museum in
New York during the same season the orchestral concerts under the leadership
of David Mannes, through the munificence of music lovers and Museum mem-
bers were given and were even more largely attended than before.
The Cleveland Museum of Art, under the auspices of its Music Department
which is particularly active, has installed a large pipe organ with chimes,
12 THE YEAR IN ART
above the garden court, which will be used in connection with its extended
music program.
A new wing of the Metropolitan Museum was completed in the Spring of
1921 and its opening was inaugurated by an exhibition of Architecture and the
Allied Arts, held under the auspices of the Architectural League of New York.
There was an evident increase in interest in the art of pageantry. Notable
pageants were held in several parts of the country, but most notable of all
was that given at Plymouth in July and August for the celebration of the
Tercentenary of the Landing of the Pilgrims. This pageant was written
by George Pierce Baker of Harvard, who called to his assistance a number
of poets, among whom may be mentioned Edwin Arlington Robinson, Josephine
Preston Peabody, and Robert Frost ; and musicians such as Edward Burlin-
game Hill, Edgar Stillman Kelley, Frederick S. Converse, George W. Chad-
wick, Arthur Foote, Henry F. Gilbert, Chalmers Clifton, Leo Sowerby, and
John Powell. The costumes were designed by RoUo Peters, the well-known
California painter. It was an interesting piece of cooperation on the part of
the several representatives of the arts.
At auction sales some notable prices were attained in 1921. Most sensa-
tional of all was the purchase abroad by Messrs. Duveen, of Gainsborough's
"Blue Boy" and Sir Joshua Reynolds' portrait of "Mrs. Siddons as the Tragic
Muse", from the Duke of Westminster's collection, at a price said to approxi-
mate one million dollars, one hundred and seventy thousand pounds being
paid for the former which has since been acquired by Mr. Henry E. Hunting-
ton of California and New York.
Philadelphia has received through the bequest of an art-loving, public-
spirited citizen another collection of paintings of extraordinary value and
interest. According to the will of John H. McFadden, who died in February,
1921, his magnificent collection of eighteenth century English art has been
left in trust to the city of Philadelphia. The will provides that $7,500 annually
shall be set aside for the maintenance of the collection; the only stipulation
being that the Municipal Art Museum to house the paintings be completed
within seven years after Mr. McFadden's death. Should the city fail to
meet this requirement, the pictures go to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in
New York.
The State University of New York has established in its Gould Memorial
Library an Artists' Memorial. Therein have already been placed busts of
George Lmess, Clinton Ogilvie, and Carroll Beckwith. As a memorial to
Stanford White who designed the building, a pair of bronze doors, the work
of his son, will be placed at the main entrance to the Library.
L. M.
M
useums
The Greek cross (A) preceding the name of a museum indicates that it is a chapter
of The American Federation of Arts.
LOS ANGELES, CALIF.
LOS ANGELES MUSEUM OF HISTORY, SCIENCE AND ART
Exposition Park, Los Angeles, Cal.
William M. Bowen President Howard Robertson Secretary
William Alanson Bryan, Director
Mary E, Marsh, Assistant Curator, Department of Fine and Applied Art
Art department founded November 6, 1913. Board meetings last Thurs-
day of each month. A free institution, maintained by the county of Los
Angeles. Educational work done through the public schools, clubs and societies
of the Southwest. Collection of paintings by well-known American artists
presented by Mr. and Mrs. William Preston Harrison; collection of etchings
presented by Wallace L. DeWolf.
One-man exhibits held every two weeks ; main gallery occupied by important
exhibits changed every month ; California Art Club holds annual exhibits in
October; six prizes awarded. International Print Exhibition held annually.
Annual attendance averages 500,000.
The Otis Art Institute (see school section) which is under the direction of
the Museum, was established by General Harrison Gray Otis shortly before
his death in 1917, through the gift to the County of Los Angeles of his resi-
dence, "The Bivouac."
SOUTHWEST MUSEUM
4699 Marmion Way, Los Angeles
Milbank Johnson President Joseph Scott 2nd Vice-Pres.
Mrs. Clara B. Burdette, Eda S. Dessau Sec.-Treas.
First Vice-President 647 South Chicago St., Los Angeles
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 48.
Open free, daily, 1 to 5 p.m. Exhibition of European paintings; permanent
exhibit of ivories, sculpture and Western art.
Incorporated 1907; building opened 1914. Annual meeting in Januar}^
Student members, $2.50; annual dues, $10; membership, 418. Contains a large
collection of Southern California archaeology. The rotunda has an art gal-
lery; also Torrance Hall of Arts. There are also scientific collections and
libraries. Meetings of natural history clubs; lectures covering exhibits weekly
for school pupils and for teachers.
OAKLAND, CALIF.
OAKLAND ART ASSOCIATION
^MUNICIPAL ART GALLERY AND PUBLIC MUSEUM
Municipal Auditorium, 12th and Fallom Streets, Oakland
William S. Porter President Charles S. Green Treasurer
Worth Ryder Secretary Mrs. D. W. DeVeer, Acting Curator
W. H. Clapp, Director
Open daily 10 a.m. to 12 m.; 1 to 5 p.m.; Sundays and holidays, 1 to 5 p.m.
Admission free.
13
14 CALIFORNIA MUSEUMS
Oakland Art Association — Continued
OAKLAND, CALIF.
Founded 1915. Annual meeting in March. Annual dues, students, $1 ;
annual $5; sustaining, $10; life, $100; membership, 250. Holds exhibition on
average of every two weeks.
SACRAMENTO, CALIF.
CALIFORNIA MUSEUM ASSOCIATION
CROCKER ART GALLERY
Second and O Streets, Sacramento
Grove L. Johnson President W. F. Jackson, Secretary-Treasurer
Robert T. Devlin Vice-Pres. and Curator
Open free, daily except Saturday and Sunday, October 1 to April 1, 10
A.M. to 4 p.m; April 1 to October 1, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m; Saturday, 10 a.m. to
12 M.; Sundays, 1 to 4 p.m.
Founded 1884. Annual meeting in March ; life membership fee, $25. Mem-
bership, 57. Mrs. E. B. Crocker gave to the city her art collection of about
700 paintings and the Crocker Gallery, which, although municipal property,
is managed by the Museum Association.
SAN DIEGO, CALIF.
SAN DIEGO MUSEUM
Balboa Park, San Diego
Wheeier J. Bailey President Anna A. M. Connell Secretary
Mrs. W. p. B. Prentice. . .Treasurer Edgar L. Hewett Director
Organized 1916. Annual meeting in January. Annual dues from $5 to $500.
Membership, 450. Circuit exhibitions every month.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.
M. H. DE YOUNG MEMORIAL MUSEUM
Golden Gate Park, San Francisco
Charles E. Penez, Curator.
Herbert Fleishhacker, President John A. McGregor
M. Earl Cummings William F. Humphrey
A. B. Spreckles Commissioners
Open free, daily, from 10 a.m to 4 p.m ; Sundays and holidays, 10 a.m. to
5 P.M.
The Memorial Museum was organized in 1895, and is under the management
of the Park Commission and the direct supervision of the Curator. Meetings
bi-monthly.
Out of a legacy of $10,000 given by Alice Skae for paintings, 32 paintings by
California artists have been purchased by the Park Commission and they are
exhibited as the "Alice Skae Collection." Also owns Haven's collection of oil
paintings, donated to the Museum by M. H. de Young as a permanent exhibit.
On February 22, 1919, the ceremonies attending the opening and dedication
of the first wing of the new Memorial Museum Building were held. The
building was a gift to the City of San Francisco from M. H. de Young. The
fully installed rooms of the new Museum are as follows : Statuary Hall, Ori-
ental Room, Continental and Oriental Ceramic Rooms and six Art Galleries.
The remainder of the building, Center Tower and Second Wing, have been
completed. The dedication and opening was held January 2, 1921. In this new
Wing there are three galleries devoted to oil paintings; one to water colors;
one to etchings and engravings; large gallery installed with ancient, modern
and recent war relics ; two rooms devoted to textiles ; one to minerals ; another
to musical instruments, and one each to coins and jewels.
The attendance during 1920 was 728,256; received 1,944 donations.
CALIFORNIA MUSEUMS 15
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.
.^SAN FRANCISCO MUSEUM OF ART
(Formerly Comparative Museum of Art)
Palace of Fine Arts, Exposition Grounds, San Francisco
George A. Pope President Walter S. Martin Treasurer
Charles T. Crocker. . .1st Vice-Pres. E. Raymond Armsby Secretary
Sidney M. EHRMAN..2nd Vice-Pres. A. W. Widenham Asst. Sec.
J. Nilsen Laurvik, Director
Open daily, including Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Organized 1916 and permanently established 1920. Conducted by the San
Francisco Art Association. Yearly maintenance fund raised by public-spirited
citizens. Permanent Museum Board of Trustees organized 1920 to administer
the affairs of the Museum apart from the Art Association's other activities,
at which time it was decided that henceforth the Museum was to be known
as the San Francisco Museum of Art.
The Museum contains a retrospective Loan Exhibition of the work of Axel
Gallen-Kallela ; large murals of the Four Elements by Frank Brangwyn;
murals by Childe Hassam and Arthur Matthews ; a permanent loan collection
of American and foreign art ; the Emanuel Walter collection of paintings and
drawings by modern masters ; the Oriental department comprising the Car-
lotta Mabury, Ney Wolgskill and Maude Rex Allen Chinese and Japanese col-
lections of ivories, potteries, porcelains, etc., filling ten galleries of the fifty
now open to the public; the University of California Loan Collection of paint-
ings and tapestries from the late Mrs. P. A. Hearst's Collection ; the Com-
parative Room of ancient and modern paintings. Exhibitions are held through-
out the year.
STANFORD UNIVERSITY, CALIF.
THOMAS WELTON STANFORD ART GALLERY
Stanford University, Calif.
Pedro J. Lemos, Director
The building completed 1917; cost, $100,000; houses paintings given to
University by Thomas Welton Stanford. Galleries are reserved for local
and travelling exhibitions which are given monthly.
►J^LELAND STANFORD, JR., MEMORIAL MUSEUM
Has Stanford family collection of paintings; the Timothy Hopkins collec-
tion of paintings; the David Hewes collection of paintings and sculpture;
the Icheda collection of Oriental art; the Cesnola collection of Greek pottery;
Egyptian collection ; textile collection.
DENVER, COLO.
COLORADO MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY
City Park, Denver
Frank M. Taylor, President
Henry M. Porter Vice-Pres. Harry C. James Treasurer
Persifor M. Cooke, Secretary, Denver National Bank, Denver
Walter C. Mead, Chairman Art Committee
Incorporated 1900. Meetings second Tuesdays in February, May, August
and November; annual in February. Total Museum income for 1920 was
$38,712.50. The attendance for 1920 was 219,873.
A natural history and mineral museum which contains a well-lighted art
gallery. Own collection of Japanese and Chinese ceramics and bronzes and
a few pictures. A loan collection of pictures is maintained and is changed at
intervals. In addition, several loan collections of Japanese and Chinese cera-
mics and bronzes are shown. During 1920 Mrs. Ellen M. Standley gave
16 COLORADO— CONNECTICUT MUSEUMS
Colorado Museum of Natural History — Continued
DENVER, COLO.
$10,000 toward the endowment fund for the upkeep of the Joseph Standley
Wing.
The Museum has an expedition on the far northern coasts of Alaska ; besides
natural history specimens they are to take numerous photographs, and the use
of latest color charts will enable the reproduction of accurate colorings.
GREENWICH, CONN.
BRUCE ART MUSEUM
Bruce Park, Greenwich
Edward F. Bigelow, Curator
Paul G. Howes, Assistant Curator
Leonard Ochtman, Art Advisor
Selectmen Trustees
Newton S. Johnson Frederick K. Hubbard
Oscar D. Tuthill Walter M. Anderson
John Broderick Wilbur S. Wright
Augustus I. Mead
Established by the late Robert M. Bruce, August 4, 1908, "as a natural his-
tory, historical and art museum for the use and benefit of the public, in such
manner and under such rules as may be prescribed by the selectmen of the
town and trustees." Owns small collection of paintings. The annual exhibi-
tions of the Greenwich Society of Artists are held in the Museum.
HARTFORD, CONN.
WADSWORTH ATHENEUM AND MORGAN MEMORIAL
. Hartford
Charles E. Gross President William R. Corson Secretary
Charles H. Clark Treasurer George H. Story Hon. Curator
Frank B. Gay, Director
Mrs. Florence Paull Berger, General Curator
For Foundation and history see Vol. XI, p. 65, and earlier issues.
Open, free, daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. (4 p.m. October to March); Sundays
and holidays, 2 to 5 p.m. Galleries of old and modern paintings, statuary,
furniture, art objects. Annual meeting second Saturday after first Monday
in January. Annual dues, $10. Membership, 227.
Original building dates from 1842; additions 1866, 1892 and 1910. The
collections include modern statuary, old tapestries, a series of historical battle
scenes painted by John Trumbull, paintings of the old Dutch, early English,
modern French, and American schools; on the main floor there are collec-
tions of antique furniture, porcelain, silver, and glass; Colt collection of
paintings and objects of art, and of models of arms; Cypriote antiquities and
Babylonian tablets given by Samuel P. Avery, casts of Cypriote statues given
by Henry Walters of Baltimore; the Albert C. Bates collection of American
Archaeology, the Pitkin collection of American pottery, the Cone collection
of fire-arms, and the J. Coolidge Hills collection of war medals and decora-
tions. In February, 1917, J. P. Morgan presented a selection of 1,700 art
objects from his late father's collection (with a fund of $50,000), which
includes the French porcelains, Meissen figurines, Italian majolica, English
salt-glaze pottery; early Roman and later Venetian glass; Egyptian, Grecian
and Roman bronzes, pottery, sculptures, gems ; Delia Robbia placques ; carved
ivories; German plate and wood carvings. The collection of ancient bronzes
IS of special_ significance, while the permanent exhibition of the Morgan potteries
and porcelains makes the family memorial one of the most important ceramic
museums in America. Exhibitions are held, and lectures given.
CONNECTICUT— DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA MUSEUMS 17
NEW HAVEN, CONN.
MUSEUM OF THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
Yale University, New Haven
James Rowland Angell, President
William Sargeant Kendall,. . .Dir. George H. Langzettel Secret'ary
The Art Museum includes the Jarves collection of 119 Italian paintings,
dating from the thirteenth to the seventeenth centuries ; the Trumbull collec-
tion of historical portraits and other paintings illustrative of the American
Revolution ; a general collection of paintings ; original sketches by the old
masters ; casts from Greek, Roman and Renaissance sculptures ; Chinese por-
celains (lent) ; autotypes and fictile reproductions. A catalogue of the Italian
paintings in the Jarves collection written by Oswald Siren, was published in
1917.
March 28 to April 17, 1921 — 'Twenty-first annual exhibition of New Haven
Paint and Clay Club.
NORWICH, CONN.
NORWICH FREE ACADEMY
Peck Library, Norwich, Conn.
Francis J. Leavens President Guy B. Dolbear Sec. Treas.
Helen Marshall, Librarian-Curator
Incorporated 1854. It includes the Peck Library, Slater Memorial Museum
and Converse Art Building.
SLATER MEMORIAL MUSEUM
Open, free, 8.30 a.m. to 5 p.m. ; Saturdays and holidays from 9 a.m. to 12 m.,
and from 2 to 5 p.m. ; Sundays from October to June, 2 p.m to 4 p.m.
The Museum contains casts of Greek and Italian sculpture, French archi-
tectural ornament, medals and metal work of the Renaissance; and over 2,000
photographs. There are occasional loan collections of paintings and of handi-
crafts. Docent work with children of the public schools of Norwich.
CONVERSE ART BUILDING
Open, free, from 8.30 a.m. to 5 p.m. ; Saturdays 9 a.m. to 12 m. and 2 to 5
p.m. It houses the Edmond Indian collection and the art school. (See school
section.) Exhibitions of the Norwich Free Art School are held.
WASHINGTON, D. C.
HhCORCORAN GALLERY OF ART
Seventeenth Street and New York Avenue, N.W., Washington
Charles C. Glover, President and Treasurer
C. Powell Minnigerode, Secretary and Director
For foundation and history see Vol. I, p. 405 and Vol. XI, p. 71.
Open throughout the year : Mondays, 12 m. to 4.30 p.m. ; other week days 9
a.m. to 4.30 P.M. ; holidays (except Christmas day and July 4, when the gal-
lery is closed), 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Sundays, 1.30 to 4.30 p.m. Admission fee
25 cents on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays ; other days free, including
Sundays and holidays. Free admission is granted at all times to pupils of
public and private schools, accompanied by a teacher.
Founded 1869. Meetings of the trustees are held on the third Mondays of
March, June and October ; annual meeting in January.
The collections consist chiefly of works by the modern painters and sculp-
tors, including important examples by the masters of the Barbizon School,
and an unusually fine collection of sculptures by A. L. Barye. Within recent
years special attention has been given to the acquisition of works by the
18 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA MUSEUMS
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Corcoran Gallery of Art — Continued
American painters and sculptors, with a view to making the collection as
representative as possible. There is also a large collection of casts from
antique and Renaissance sculptures.
A free art school is conducted in connection with the Gallery with both day
and night classes. (See school section.)
Recent acquisitions, by gift and purchase : "Head of a Girl," by Frank
Duveneck ; "Portrait of Fanny Yates Levy," by Thomas Sully ; "Head of a
Woman," granite, by Wilham Rimmer ; "Lion Striking at a Serpent," by A. L.
Barye.
Exhibitions of Contemporary American Oil Paintings are held biennially,
the eighth of which opened December 18, 1921. Through the generosity of
Hon. William A. Clark, an endowment of $100,000 has been established for
the perpetuation of prizes aggregating the sum of $5,000 for each exhibition
of this character.
Exhibitions
Oct. 30 to Nov. 15, 1920 — Etchings by members of the English Print Society,
under auspices of The American Federation of Arts.
Nov. 6 to Nov. 21 — Joint memorial exhibition of paintings by Edmund C.
Messer and Richard N. Brooke.
Nov. 15 to Dec. 1 — Etchings by Louis Orr.
Nov. 22 to Nov. 29 — Summer sketches by students of the Corcoran School of
Art.
Nov. 24 — Pastel drawings by John McLure Hamilton, the gift of Mrs. E, H.
Harriman to the Corcoran School of Art.
Nov. 27 to Dec. 14 — Etchings by Arthur William Heintzelmian.
Dec. 1 to Dec. 12 — Water colors and drawings by workers in the Department
of Agriculture.
Dec. 4 to Dec. 14 — Miniatures by Franklin Barber Clark.
Dec. 15 to Jan. 2, 1921— Drawings by Alexander R. James.
Jan. 5 to Jan. 28— Etchings by Charles A. Piatt.
Jan. 15 to Jan. 28 — Thirtieth annual exhibition of the Society of Washington
Artists.
Jan. 22 to May 31 — Bronzes and etchings lent by Ralph King.
Jan. 29 to Feb. 18 — Etchings by Ernst Norhnd; etchings by Joseph Pennell,
lent by James Parmalee.
Feb. 4 to Feb. 23 — Twenty-fifth annual exhibition of the Washington Water
Color Club.
Feb. 19 to Mar. 6— Etchings by Donald Shaw MacLaughlin.
Feb. 26 to Mar. 20— Paintings by P. A. de Laszlo.
Mar. 7 to Mar. 21 — Etchings by William Meyerowitz.
Mar. 23 to Mar. 30— Paintings by Albert de Kossak
Mar. 24 to Apr. 13— Oil paintings, etchings and wash drawings by Frank W.
Benson.
Apr. 14 to May 6— Photographs of cathedrals, under auspices of the National
Cathedral Association.
Apr. 14 to Apr. 27— Drawings by Anna Milo Upjohn, under auspices of the
Junior National Red Cross.
Apr. 14 to May 2— Water colors by Bertha E. Perrie.
Apr. 29— Paintings lent by Hon. Breckinridge Long.
May 3 to May 22— Water colors by Felicie Waldo Howell.
May 1 to May 31— British Arts and Crafts, under auspices of the Washington
Society of the Fine Arts.
May 2 to May 16— Water colors by Germaine Tailleur.
May 7 to May 22 — Modern Swiss paintings and sculpture.
May 23 to June 15— Water colors by M. W. Zimmerman!
Reflection. By Frank W. Benson. N.A.
Phillips Memorial Gallery, Washington
Marshal Joffre. By John C. Johansen, N.A.
Owned by the National Portrait Gallery of Washington
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA MUSEUMS 19
Corcoran Gallery of Art — Continued
WASHINGTON, D. C.
May 24 to June 5 — Annual exhibition of work by students of The Corcoran
School of Art.
June 6 — Busts of famous personages of the World War, by Jo Davidson.
June 7 to Oct. 3 — Rotary exhibition of the American Water Color Society,
circulated by the American Federation of Arts.
NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART
■SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION
Washington
Officers of the Institution
Warren G. Harding, President of the United States, Presiding Officer ex-
officio.
Calvin Coolidge, Vice-Pres. of the United States, Chancellor.
Charles D. Walcott, Secretary and Keeper, ex-officio.
William H. Holmes, Director, National Gallery of Art.
For foundation and history see Vol. XI, p. 76.
Open free to the public every week day from 9 a.m. to 4.30 p.m.; Sundays
from 1.30 to 4.30 p.m.
The Institution was founded in 1846, art being one of the four grand divi-
sions included in the scope of its contemplated activities. The separate title
"National Gallery of Art" for the art collections was first applied in 1906 as
the result of a decision handed down by the Supreme Court of the District
of Columbia.
The collections, cared for previously in connection with the collections of the
department of anthropology, increased to such an extent in recent years that
it became necessary to separate the Gallery from the scientific department, and
on July 1, 1920. it was made a separate unit under the Institution, with W. H.
Holmes as director. The problems of the Gallery made it necessary to organize
a commission to consider plans for their solution, and especially to take up
the task of providing a gallery building. The membership of the Commission
is as follows :
Public men interested in the Fine Arts :
W. K. BiXBY, St. Louis, Mo. James Parmelee, Cleveland, O.
Joseph H. Gest, Cincinnati, O. Herbert L. Pratt, New York, N. Y.
Charles Moore, Detroit, Mich.
Experts :
John E. Lodge, Boston, Mass. Charles A. Platt, New York, N. Y.
Frank Jewett Mather, Jr., Edward Willis Redfield,
Princeton, N. J. Center Bridge, Pa.
Artists :
Herbert Adams, New York, N. Y. William H. Holmes,
Edwin H. Blashfield, Washington, D. C.
New York, N. Y. Gari Melchers, Falmouth, Va.
Daniel C. French, New York, N. Y.
At the first meeting of the Commission the following committees were
appointed :
Executive Committee
Herbert Adams Charles Moore
Daniel C. French James Parmelee
W. H. Holmes C. D. Walcott
20 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA— GEORGIA MUSEUMS
National Gallery of Art — Continued
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Advisory Committee
Herbert Adams Gari Melchers
E. H. Blashfield Charles A. Platt
W. H. Holmes E. W. Redfield
Special Committees
American Paintings, E. W. Redfield, Chairman.
Modern European Paintings, Gari Melchers, Chairman.
Ancient European Paintings, Frank J. Mather, Chairman.
Oriental Art, John E. Lodge, Chairman.
Sculpture, Herbert Adams, Chairman.
Architecture, Charles A. Platt, Chairman.
Mural Paintings, E. H. Blashfield, Chairman,
Ceramics, Joseph H. Gest, Chairman.
Textiles, Denman W. Ross, Chairman.
Prints, James Parmalee, Chairman.
National Portrait Gallery, Herbert L. Pratt, Chairman.
National Gallery Building, Charles Moore, Chairman.
In May, 1921, twenty portraits of personages prominent in the war with
Germany, executed for the National Portrait Committee by American portrait
painters of established reputation, was exhibited in the central room of the
Gallery.
The Freer Gallery of Art is regarded as a separate unit of the National
Gallery, to remain always as such, the^staff being provided for by the Freer
Foundation. The collections at the beginning of the fiscal year are in process
of installation, with John E. Lodge as curator, and Katharine N. Rhoades and
Grace D. Guest, assistants.
The National Gallery proper occupies the main central sky-light hall of the
Natural History Museum, and will so continue until an art building is pro-
vided. Its collections consist of gifts and bequests by generous patrons and
of transfers from other Government departments. The more important col-
lections are : The Harriet Lane Johnston Bequest, comprising 21 works, among
which are paintings by Luini, Romney, Reynolds, Lawrence, Hoppner, Con-
stable, Beechey, Gordon, Jansen, Pourbus and Rossiter ; the William T. Evans
collection of 151 paintings by 106 contemporary American artists, besides
numerous engravings ; 82 paintings and drawings by contemporary French
artists, presented by the French Government in recognition of the aid given
to France in the war with Germany ; 24 important works by 19 European
masters, Cox, Flinck, Francia, Gainsborough, Guardi, Hogarth, Lotto, Law-
rence, Maes, Mainardi, Raeburn, Rembrandt, Reynolds, Romney, Rubens,
Turner, Titian, Van Orley, Wilson ; a large collection of miscellaneous art
objects chiefly French, the gift of Reverend Alfred Duane Pell. Five hundred
and ninety paintings and drawings illustrating the war with Germany are on
exhibition in available spaces on the ground floor of the Museum building,
ninety-three being from the great series of paintings and sketches made for the
Liberty Loan celebration in New York, and four hundred and ninety-seven the
work of the corps of artists sent to France for the purpose by the War Depart-
ment. The additions for the year 1920-1921 include as gifts nine works of
painting and sculpture, one bequest, and twenty-six loans.
SAVANNAH, GA.
►^TELFAIR ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
Alexander R. Lawton President Charles F. Groves Sec.-Treas.
Charles Ellis Vice-Pres. P. O. Box 727, Savannah
For foundation and history see Vol. I, p. 398.
GEORGIA— ILLINOIS MUSEUMS 21
Telfair Academy of Arts and Sciences — Continued
SAVANNAH, GA.
Open daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, 3 to 5 p.m.; admission free. Perma-
nent collection of about 73 modern paintings ; a few pieces of sculpture, and 60
casts from the classic antique sculpture, including the "Farnese Bull" group.
Founded 1875 ; organized 1883 ; incorporated 1920. Annual meeting in Jan-
uary.. Annual dues, $2.50; contributing, $10; sustaining, $25.
During 1919, 1920 and 1921 acquired "La Madrilenita," by Robert Henri;
"A Boy's Head," by C. W. Hawthorne ; "Intimate," by Julius L. Stewart ;
"Ribot's Family," by T. Ribot.
Exhibitions, 1920-21 — Prints and photographs, circulated by the American
Federation of Arts; etchings by Lester G. Hornby; exhibition of work by the
Savannah Art Club ; paintings by American artists, circulated by the American
Federation of Arts.
CHICAGO, ILL.
►^ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO
Michigan Avenue, opposite Adams Street, Chicago, 111.
Charles L. Hutchinson. . .President Frank G. Logan Vice-Pres.
Martin A. Ryerson Vice-Pres. Ernest A. Hamill Treasurer
Executive Staff
Robert B. Harshe, Director.
Charles H. Burkholder, Secretary.
Clarence A. Hough, Comptroller.
Mrs. Emma B. Hodge, Honorary Curator of Ceramics.
Berthold Laufer, Honorary Curator of Chinese Antiquities.
James H. Breasted, Honorory Curator of Egyptian Antiquities.
Charles L. Ricketts, Honorary Curator of Manuscripts.
Bessie Bennett, Curator of Decorative Arts.
Charlotte Voge, Assistant Curator of Decorative Arts.
Frederick W. Gookin, Curator Buckingham Collection of Prints.
Kathryn W. McGovern, Assistant in Charge of Prints.
Sarah L. Mitchell, Librarian.
WiEBE White, Assistant Librarian, Ryerson Library.
Marion Cummings, Assistant Librarian, Burnham Library of Architecture.
Gracia Alling, Exhibition Sales Agent.
Mrs. Herman A. Hall, Museum Instructor.
Helen Parker, Assistant Museum Instructor.
Ross Crane, Head Extension Department.
Guy U. Young, Manager Membership Department.
Fanny J. Kendall, Registrar of the School.
Grace Williams, in charge of Social Relations.
G. E. Kaltenbach, Keeper of Archives and Historical Documents.
For foundation and history see Vol. I, p. 138 and Vol. XI, pp. 87, 88.
The Museum building is open to the public every week day from 9 a.m.
to 5.30 P.M.; Sundays, 12.15 to 9 p.m.; the Ryerson and Burnham libraries are
open every week day from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays
until 9 p.m. ; Sundays, 2 to 8 p.m. Admission to the museum is free to members
and their families and to public school teachers and pupils at all times, and
free to all on Wednesdays, Saturdays, Sundays and legal holidays; on other
days the entrance is 25 cents.
Incorporated 1879. The annual meeting the second Tuesday in January;
Board meets the first Thursday after the Second Tuesday in January, and
second Thursday of April, July and October. Fees: annual members $10;
sustaining members $25 or more annually; life members $100; governing
members $100 first year, and $25 annually; they are exempt from dues after
22 ILLINOIS MUSEUMS
Art Institute of Chicago — Continued
CHICAGO, ILL.
payment of $400, when they become governing life members ; total member-
ship, 13,600.
The Museum has collections of Egyptian and classical antiquities ; casts
of architecture and sculpture, and original works in marble and bronze;
medals and metalwork ; paintings, prints and drawings. Oriental art ; decora-
tive arts, including furniture, tapestries, textiles, and ceramics. Special
collections' of note are the Dutch and Flemish paintings, the Field collec-
tion of paintings mostly by the Barbizon School ; the Butler collection of
paintings by Inness ; Friends of American Art collection of paintings and
sculpture, Nickerson collection of Oriental art objects, Blackstone collection
of casts of historic French sculpture, Amelia Blanxius collection of English
ceramics, F. W. Gunsaulus collection of Old Wedgewood, Mary Jane Gun-
saulus collection of pottery of the Near East, Howard Mansfield collection
of etchings by Meryon, Wallace DeWolf collection of etchings by Zorn ;
Bryan Lathrop collection of Whistler etchings and lithographs.
A Bulletin is issued monthly, September to May. The Scammon lectures
are held annually and frequently issued in book form. Regular Tuesday
lecture course on art and allied subjects is held for members and students
in Fullerton Memorial Hall. Annual lecture courses on architecture, sculpture
and paintings given. Regular weekly classes are held for adults and lectures
on the collections given to clubs by the Museum instructor. Classes for pupils
are a part of the educational work for children, together with the children's
hour Saturday mornings and afternoons. A Children's Corner is maintained.
Sunday afternoon concerts are given in Fullerton Memorial Hall. Art
study outlines are issued for the use of students, and a classroom is pro-
vided for stereopticon talks. The Ryerson and Burnham libraries, in the
Museum building, are open daily to the public for reference and to students
of the school for circulation. They contain besides 17,000 books, photo-
graphs, lantern slides, color prints and post cards. Forty-three subjects of
color prints of paintings in the Museum, and post cards of 40 subjects in
color and 250 in monotone are on sale.
The Extension Department conducts Better Homes Institutes in cities and
towns in the mid-west. Their program includes exhibits of paintings by
contemporary American artists ; exhibits of architecture, covering home-
building, city planning, community centers, etc.; exhibits of landscape art;
demonstrations in interior decoration in which a room and furnishings are
used; lectures on How to Build a Home; How to Plant the Home Grounds;
Costume Designing; Industrial Art; Community Betterment; Gallery Talks,
etc. An art school is maintained in the Museum building (see school section).
Important bequests, gifts and purchases, 1920-1921 : The George L. McKin-
lock Memorial building fund of $150,000 and $50,000 for statuary; Joseph
Winterbotham endowment fund of $50,000, the income for foreign subjects
by European painters; $25,000 endowment from Henry L. Frank (un-
restricted) ; the Mr. and Mrs. Mark Kimball funds of $10,000 each, instituted
by their daughter, Mrs. Galloway, the income to go. for the purchase of books
for the Ryerson Library; Chicago Tribune $5,000 prize for Mural Decora-
tions (school) ; Chicago Daily News $1,000 prize for Sculpture (school) ; an
additional gift of $5'000 from Mrs. Kate Adams Wells to the John Quincy
Adams scholarship fund (now $15,000) to increase the scholarship from $425
a year to $750; the Ettinger fund is approximately $4,500; F. Oplatka scholar-
ship of approximately $4,500; two new annual purchase prizes instituted by
Charles S. Peterson, namely $500 for a painting exhibited in the exhibition
of American Paintings and Sculpture to be added to the permanent collection
of the Art Institute, and two $250 purchase prizes for pictures to be given
to the Public School collection; the Evaline M. Kimball collection of 23
paintings containing examples by Constable, Corot, Diaz, Dupre, Gains-
ILLINOIS MUSEUMS 23
CHICAGO, ILL.
Art Institute of Chicago — Continued
borough, Hobbema, Lawrence, Millet, Monet, Rembrandt, Reynolds, Romney,
Ruisdael, Turner, Wilson, and others valued at about $1,500,000; the Mrs.
Potter Palmer bequest of $100,000 worth of paintings to which her sons
added paintings over $400,000 in value.
Noteworthy additions in the Decorative Arts division include : the Jacobean
Room "in memory of Mr. and Mrs. E. Buckingham by their children, 1920" ;
Dutch peasant room, gift of the heirs of Mr. and Mrs. William G. Hibbard;
and English room of the 18th century, purchased. In the Oriental division
important loans have been received through Samuel A. Marx, Robert Aller-
ton, Mrs. George T. Smith, Mrs. Fred W. Smith, Miss Kate Buckingham,
and others, and Gothic pieces and other subjects of art are also loaned by
Miss Buckingham. Four Korean paintings of the thirteenth century have
been acquired by purchase, and one Korean panel, "Jizo and attendants"
as a gift of The Arts Club; a carved wood statue of the T'ang period and
two stone heads from the Lung Men cave are a gift of Robert Allerton ; ten
Coptic textile fragments, gift of Martin A. Ryerson ; group of sculptured
relief fragments, Egyptian, purchased; through the Mr. and Mrs. Frank
G. Logan fund three panels of stained glass by Charles J. Connick which
received a medal in the Exhibition of Applied Arts.
The print collection was increased among other acquisitions by 600 prints
representing engravers and etchers of all schools from 15th to 19th centuries,
and a complete set of Odilon Redon's etchings and lithographs (1920).
"Portraits of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Mackie", by Samuel Waldo; "Chrysanthe-
mums" by Grace Ravlin; 11 pastels by William Penhallow Henderson; bronze
bust of Charles Lawrence Hutchinson, by Albin Polasek from the artist; 17
paintings, water colors and pastels from the estate of Mrs. J. C. Black, some
for the permanent collection with examples of L'hermitte, Boughton, Jacque,
Verhaert, the rest for the Public Schools Lending collection which now
numbers over 50 oil paintings. The J. A. Edwards collection of original
drawings and autographs by modern Dutch Masters, including an original
sketch book by J. H. Weissenbruch, drawings by Israels, Mauve, Mesdag,
■ Mathijs Maris, A. Neuhuys and others.
The most important accessories to the Ryerson Library were Fenaille Etat
General des tapisseries de la manufacture des Gobelins, Diirer Society Pub-
lications, 12 Vol.; Krom & Erp, Beschrijving van Barabudure, 3 vol.; J. P.
Morgan, C. Fairfax Murray's drawings by old masters, 4 vols.; Jasper & Pirn-
gadie, De Inlandsche Kunstnijverheid in Nederlandsch Indie, 3 vol.; Hefner-
Alteneck, Costumes, oeuvres d'art et ustensiles, 10 vols.
The Burnham Library's more important accessions were 23 v. Architectural
Association Sketchbook. 1867-1892 ; Nouveau theatre de la Grande Bretagne,
1708-15, 5 v.; Ferdinando Ruggieri's Studio d'architectura civile. 1722-28, 3v.
Two important murals were painted, presented and placed in Burnham
Library by Frederick Clay Bartlett.
The new department of Drawings and Water Colors (about 150 examples)
includes sketches by Puvis de Chavannes, Sargent, Thevanaz, Davies, Koehler
and a group by English artists, the gift of Robert Allerton ; sketches by modern
Americans and 11 pastels by Henderson, the gift of the Friends of American
Art; gifts by Martin Roche, Robert Macbeth, David Adler, Mrs. J. A.
Edwards. Drawings and sketches by Bakst, Zandomeneghi, Giles, Welsh,
Forsberg (purchase).
Statistics show the invested funds on Oct. 1, 1921 at $2,894,366.19; Museum
and membership receipts for 1920 $431,100.81 (membership alone $170,803.17) ;
school receipts (1920) $149,052.38; expenditure for maintenance: museum
$366,779.94; membership $48,107.65; school $137,962.57; building extension
$137,390.07; number of members 13,600; number of books in the Libraries
(Ryerson and Burnham) 17,000; (circulation 9,982, attendance 5,647); photo-
24 ILLINOIS MUSEUMS
CHICAGO, ILL.
Art Institute of Chicago — Continued
graphs (circulation 10,572) 45,000; lantern slides (circulation 29,783) 20,000;
2,933 books in the Burnham Architectural Library; school collection of
reproductions, 6,601. Number of students in the school, 4,200; teachers 35
and 17 in the Juvenile Department ; number in the Museum Instruction classes,
11,418 (Oct., 1920-Sept., 1921) visitors to the Museum (1920) 1,136,174.
EXHIBITIONS AND AWARDS
July to December, 1920 — Loan Exhibition from private collections ; paintings
from International Exhibition of the Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh ; ex-
hibition by the members of the American Institute of Graphic Arts ;
advertising art assembled by the Society of Art Directors in Chicago ;
paintings by Carl R. Krafft ; the Mrs. Emma B. Hodge Collection of
samplers; water colors by Winslovv Homer lent by Martin A. Ryerson ;
medals and coins lent by the American Numismatic Society; 33rd annual
exhibition of American Oil Paintings and Sculpture, 240 works — Awards :
Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Logan medal and $1,500 to George B, Luks
for painting "Otis Skinner in 'The Honor of the Family' ", Potter Palmer
gold medal and $1,000 to Frederick C. Frieseke for painting "Torn
Lingerie", Norman Wait Harris silver medal and $500 to Louis Betts for
portrait of James B. Forgan, Norman Wait Harris bronze medal and
$300 to Robert O. Chadeayne for painting, "Mid-Summer Afternoon",
Martin B. Cahn prize of $100 to Edgar A. Payne for painting "Rugged
Slopes and Tamarack", honorable mentions to W. J. Potter, Rockwell
Kent, Cornelius Botke, Leo Friedlander, Albert Laessle : Sculpture by
Jo Davidson; paintings by Guy Wiggins, paintings by Charles H. Wood-
bury, paintings by Alfred Juergens, paintings by John H. Stacey and
Anna Lee Stacey, paintings by Gifford Beal, paintings by W. Elmer Scho-
field, paintings and pastels by William Pehallow Henderson ; second annual
exhibition by the Chicago Chapter of the Wild Flower Preservation
Society of America ; costumes from the studio of Signora Maria Gal-
lenga lent by Miss Mary S. Nixon; Twenty-eighth annual exhibition by
the Atlan Ceramic Art Club; memorial exhibition of prints by Anders'
L. Zorn ; prints by Adolphe Beaufrere from the Alfred D. Eddy Memorial
collection of etchings; paintings by American painters of Swedish descent
(as shown in Stockholm in summer, 1919) ; exhibition of table service
by local art lovers ; exhibition of applied arts by Herman Sachs.
January to March, 1921 — Silverware by George Jensen ; Caxton Club ex-
hibition of publications of the Bibliophile Society, lent by Park Edmund
Simmons; twenty-fifth annual exhibition of works by artists of Chicago
and vicinity ; 390 works — Awards : Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Logan medal
and $500 to Frank Virgil Dudley for painting "Duneland" (which has
since become the gift of Miss Gracis Barnhart to the permanent collection) ;
the medal and $200 going to Anna Lee Stacey for painting "The Dansant",
Fine Arts Building purchase prize of $500 to Leon Roecker for paint-
ings "Springtime" and "Tangling Branches", Edward B. Butler purchase
fund of $200 to William Owen, Jr., for painting "From the Elevated",
Mrs. Julius Rosenwald purchase fund of $200 to A. Lou Matthews for
painting "The Circus" ; Joseph N. Eisendrath prize of $200 to Ramon
Shiva for painting "Nocturne", Harry A. Frank prize of $150 to Emile
Zettler for sculpture "Panel for a Mausoleum," Clyde M. Carr Muni-
cipal Art League prize of $100 for portraiture to Albin Polasek for sculp-
ture "Portrait bust of Charles L. Hutchinson", Mrs. John C. Shaffer
prize of $100 to Hester Bremer for sculpture "Ethiopian", Mrs. William
O. Thompson prize of $100 for color effect to Gerald A. Frank for
group of paintings, Business Men's Art Club prize of $100 to Irma Kohn
for group of Paintings, William H. Tuthill prize of $100 for a pure water
color to Edmund S. Campbell for painting "Brook in the Dunes", Engle-
ILLINOIS MUSEUMS 25
CHICAGO, ILL.
Art Institute of Chicago — Continued
wood Woman's Club prize of $50 to Samuel Klasstorner for sculpture
"Orpheus and Eurydice", Chicago Woman's Aid Prize of $50 to Ruth
Sherwood for sculpture "Relief, Mrs. Stanley G. Harris", Austin Woman's
Club prize of $50 to Flora I, Schoenfeld for painting "The Mountains",
Chicago Society of Artists' silver medal to Carl R. Krafft for group
of paintings, honorable mentions to Laura Van Pappelendam, Torey
Ross and Carl Hoeckner; Eleventh annual exhibition of Chicago Society
of Etchers; exhibition of paintings for the "Spirit of Transportation"
competition, the Eugene B. Clark $1,000 prize being divided equally
among Maxfield Parrish, Jonas Lie and James Cady Ewell ; bead bags
lent by Jacob Loeb ; color representations lent by Charles Beck.
March to May — Nineteenth annual Applied Arts exhibition including British
Arts and Crafts; landscape and garden design under management of the
Woman's Farm and Garden Association; Twenty-fourth annual Chicago
architectural exhibition ; etchings by Lester G. Hornby ; Cyrus H. Mc-
Cormick etchings by Millet ; Sixth annual exhibition of the American
Bookplate Society under management of the Caxton Club ; First annual
International exhibition of water colors; paintings by Nikolai Roerich ;
paintings by Maurice Fromkes ; Eighteenth annual exhibition of the
Chicago Camera Club; decorative portraits by Abram Poole.
May to July — Southern fish by Chicago Aquarium Society; Contemporary
Polish art ; paintings by Frederick Clay Bartlett in China ; paintings and
drawings by Harry I. Stickroth ; Art Institute collection of posters from
all nations.
July to October — Loan exhibitions from private collections ; Winslow Homer
water colors from M. A. Ryerson collection ; Potter Palmer collection
of German and Italian engravings of XV to XVI centuries ; Rembrandt
etchings ; Bryan Lathrop collection of Whistler etchings ; paintings and
sculpture by artists of Switzerland ; Twentieth annual exhibition of
applied arts — Awards : Mrs. Julius Rosenwald prize for best exhibit of
textiles to Mountain Industries of Tryon, N. C. ; Thomas F. Googerty
prize for wood block prints to Winold Reiss of New York City, Arthur
Heun prize for collection of pewter to Lester H. Vaughan of Taunton,
Mass. ; Mrs. J. Ogden Armour prize for pottery to Moravian Pottery and
Tile Works of Doylestown, Pa., Mrs. Avery Coonley prize for woven fab-
rics to Flambeau Shops of New York City, Mrs. Avery Coonley prize
for woven fabrics to The Davenports of New Hope, Pa., the Thomas J.
Dee prize for gold brooch to Gertrude Peet of Salem, Mass., the Thomas
J. Dee prize for collection of jewelry to Mrs. Peruzzi of Boston, Mass., the
Albert H. Lamb prize for collection of table silver to Old Newbury
Crafters of Newburyport, Mass., the Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Logan prizes,
medal and $100 each to Edgewater Tapestry Looms of New York City,
Pewabic Pottery of Detroit, Mich., medal and fifty dollars to Greenwich
House Pottery of New York City, Logan fund purchase of stained glass
panels by Charles J. Connick of Boston, Mass., paintings by William
Wendt and sculpture by Julia Bracken Wendt.
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MUSEUMS
Harry Pratt Judson, President of the University
Organized 1891. Museums open, free, 8.30 a. m. to 5 p. m. daily, except
Saturday afternoons and Sundays. Haskell Museum contains Egyptian.
Babylonian and Japanese art and archaeology; Classics Building, Greek and
Italian antiquities; Harper Memorial Library, illuminated manuscripts, Phelps
collection of Napoleonana, etc. ; Ida Noyes Hall, collection of furniture,
mural paintings by Jessie Arms Botke ; Bartlett Gymnasium, mural paintings
by F. C. Bartlett ; portraits in Hutchinson, Rosenwald, Foster and Ida Noyes
Halls. Exhibitions are held.
26 ILLINOIS— INDIANA MUSEUMS
DECATUR, ILL.
►I-DECATUR ART INSTITUTE
North Pine and West Main Streets, Decatur
A. R, Taylor President S. E. Walker Treasurer
Warren F. Hardy Vice-President C. A. Wait Secretary
Maria Buckingham, Cor. -Sec.
Founded 1917. Annual meeting in April ; Board meetings monthly. Annual
dues from $1 to $100. Membership, 360.
Exhibitions, 1920-21 : October — Copies of old masters circulated by The
American Federation of Arts ; November — Portraits by Orlando Rouland ;
December — Work by Illinois artists ; March — Etchings by Gruppe and Heintzel-
man; April — Oil paintings, circulated by The American Federation of Arts.
ELKHART, IND.
ECKELMAN ART GALLERY AND MUSEUM
Presented to the city of Elkhart by Dr. Frederick C. Eckelman in 1917.
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
^ART ASSOCIATION OF INDIANAPOLIS
JOHN HERRON ART INSTITUTE
Pennsylvania and Sixteenth Streets, Indianapolis
Evans Woollen President Howard M. Stanton Treasurer
Mrs. Addison C. Harris. .Vice-Pres. Mrs. James W. Fesler Secretary
Executive Staff
Anna E. Terrill, Librarian.
Grace A. Speer, Secretary to the Board.
Anna Hasselman, Museum Instructor.
Alfred M. Brooks, Curator of Prints.
Eliza M. Niblack, Curator of Textiles.
'For foundation and history see Vol. XI, p. 110.
Open week days 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays 1 to 9.30 p.m. Admission free
on Saturdays and Sundays and to public school teachers and pupils at all
times ; other days, 25 cents.
Association organized in 1883 ; incorporated 1883 ; John Herron Art In-
stitute established 1902 ; present building dedicated 1906 ; school building
erected 1907. Annual meeting first Tuesday in April ; Board of Directors'
meetings third Tuesdays in each month except July, August and September.
Annual dues $10 ; Associate $5 ; Sustaining $25 ; total membership 478.
Collections : Archaeology ; arms and armor ; bronzes, casts ; coins and
medals ; drawings ; furniture ; ceramics ; metalwork ; sculpture ; textiles ;
woodwork; Oriental objects; modern paintings, library; photographs; prints.
A gallery in the museum has been set aside for the Children's Room and here
the lectures and special exhibitions for the children are held. Work for the
public includes lectures at the Museum ; meetings of many groups ; an art
school (see school section) ; talks on a wide variety of art subjects at schools,
club rooms, or at the Museum; social gatherings with tea in the galleries;
Sunday musical programmes; quarterly bulletins; free catalogues and an
illustrated annual report.
Principal accessions, 1920-1921 : Oil paintings— "Portrait of Mrs. William
H. C. Bartlett" by J. Carroll Beckwith, gift of Mrs. Neva B. Carling; "Land-
scape" by George Winters, gift of Harvey J. Flam; "Portrait of Alexander
Ernestinoff" by Waymaii Adams; "The Jade Bowl" by Dines Carlsen; "The
Old Market Woman" by William Forsyth, gifts from the Friends of Amer-
ican Art; "Still Life" by J. Cox, gift of Mrs. George Hume; a "Landscape"
INDIANA MUSEUMS 27
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
Art Association of India.nsi[)o\\s— Continued
and "Head of a Woman" by T. C. Steele, gifts of Mrs. Alpheus H. Snow.
Morris collection, gift of Miss Charity Dye; Egyptian Vase, gift of Winant
P. Johnson ; prayer rug, gift of Miss Mary Judson ; textiles, laces, ceramics,
pottery, gifts from Mrs. V. A. Longaker, Miss Mary A. Massey, Mrs.
Meredith Nicholson, Mrs. Mary A. Rhodes, Miss Mary Sparrell and Mrs.
Alpheus H. Snow; stained glass, gift of Miss Lucy M. Taggart; textiles,
gift of Miss Eliza M. Niblack; Purchased "The Little Gormand" by Beatrice
How, and "Brother and Sister" by Rodin, from the Harry J. Milligan Be-
quest; "Portrait of T. C. Steele" by Simon P. Bans and "Riverview Row"
by Randolph LaSalle Coats from the John Herron Funds.
For the year ending March 31, 1921, the total income was: $31,343.99 avail-
able for maintenance; $1,285.64 available for purchase of works of art; life
memberships $500; $100 for a Holcomb Prize. Expenditures for maintenance
$29,444.49; for additions to collections $2,497.20. Attendance 51,830.
Exhibitions
Apr. 11 to May 4, 1920 — Paintings by Henry G. Keller.
Apr. 11 to May 29 — Exhibition of ceramics by Keramic Club of Indianapolis.
Apr. 30 to June 21. — Japanese Prints, lent by George C. Calvert.
May 9 to June 9 — Woodblock Prints by American Artists.
June 6 to June 27 — Indianapolis Centennial Exhibition.
July 4 to Sept. 1 — Paintings, lent by George C. Calvert.
July 11 to Sept. 1 — Old and Modern Paintings, lent by William Dudley Foulke.
July 14 to Sept. 1 — Chinese and Japanese Paintings, lent by Mrs. Chauncey
Blair.
Sept. 5 to Sept. 19. — Paintings and Drawings by Stephen Haweis.
Sept. 22 to Oct. 8 — Greek Government Exhibit.
Oct. 7 to Oct. 17 — Exhibit of Sketches made during the war by John Haapenan.
Oct. 11 to Oct. 25— Arts and Crafts Exhibit, by Herman Sachs.
Oct. 20 to Nov. 2 — Lace Exhibition, by the Needle and Bobbin Club of
New York.
Oct. 27 to Nov. 21— Etchings.
Nov. 7 to Nov. 28. — Retrospective Exhibition of Paintings by William Forsyth.
Nov. 27 to Dec. 26. — British Commercial Posters.
Dec. 5 to Dec. 26 — Paintings by T. C. Steele.
Dec. 30 to Feb. 7, 1921 — (Contemporary Graphic Art in Holland.
Jan. 1 to Jan. 30 — Thirty-sixth Annual Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture.
Jan. 22 to Feb. 16 — Paintings by Henry Golden Dearth.
Feb. 6 to Feb. 27 — Exhibit of Water Colors from Philadelphia Water Color
Club.
Feb. 18 to Apr. 18— Exhibit of War Photographs.
Mar. 6 to Apr. 3 — Fourteenth Annual Exhibition of Works by Indiana
Artists; Holcomb Prize of $100 awarded to Clifton A. Wheeler for
"Pussy Willow Time" ; Art Association Purchase Prize Awarded to
Simon P. Baus for "Portrait of T. C. Steele" and Randolph LaSalle
Coats for "Riverview Row" ; honorable mention to Clement Trucksess
for "Woman and Cows".
Mar. 13 to May 1 — Etchings and wood engravings by modern artists.
NEW HARMONY, IND.
ART GALLERY AND MUSEUM OF
THE WORKINGMEN'S INSTITUTE
Library Building, New Harmony
Nora C. Fretageot Librarian Arthur E. Fretageot Secretary
Museum organized 1838; gallery 1887. Permanent collection of 60 pic-
tures. Open free to public. During 1920-21 received two paintings as gift.
28 IOWA— LOUISIANA MUSEUMS
IOWA CITY, lA.
RANNEY LIBRARY AND MUSEUM
Hall of Liberal Arts, University of Iowa, Iowa City
Walter A. Jessup Pres. of Univ. Jane E. Roberts Librarian
Founded 1911. Open daily 2 to 4 p.m. Collection contains casts, copies
of old paintings, and modern originals. The Mark Ranney Memorial Library
contains 3,300 art books and editions de luxe.
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA MUSEUM OF ART AND ARCHEOLOGY
C. H. Weller, Director
Founded 1906.
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
►I-ISAAC DELGADO MUSEUM OF ART
City Park, New Orleans
C. F. Claiborne President Hunt Henderson Vice-Pres.
E. W. Smith, Secretary-Treasurer
Executive Staff
C. W. Boyle, Curator.
S. H. LivAUDAis, Assistant Secretary and Treasurer
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 122.
Open 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. week days, closed Mondays; 11 a.m to 6 p.m.
Sundays. Admission Friday 25 certs, other days free. Permanent collec-
tion includes the Chapman H. Hyams collection of paintings and statuary;
the Morgan Whitney collection of jade and other hard stones; the Alvin
Howard collection of Etruscan glass ware and Greek pottery; the B. M.
Harrod collection of paintings and old silver ware, and the John G. Agar
collection of paintings, bronzes and ceramics.
Organized 1910; building dedicated 1911. Annual meeting in January;
administrators meet first Friday of each month. Annual dues': Patrons $10;
Life membership $100 or a work of art equivalent thereto. Membership 80
patrons. The city allows an appropriation for maintenance and the Art
Association contributes toward cost of exhibitions.
Exhibitions
Dec. 22, 1920 to Jan. 24, 1921— Paintings by Victor Charreton.
Feb. 5 to Mar. 4 — Paintings and etchings by Anne Goldthwaite.
Mar. 12 to Apr. 10 — Paintings by Helen M. Turner.
June to August — Loan collection of etchings by Anders Zorn.
LINTON-SURGET ART HALL
Tulane University, New Orleans
William Woodward, Director
Open to the public daily.
The Linton-Surget collection of works of art was donated to the City of
New Orleans by the late Mrs. Eustace Surget of Bordeaux, France; valuable
historical portraits and marble statuary donated by Mrs. C. B. Surget of
Bordeaux, France; statues and other objects of art donated by Mrs. F. W.
Tilton; loan collection from Mrs. J. L Harris and Mrs. Samuel H. Kennedy
of New Orleans, and various bronzes, marbles, paintings, engravings and
other works of art donated or lent to the University. There are about 2,000
books in the collection.
LOUISIANA— MAINE MUSEUMS 29
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
LOUISIANA STATE MUSEUM
The Cabildo, Jackson Square, New Orleans
T. P. Thompson President J. B. Levert Treasurer
Robert Glenk, Sec. and Curator.
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 123.
Open free, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Organized 1906. The Cabildo, built in 1794, was formally opened as a
museum 1911. Annual meeting in January; monthly board meetings. An-
nual State appropriation $12,500.
Art Department includes sculpture, paintings, engravings, pottery and
miscellaneous art objects. Special collection of portraits of Louisiana pio-
neers. Exhibit of portraits, relics and works of art by local artists.
BRUNSWICK, ME.
^BOWDOIN MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS
Walker Art Building, Bowdoin College, Brunswick
Henry E. Andrews, Director
Anna E. Smith, Curator.
Open free, week days 10 a.m. to 12 m. ; 2 to 4 p.m ; Sundays and holidays
2 to 4 P.M.
Erected 1894 : C. F. McKim, architect. Mural decorations by John La
Farge, Elihu Vedder, Abbott Thayer and Kenyon Cox. The galleries
contain the James Bowdoin collection of paintings and drawings bequeathed
in 1811; the Walker collection; Boyd gallery of paintings; Japanese and
Chinese works of art ; Levi C. Wade and George Warren Hammond collec-
tions ; Virginia Dox collection of native American art ; Dana Estes collection
of Cypriote antiquities; and the Edward Perry Warren collection of Greek
and Roman art. Photographs of the principal works of art owned by the
college are for sale.
PORTLAND, ME.
PORTLAND SOCIETY OF ART
L. D. M. SWEAT MEMORIAL ART MUSEUM
Spring and High Streets, Portland
George F. Morse President John Howard Stevens Librarian
John Calvin Stevens.. 1st Vice-Pres. Oliver P. T. Wish Sec.-Treas.
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 125.
Open every day except Monday ; Wednesdays and Saturdays free, 9 a.m.
to 4.30 p.m.; Sundays free, 1 to 5 p.m. An admission of twenty-five cents is
charged on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays : 9 a. m. to 4.30 p.m.
Organized 1882; building dedicated 1911. Annual meeting last Wednesday
in January. Annual dues $5. Membership 328.
The most notable collection, the gift of Curtis Perry, consists of tapes-
tries and chairs dating back to the twelfth century, also collection of Mexican
pottery from the same donor and paintings and sculpture by American
artists. Also contains the Franklin Simmons collection of sculpture. There
is a special Maine Room.
Exhibitions
January, 1921 — Paintings by George F. Morse.
March — Annual photographic exhibition.
April — Paintings by Gifford Beal, George Bellows and Eugene Speicher.
May — Annual exhibition of oils, water colors and pastels.
June — Water colors and miniatures by W. H. Shaylor and Mrs. H. T. Hannon,
July and August — Exhibition of the Simmons collection of statuary.
30 MARYLAND MUSEUMS
BALTIMORE, MD.
BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF ART
Blanchard Randall President B. Howell Griswold, Jr.. .Treasurer
Henry H. Wiegand, Secretary, Charcoal Club, Baltimore
Organized 1914 ; incorporated Nov. 16, 1914. Annual meeting second
Monday in February. Annual dues $5 ; sustaining $25. Johns Hopkins
University offered five acres at south end of its park, opposite 31st Street,
for new building. Preliminary plans have been made and endowment fund
has been started. Some gifts of paintings have been received and placed
temporarily with the Peabody Gallery.
JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN,
ORIENTAL AND CLASSICAL ARCHEOLOGY
"Homewood," Charles and 32nd Streets, Baltimore
David M. Robinson, Director
Open daily (except Sunday) from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m.
Organized and sustained by contributions from private individuals ; is part
of University's Archaeological Department with large collection of Greek,
Roman, Egyptian, American and Jewish antiquities ; also photographs and
lantern slides. A valuable collection of portraits of professors and medical
men ; loan collection of original etchings by Rembrandt, Durer, Haden, Zorn,
Meryon, Whistler and others. Lectures given.
►^MARYLAND INSTITUTE FOR THE PROMOTION OF THE
MECHANIC ARTS
Mount Royal Avenue and Lanvale Street, Baltimore
Henry Adams President Lemuel T. Appold Treasurer
Augustine J. Ryan Vice-Pres. Thomas G. Young Secretary
and Asst. Treas.
Officers of Administration
Alon Bement, Director.
Thomas B. Everist, Actuary and Registrar.
Gertrude Pentland, Assistant Librarian.
Irene Cook, Custodian of Galleries.
Louise R. Hopper, Secretary to Director.
Helen Jaeger, Superintendent of Building.
For foundation and history sec Vol. XI, p. 130.
Galleries open, free, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Permanent collection of paintings,
bronzes and porcelains.
Organized 1825. Annual meeting, third Wednesday in April ; Board meet-
ings, second Monday in each month. Annual dues, $3; life membership, $25.
Schools of Art and Design are maintained with both day and evening ses-
sions and a department of applied and mechanic arts (see school section).
Exhibitions are held.
►J-PEABODY INSTITUTE OF THE CITY OF BALTIMORE
Lawrason Riggs President John J. Nelligan Treasurer
H. Oliver Thompson, Secretary
Staff
Elizabeth W. Smith, Custodian of Art Gallery
Carroll T. Bond, Chairman Art Gallery
Louis H. Dielman, Executive Secretary.
For foundation and history see Vol. XI, p. 132.
Open, free, daily, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays 2 to 5 p.m. For special exhibi-
tions admission fee of 25 cents, 10 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.; Sundays free.
MARYLAND— MASSACHUSETTS MUSEUMS 31
BALTIMORE, MD.
Peabody Institute — Continued
Founded 1857. Annual meeting in February. Institute consists of large
library, school of music, and art gallery in which permanent and temporary
exhibitions are held.
Maintains Rinehart School of Sculpture at Maryland Institute (see School
Section) and also a Rinehart Fellowship in The American Academy in
Rome. Stores gifts to Baltimore Museum of Art pending the erection of
building.
Exhibitions, 1920-1921 : Paintings by Clark S. Marshall ; exhibition of per-
mananent collection ; print collection from Library ; Homelands exhibition
of arts and industries of Central Europe; print collection; paintings and
sculpture by Grace Turnbull ; portraits by Frank B. A. Linton; paintings by
"The Six of Baltimore"; paintings by Everett L. Bryant and Louise West;
annual exhibition of contemporary American Art by members of the Charcoal
Club; annual exhibition of The Baltimore Water Color Club; exhibition by
the Photographic Guild of Baltimore; collection of Stuart and Sully portraits.
WALTERS GALLERY
North Charles and Centre Streets, Baltimore
Private gallery of Henry Walters. Public admitted Wednesdays, Saturdays
and holidays in January, February, March and April, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fee,
50 cents ; proceeds given to the Poor Association, 101 West Saratoga Street,
where tickets must be secured. Arrangements for private view may be made
for a party of 100 or more.
Present building opened February 3. 1909. The collection contains master-
pieces of every school of painting; Italian majolica, Limoges enamels, antique
and modern sculpture, and Chinese porcelains.
ANDOVER, MASS.
JOHN-ESTHER ART GALLERY
Abbot Academy, Andover
Burton S. Flagg Treasurer Jane B. Carpenter Custodian
Building dedicated 1907. Open free, Saturdays, 2 to 5 p.m.
Collection of modern paintings and small Roman bronzes. During summer
of 1921 held exhibition of paintings by Marion L. Pooke and Mrs. Beatrice
Whitney Van Ness.
BOSTON, MASS.
THE CHILDREN'S ART CENTRE
OF THE
SETTLEMENTS MUSEUM ASSOCIATION
36 Rutland Street, Boston
Mrs. Joseph L. Smith President Harold Peabody Treasurer
Mrs. Charles B. Perkins . . 1st V.-P. Adelaide Pearson Secretary
FiTZ Roy Carrington, Director
Open daily, 2 to 5.30 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. Admission free.
Incorporated 1915. Building opened May 1, 1918. Located in the crowded
section of Boston, it has exhibitions and lectures of special interest and value
to children. Classes in drawing.
ISABELLA STEWART GARDNER COLLECTION
Fenway Court, The Fenway District, Boston
Mrs. John L, Gardner has built her residence in the Italian style around an
inner court. Here she has installed an important collection of paintings and
art objects. The collection may be seen on certain days between 12 and 3 p.m.;
tickets at $1 and information regarding dates can be had only at Herrick's
ticket agency, Copley Square, Boston.
32 MASSACHUSETTS MUSEUMS
BOSTON, MASS.
►J<MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS
Huntington Avenue, Boston
Morris Gray President William C. Endicott Treasurer
Executive Staff
Arthur Fairbanks, Director.
Charles Henry Hawes, Assistant Director and Bursar.
Benjamin Ives Oilman, Secretary, and Registrar of Local Art.
John Eliot Thayer, Jr., Assistant Treasurer.
Hanford L. Story, Registrar.
Curator of Prints.
Henry Preston Rossiter, Assistant Curator of Prints.
Lacey D. Caskey, Curator of Classical Art.
John E. Lodge, Curator of Chinese and Japanese Art.
KojiRO ToMiTA, Assistant Curator Chinese and Japanese Art.
Edward S. Morse, Keeper of Japanese Pottery.
Francis Stewart Kershaw, Keeper in the Dept. of Chinese and
Japanese Art.
Ananda K. Coomaraswamy, Keeper of Indian Art.
George A. Reisner, Curator of Egyptian Art.
Dows Dunham, Associate Curator of Egyptian Art.
John B. Potter, Keeper of Paintings.
Edwin James Hipkiss, Keeper in the Dept. of Western Art.
RoscoE L. Dunn, Acting Librarian.
Martha Fenderson, Assistant Librarian.
Mrs. Charles W. Townsend, Advisor in the Dept. of Western Art
and Textiles.
Gertrude Townsend, Assistant in charge of Textiles.
Frances E. Turner, Assistant in charge of Photographs.
Michael J. Moore, Supt. of Building and Grounds.
For foundation, history and activities, see Vol. XI, pp. 142-4.
Open daily, excepting the Fourth of July, Thanksgiving Day and Christ-
mas, 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. (November 1st to March 1st, to 4 p.m.). Saturdays
to 5 p.m.. Sundays, 1 to 5 p.m. Admission free.
Chartered 1870; present building opened 1909. Annual meeting third Thurs-
day in January ; Board meetings third Thursdays in April, July and October.
Annual dues of subscribers, $10; membership, 2,476. During 1920 attendance
was 288,312; Print Study Room visited by 1,509 persons; 2,672 students worked
in the Textile Study Room, 6,265 in the Library and 5,244 in the Photograph
Room.
The collections of the Museum cover the painting, sculpture and derivative
arts of all times and countries. The collection of oriental art is the most
important in the world under one roof; and with the library of books in
Chinese and Japanese, and other facilities, offers an unexampled opportunity
for the study of oriental culture. The collection of classical art is the fore-
most in America. The Egyptian Department has a unique collection of Old
Empire sculpture. The Print Department offers the best opportunity in
America to study the history of the engraver's art.
The Library contains 21,688 volumes, and the Photograph Collection 54,893
prints. The Photograph Department lends prints to schools, clubs and classes
in the immediate vicinity of Boston.
The Museum issues a bi-monthly Bulletin and Annual Report and Handbook
of the Museum, and a special catalogue. A Leaflet Guide is issued in vest-
pocket size giving directions for reaching all the departments and containing
a manifolded Insert with a plan of the galleries, bringing the information of the
Guide to the day of sale.
MASSACHUSETTS MUSEUMS 33
BOSTON, MASS.
Museum of Fine Arts — Continued
The Registry of Public Art co-operates with the Municipal Art Commission.
The School of the Museum contained 252 pupils in 1920. (See School
Section.)
The educational activities of the Museum during 1920 included Docent Ser-
vice (gallery guidance) to 5,989 persons, Sunday afternoon talks (54 to 2,572
persons), conferences (11), lecture courses in the Museum (2) and in the
public schools (37 lectures to 2,305 children). The Egyptian Traveling Exhibi-
tion was circulated in the public schools.
Publications by officers of the Museum on topics relating to the fine arts
included fifteen articles in current, scientific and other periodicals by eight
authors.
Acquisitions, 1920: Okakura collection of Chinese paintings, sculpture,
bronze, etc., given in part by Dr. W. Sturgis Bigelow ; a Chinese early Sung
wooden seated figure of Kuan-yin ; an Egyptian painted cedar coffin of the
Middle Empire, and gold ornaments of the XXV dynasty (Ethiopian) ; Ma-
donna and Child with St. Jerome, by Fiorenzo di Lorenzo, gift of Mrs. W.
Scott Fitz ; an interior of a colonial house, the Jafifrey House, Portsmouth.
Exhibitions, 1920 : French modern art ; paintings and sculpture by Boston
artists; paintings by "The Group of Seven" of Canada.
BROOKLINE, MASS.
FITZGERALD ART GALLERY
416 Washington Street, Brookline
Open week days, 9 a.m. to 12 m. and 1 to 5 p.m.
The art museum of Desmond FitzGerald, built and maintained by him on his
estate, is open free to the public. It contains paintings by the early French
impressionists Monet, Sisley, Pizarro, etc., and by contemporary Americans,
including a large group of water colors by Dodge MacKnight.
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
HARVARD UNIVERSITY
Cambridge
.^WILLIAM HAYES FOGG ART MUSEUM
College Yard, facing Broadway
A, Lawrence Lowell President Edward W. Forbes Director
Margaret E. Gilman Secretary Paul J. Sachs Asst. Director
For notes on permanent collection see Vol. XIV , pp. 134, 135.
Open free, week days 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ; Sundays, during the term, 1 to 5 p.m.
During the summer vacation the museum is open on week days 9 a.m. to
5 P.M. ; Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Erected 1895 ; founded by Mrs. Elizabeth Fogg. The Museum is practically
the laboratory of the Department of Fine Arts at Harvard ; the regular
lectures in the courses are held here and also free public lectures and
exhibitions.
Exhibitions: Mar. 16 to Apr. 14, 1921, Morgan exhibition of illuminated
manuscripts ; May 5 to June 9, Prints by Degas, Forain and Pissarro.
The "Sachs Research Fellowship in Fine Arts" was established in 1916
by Samuel Sachs. It gives $2,000 annually to any American man or woman
of proved ability, whether student or instructor, to enable that person to
pursue in any part of the world advanced studies in the history, principles,
or methods of the fine arts. Awarded, 1921, to Richard Ofifner.
The Society of Friends of the Fogg Art Museum is an informal organi-
zation of 170 members who annually contribute varying amounts for the pur-
chase of works of art for the Museum.
34 MASSACHUSETTS MUSEUMS
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
Harvard University— ConfiuMf?^
Acquisitions, 1920-21, included a thirteenth century painting by Guido da
Siena ; paintings by Giovanni di Paolo ; paintings by Giacomo Pacchiarotto ;
Gothic head of a king; copy of a Benozzo Grozzoli fresco by Lokhoff.
GERMANIC MUSEUM
Adolphus Busch Hall
KuNO Francke, Honorary Curator
Open, free, Mondays, Fridays and Saturdays, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and
Thursdays and Sundays during the term from 1 till 5 p.m.
Established 1902.
NELSON ROBINSON, JR., HALL
Charles W. Killam, Acting Dean Faculty of Architecture
Erected 1901, by Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Robinson. It is the home of the
School of Architecture and of the School of Landscape Architecture. It
contains full-sized casts of important pieces of architecture, original drawings,
pottery and bronzes and a collection of oriental textiles lent by the Fogg
Museum.
The libraries of the two schools are open daily, during term, 9 a.m. to 5
P.M. ; Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. About 5,300 volumes and 24,500 photo-
graphs.
SEMITIC MUSEUM
David Gordon Lyon, Curator
Open, free, week days, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, 2 to 5 p.m. Collections
illustrate the art, religion, literature and manners of Assyria, Babylonia,
Phoenicia, Syria and Palestine.
COLLECTION OF CLASSICAL ANTIQUITIES
Sever Hall
George Henry Chase, Curator
Open to the public Mondays, 2 to 5 p.m. The objects may be taken out
for study. There are several hundred objects of minor art, such as bronzes,
vases and coins ; also casts, photographs, squeezes and rubbings of inscrip-
tions, and models of ancient utensils of archaeological interest.
NORTHAMPTON, MASS.
HhHILLYER ART GALLERY
Smith College, Northampton
Alfred Vance Churchill, Director of Gallery
Founded 1881. Open, free, daily, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., and 2 to 4 p.m.; Sundays,
2.30 to 4.30.
Collections : Greek and Roman, Italian, Renaissance and modern French
works ; Chinese and Japanese paintings, prints and pottery ; American paint-
ings and bronzes ; drawings, engravings, etchings, lithographs ; photographs,
lantern slides, casts. Studios for classes in drawing, painting and design.
Lecture hall. Nine special exhibitions held during 1920-21. _
PITTSFIELD, MASS. .*-.-.*«. i
BERKSHIRE ATHEN^UM AND MUSEUM
Henry Colt President George H. Tucker, Treasurer and
William H. Swift. . .Vice-President Chairman Art Committee
Harlan H. Ballard, Librarian and Curator
Annie F. Grossman, Assistant in charge of Museum
_ The Museum is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. ; Sundays, 2 to 5 p.m. Admis-
sion free at all times. The annual meeting is held in June. It is also a public
library and reading-room.
MASSACHUSETTS MUSEUMS 35
PITTSFIELD, MASS.
Berkshire Athenaeum and Museum — Continued
Museum opened 1903. The exhibits include natural history, Indian relics,
archaeology, Greek and Roman curios, original sculpture, casts of Renaissance
sculpture ; 138 paintings, a few being sixteenth century Italian works, some
eighteenth century English, and the majority French and American of the
nineteenth century.
SALEM, MASS.
ESSEX INSTITUTE
132 Essex Street, Salem
William C. Endicott, President
Alden p. White 1st Vice-Pres. Henry W. Belknap Secretary
Henry M. BATCHELDER.2nd Vice-Pres, Philip Little Curator of Art
William O. Chapman. .. .Treasurer Louise M, Taylor Librarian
For foundation and development see Vol. XI, p. 156.
Museum and picture gallery open, free, daily, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ; Sundays,
2 to 5 P.M..
Founded 1848. Monthly Board meetings, first Monday ; annual in May.
Annual dues, active, $3 ; contributing, $5 ; sustaining, $10 ; membership, 725.
Museum contains antiquarian and historical objects illustrating the life of
the English settler, including three type rooms — a New England kitchen of
1750, a bedroom, and a parlor of 1800 — and large collections of old furniture,
china, war relics, tools, medals and coins, etc. On exhibition in the picture
gallery are over two hundred paintings, including portraits of prominent per-
sons by Stuart, Copley, Smibert, Trumbull, and others; about 50 miniatures;
also engravings and art objects. In the rear of the Museum building is an
annex to the Museum (built in 1918) containing collections of utensils, bas-
ketry, farm and craft implements and wagons ; and a house built in Salem in
1684, furnished in the manner of that time. In the lean-to are shown an
apothecary's shop (1825), a Salem cent shop (1840), and a weaving room.
Beside it is an old-fashioned shoemaker's shop (about 1830), and near are
Salem porches and architectural objects. Held free lecture course from Jan-
uary to March, 1920.
SOUTH HADLEY, MASS.
DWIGHT ART MEMORIAL
Mt. Holyoke College, South Hadley
Gertrude S. Hyde, Chairman Department of Art and Archaeology
Erected in 1901 to house the equipment and collections of the department of
art and archaeology. It contains lecture rooms, studios, 3 galleries, and the
art library of 2,500 books, 10,000 photographs, 1,500 lantern slides, 356 casts,
and a large collection of old and modern works of art. Lectures on history
of art have been given at Mt. Holyoke since 1874. Exhibitions are held.
SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
►^SPRINGFIELD ART MUSEUM
State Street, Springfield
George Walter Vincent Smith Collection
George Walter Vincent Smith, Donor and Director.
Eleanor A. Wade, Curator.
Cordelia C. Sargent, Assistant Curator.
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 157.
Open, free, week days, 1 to 5 p.m.; closed Thanksgiving, Christmas, New
Year's Day, and Fourth of July. The collection of casts, which occupies part
36 MASSACHUSETTS MUSEUMS
SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
Springfield Art Museum — Continued
of the first floor of the building, is open on Sundays, but not the other de-
partments.
Opened 1895. Collection given by George Walter Vincent Smith. Twelve
galleries of objects including: paintings, statuary and drawings; arms and
armor; Oriental potteries and porcelains; bronzes, jade, enamels, lacquers and
ivories ; textiles and wood carvings ; work with children, groups being taken
through the Museum by an attendant on Saturday mornings ; illustrated story
hours; drawing classes; open evenings upon request for clubs, etc. Pictures
are lent, and exhibitions of photographs held monthly.
WELLESLEY, MASS.
►^FARNSWORTH MUSEUM
Wellesley College, Wellesley
Alice Van Vechten Brown, Director. Gladys Turnback, Asst. in Charge
Founded 1875. Open, free, 8 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. daily, except Sundays.
Collection consists of antique sculpture ; Jarves collection of laces and vest-
ments ; Frost collection of Indian baskets ; and the Stetson collection of modern
paintings. About 14,000 photographs. Courses are given at the College in
history of art and studio practice.
Exhibitions, 1920-21 : Studies on the Maine coast by Edith R. Abbot ; paint-
ings by Gladys Thayer ; paintings by F. W. Benson ; architectural water colors,
lent by Dept. of Agriculture, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; examples
of industrial housing; paintings by Charles H. Woodbury.
WORCESTER, MASS.
^WORCESTER ART MUSEUM
Salisbury and Tuckerman Streets, Worcester
Francis H. Dewey President Lincoln N. Kinnicutt Treasurer
Frederick S. Pratt. . .Vice-President Thomas H. Gage Clerk
Executive Staff
Raymond Wyer, Director.
Benjamin H. Stone, Assistant to Director.
Edward E. Pease, Assistant Treasurer.
Lucy D. Tuckerman, Librarian.
Ella I. Simons, Educational Department.
Anna D. Hackett, Secretary to the Director.
For foundation and history see Vol. XI, pp. 159, 160.
Open 10 A.M. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, 2 to 5 p.m. Admission free.
Founded 1896. Annual meeting third Tuesday in April ; Trustees' meeting
fourth Mondays. Annual dues, $5; membership, 171. Attendance 1920-21 was
43,949. Collections include archaeology, architecture, casts, coins and medals,
furniture, ceramics, rnetalwork. Oriental objects, old and modern paintings,
colonial silver, sculpture, textiles, woodwork, prints, photographs, and a library.
Of special note are the collection of paintings, the Bancroft collection of
Japanese prints, and the Goodspeed collection of engravings by American
masters.
Lectures are offered to the public, to special groups of persons and organi-
zations. Lantern slides and photographs are lent through Worcester County
to clubs, schools, etc., and lectures are given by members of the staff in the
Museum and in the towns of the county. Free concerts given every other
Sunday during winter of 1920-21.
The most important incident, 1920-21, was the opening of the addition to the
buildmg.
MASSACHUSETTS— MICHIGAN MUSEUMS 37
WORCESTER, MASS.
Worcester Art Museum — Continued
Accessions, 1920-21 : "Madonna and Child with Saint and Donor," Spanish
primitive ; "Madonna and Child," late Gothic ; "Holy Family," by Dosso Dossi,
School of Ferrara ; "Charles, Cardinal de Bourbon." French, by Pierre Du-
monstier ; "Eleanor of Portugal," XVI Century, Flemish ; "Christ Bearing
the Cross," Spanish, by Alonzo Cano ; "Portrait of a Man," Dutch, by Antonio
Palamedes; "Portrait of an Artist," French, by Antoine Pesne ; "Still Life,"
French, by Jean Baptiste Simeon Chardin ; "Captain John Larrabee," by Joseph
Badger; "Historical Subject," by Benjamin West; "Christ Healing the Sick,"
by Washington Allston; "Head of Woman," pastel, by Paul Gauguin; "Break-
ing Wave on Shore Line," water color, by Winslow Homer ; "Gardiner Greene
Hammond," miniature, by Richard M. Staigg; "Richard Cosway," self-minia-
ture ; "St. John the Divine," polychrome wood carving by Giacomo Cozzarelli ;
two choir stalls ; several pieces of ornamental wood carving, Gothic ; glass panel
from the set of Seven Sleepers, French, XIH Century; glass panel from Can-
terbury Cathedral, English, XHI Century; educational panel, made up of
fragments of glass, dating from XHI to XVIH Century ; glass panel picturing
a kneeling saint, Flemish, late XV or early XVI Century ; glass panel, Eng-
lish, XVI Century; full suit of armor, Italian, about 1540; iron grille, Span-
ish, XII or XIII Century; ornamental iron work, Spanish, XVI or XVII
Century; wrought iron jewel box, French X Century; two Queen Anne walnut
side chairs covered with very fine contemporary gros point needlework ; lac-
quered beech wood chair, English; silver can by William Swan.
Exhibitions
Apr. 4 to Apr. 21, 1920 — Textiles owned by the Museum.
Apr. 25 to May 16 — Paintings, modern art, by contemporary artists.
May 23 to June 13 — Twenty-second annual exhibition of work of pupils of the
School of the Worcester Art Museum.
June 20 to July 4 — Paintings owned by the Museum.
July 11 to Aug. 23 — Memorial exhibition of paintings by Henry Golden Dearth.
Aug. 29 to Sept. 27 — Paintings owned by the Museum.
Oct. 3 to Oct. 31 — Seventeenth annual exhibition of work by local artists.
Nov. 7 to Nov. 28 — Paintings by the "Group of Seven" of Canada.
Dec. 5 to Jan. 2, 1921 — Paintings owned by the Museum.
Jan. 9 to Jan. 30 — ^Exhibition of early American paintings assembled by the
Association of Museum Directors, augmented by those belonging to the
Museum.
Feb. 18 to Apr. 1 — Paintings rehung in all galleries for the opening of the
addition.
DETROIT, MICH.
HhDETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS
(Formerly Detroit Museum of Art)
704 Jefferson Avenue, Detroit
Arts Commission
Ralph H. Booth President Albert Kahn, Henry G. Stevens,
William J. Gray. Vice-President Commissioners
Clyde H. Burroughs, Secretary and Curator
Reginald Poland, Educational Secretary
For foundation and history see Vol. XI, p. 165.
Open, free, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, 2 to 6 p.m. ; holidays, 2 to 5 p.m.
Incorporated 1885. Under the charter of the City of Detroit, adopted in
June, 1918, provision was made for a Municipal Arts Commission, consisting
of four members, with powers and duties summarized as follows : It shall
hold in the name of the city such real estate as may be necessary for the
38 MICHIGAN MUSEUMS
DETROIT, MICH.
Detroit Institute of Arts — Continued
accomplishments of its objects; shall build, operate, and maintain suitable
buildings for works of art and auditorium purposes, to be known as the
Detroit Institute of Arts; shall acquire, collect, own and exhibit objects of
art, such as are usually acquired by museums of art, and shall have such
other powers and duties as may be necessary for the proper discharge of its
duties.
Under the provisions of this charter, the corporation of the Detroit Mu-
seum of Art conveyed to the Arts Commission all its property and collec-
tions, to be administered by the Municipal Arts Commission, and hereafter
to be designated as the Detroit Institute of Arts. Meetings of the Arts Com-
mission are held every Monday afternoon. Annual meeting in June, Income
for maintenance is $59,000; for purchase of collections, $50,000; toward erec-
tion of a new building. $260,000. Additional funds for purchase are held in
trust by the Detroit Museum of Art,
The collections include : an Egyptian Department, a Classical Department,
Print Department, Department of Oriental Art, a Colonial Department, col-
lection of paintings of the fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries, as well as modern paintings, and a Children's Museum, consisting
of material suitable for circulation in the public schools, and of particular
interest to children.
The educational work of the Museum is wide in its scope. There are Sunday
afternoon talks in the auditorium, together with musical programs; the
Society of Arts and Crafts, the Archaeological Society, the Michigan Chapter
of the American Institute of Architects, and other societies, hold their lecture
courses jointly with the Museum. Lantern slides, photographs, and objects
from the collections are available for the use of schools and study clubs, A
branch of the Detroit Public Library, in charge of Miss Isabel Weadock, ful-
fills an important sphere of usefulness. A bulletin is published monthly from
October to May, Free sketch classes under the direction of an instructor
from the Recreation Commission are held Friday evenings and Saturday
mornings. During 1920-21, through the co-operation of the Chamber Music
Society, free concerts were given in the Institute Auditorium each Sunday
afternoon during the season.
In connection with the Detroit Institute of Arts is the Museum of Art
Founders Society, which donates purchases of art objects to the Detroit
Institute of Arts. Annual dues are from $10 to $10,000; when the contri-
butions of a member reach a sum total of $1,000 in money or property he or
she becomes a governing member of the Corporation. The 1920-21 gifts to
the Institute by the Founders Society were: "Child with an Orange," by
Gari Melchers; "Woman Sewing," by William Paxton ; "A Corner of My
Studio," by William Auerbach Levy ; "Desert Series" of 35 etchings, by George
Elbert Burr,
Acquisitions, 1920-21: "Fish," by William M. Chase; "Home Fields," by
John S, Sargent; "The Blue Symphony," by J. J, Enneking; "Woman Sew-
mg," by William M. Paxton; "Child with an Orange," by Gari Melchers;
"Corner of my Studio," by William Auerbach Levy; "The Green Jar," by
Roman Kryzanowsky; "The Flower Girl," by Helen M. Turner; "Path of
Gold," by Gifford Beal ; "The Artist's Model," by J, L. Gerome ; "Deer in
Repose," by Rosa Bonheur; "Turkish Women," by Diaz; "The Rainbow," by
Van Marcke; "Grandfather's Armor," by Isabey; "Cupid Captured," bv
Perrault; "Love Wins," by E. J, Aubert ; "Dancers in the Greenroom," "Deux
Femmes Assises," and "Portrait de Femme," by E, Degas; "Antibes at Sun-
set" by Boudin; "Vieux Remparts," by Pissarro ; "Les Gladioles" and
Nymphae," by Claude Monet; "Church at Moret," by Sisley; "Graziella," by
Renoir ; "At Cledin," by Moret ; "The Tea Table," by Le Sidaner ; "Le Port de
Douarnenez," by Cottet; "Mer d'Opale," by Menard; "Cabaret Breton," by
MICHIGAN MUSEUMS 39
m^mab^^-^ ■.- " DETROIT, MICH.
Detroit Institute of Arts — Continued
L. Simon; "On the Balcony," by Henri Lebasque; "Le Village, Vignes," by
H. Martin ; "Reception," water color, by L. Simon ; "Landscape," pastel, by E.
Degas; "The Exedra Seat," by Alma Tadema ; "Wood Nymphs," by J. L.
Stewart; "Living in the Past," by J. Israels; "Hon. Henry David Erskine," by
Raeburn; "The Old Hungarian Mail," by A. Schreyer; "Female Head," sculp-
ture, by J. Epstein; "Allegresse," sculpture, by Bessie Potter Vonnoh; "Run-
ning Boys" and "Cats," sculpture, by Hunt Diederich ; "Democratus," sculp-
ture, by Chiaruzzi ; seven marbles, classical and reminiscent of classical in
general; six etchings by Whistler; two etchings by B. J. Nordfeldt; eleven
prints, six blocks, and the original of one subject by Gustave Baumann; port-
folio of war sketches by C. Huard; "Desert Series' of thirty-live etchings by
George Elbert Burr; etchings by Roche, Corot, Jacquemart, Roussel, Raj on
and Detaille; three etchings by Daubigny ; two etchings by Lalanne;.two etch-
ings by Jacque ; two etchings by Appian ; three etchings by Bracquemond ; two
etchings by Nanteiul ; "Woman Carding Wool," etching, by Millet ; three
etchings by Haden; etchings by Brangwyn, Cameron, Hankey, Fitton ; two
etchings by Fortuny; etching by Gravesande; etching by Mannfeld; a collec-
tion of Egyptian antiquities; six pieces of Italian jewelry; Japanese vase and
ornament; seven English gold watches; three Danish tankards of the XVII
Century; three XVIII Century Danish silver sugar shakers; English sugar
shaker, XIX Century ; Danish corkscrew ; two German beakers and a German
silver tray; one box and hand mirror; enamel, jewels and silved by Eda Lord
Dixon ; four terra cotta vases, Graeco-Roman ; English plate and cup ; The
Nuremberg Chronicle, 1493, "History of the World," illustrations in part by
the master of Durer; Raemakers war cartoons; seventy-four photographs of
the work of Kenyon Cox; forty-five photographs of Italy; one English sam-
pler; Herter tapestry, "The Great Crusade"; four India shawls; two collars
and a flounce of lace; one piece of Maltese lace; one Mexican suit; an ivory
cigarette box ; a figuerine in polychrome plaster, American ; three Gothic XV
Century carved wood French panels ; illuminated manuscript, "The Lord's
Prayer," by a Sister of the Convent at Ralston, N. J.
Exhibitions
October, 1920 — Marine paintings by William Ritschel, "The Magic Print,"
by Denman Fink.
November — Paintings of children by Martha Walter; paintings, tapestries and
porcelains lent by New York dealers.
December — Annual exhibition by Michigan artists; etchings by Lester G.
Hornby; wrought iron by Thomas Googerty; carved wood "Spirits," by
Charles Haag.
January, 1921 — Paintings by Maurice Fromkes ; batik scarfs; loan exhibition of
Oriental rings ; etchings by Herbert Pullinger ; lithographs by Thornton
Oakley.
January to September — Paintings lent by David Gray.
February — Pilgrim Tercentenary Exhibition.
March-— Period silks lent by Cheney Bros.; Dutch graphic arts exhibition;
paintings by F. C. Frieseke.
April — American water color paintings ; group exhibition of paintings by
Eugene Speicher, Gififord Beal and W. E. Schofield.
April 15 to May 1 — Seventh annual exhibition of paintings by American
artists ; Chinese exhibition in connection with Famine Fund campaign.
June— Canadian paintings by "Group of Seven"; paintings by French impres-
sionists; recent acquisitions.
July — Costume designs by Edwards for Sam Hume productions; illustrations
for Quo Vadis by Stachiewicz, Polish artist.
40 MICHIGAN— MINNESOTA MUSEUMS
MUSKEGON, MICH.
4<HACKLEY GALLERY OF ART
Muskegon
John Vanderlaan President Charles M. Marsh Treasurer
Paul S. Moon Secretary Lulu F. Miller Director
Laura B. Hall, Assistant to the Director
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 170.
Open week days, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays and holidays, 2 to 5 p.m. Ad-
mission free.
Founded 1912. The permanent collection includes 80 paintings by old and
modern artists, etchings, drawings, bronzes, casts and a complete set of
Arundel prints. The Hackley Library of 56,000 volumes contains 5,000 books
on art.
During the winter a Saturday morning story hour is maintained for children.
Talks given regularly to classes in the Gallery and in the schools of the city.
A course of lectures by well-known speakers on art subjects is offered free
to the public. Paintings from the permanent collection are placed in the schools
and exchanged every second month. The auditorium is much used by educa-
tional organizations for special meetings.
Exhibitions
July 10 to Aug. 15, 1920 — Paintings and drawings by Stephen Haweis.
Sept. 27 to Oct. 30— Paintings by Mabel Key.
Oct. 4 to Nov. 2 — Paintings by C. Bertram Hartman ; batik scarfs and deco-
rative panels. ,, . i
Nov. 4 to Nov. 29 — Paintings and etchings by Eugene Higgins.
Dec. 3 to Dec. 10 — Japanese prints.
Dec. 8 to Dec. 31 — "Four Art Schools" circulated by the American Federation
of Arts.
Jan. 7 to Feb. 4, 1921 — Paintings by the Business Men's Art Club of Chicago;
small bronzes, medals and portrait plaques, circulated by the American
Federation of Arts ; Latin posters.
Feb. 7 to Mar. 1 — Printed fabrics for home decoration, circulated by the Ameri-
can Federation of Arts.
Mar. 1 to Apr. 3 — Early American portraits, lent by the Ehrich Galleries, New
York; American antiques, lent by residents of Muskegon; paintings by
local amateurs.
Mar. 2 to Apr, 18 — Paintings by Victor Casenelli; war sketches in pencil and
water color by Wilbur C. Kensler,
Apr. 6 to May 17 — Dutch graphic art.
May 9 to June 20 — Water colors and drawings by Winslow Homer, lent by
M. A. Ryerson.
May 12 to June 28 — Paintings by Joseph Trevitts.
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
MINNEAPOLIS INSTITUTE OF ARTS
►J^MINNEAPOLIS SOCIETY OF FINE ARTS
201 East 24th Street, Minneapolis
John R. Van Derltp President Alfred F. Pillsbury Treasurer
Eugene J. Carpenter Vice-Pres. G. Sidney Houston, Jr Secretary
Edward C. Gale 2d Vice-Pres. and Business Manager
Russell M. Bennett.. 3d Vice-Pres.
Russell A. Plimpton, Director.
Marie C. Lehr, Curator of Prints.
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 176.
MINNESOTA MUSEUMS 41
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
Minneapolis Institute of Arts — Continued
Open daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., except Sunday and Monday, when the hours
are 1 to 5 p.m. Admission free Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday, other days
admission 25 cents. Free docent service by appointment. The permanent col-
lections embrace sculpture, paintings, drawings, tapestries, furniture, prints,
laces, casts, collections of the arts of the Orient and Egyptian antiquities.
The Minneapolis Society of Fine Arts, incorporated 1883, owns the collec-
tions and controls the museum, the building being known as the Minneapolis
Institute of Arts. Building opened January 7, 1915 ; cost, $537,000. Annual
meeting, third Wednesday in January. Annual dues, $10; associate, $2;
membership, 3,365.
Public lectures and lectures for members are given frequently. An Art
Reference Library, in co-operation with the Minneapolis Athenaeum. Bulletin
published monthly, October to June. Co-operation with the public schools.
The Minneapolis School of Art, founded in 1886 by the Minneapolis Society
of Fine Arts, is located in the same park as the Institute, and occupies the
Julia Morrison Memorial Building (see school section).
Principal gifts and other accessions, 1920-21 : Painting, "Upper Ipswich
River," by Philip Little, gift of the artist; paintings, "Portrait of Governor
Palmer of Vermont," by Samuel F. B. Morse; "Group of Three Women," by
H. Bebie; "Moonlight," by Muller; "Landscape," by A. B. Durand, and
"Autumn Evening," by Homer D. Martin, gifts of Joseph Satinover, New
York; paintings, "Bay of Neaples," by Volpe, and "Market Scene," by Gabrini,
bequests of Howard W. Baker; painting, "Italian Girl," by Grace McKinstry,
gift of Charles Grant; mezzotints in color, "Mrs. Lloyd," after Reynolds, and
"Young Princess," after Netscher, by S. Arlent Edwards, gifts of the artist ;
drawings, "La Nouvelle Caserne a Pan," by Lalanne, and "Sleeping Work-
man," by A. E. Sterne, gifts of Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Brooks ; Ms. book, anti-
phonal with Gregorian music, German, 1439, gift of H. V. Jones ; bronze head
of Oedipus, by F. Fleming Baxter, gift of the sculptor; 28 examples of English
and American pewter of the XVII and XVIII centuries; pewter plate, wine
glass and sampler, American, XVIII century, gifts of Miss Sarah Bailey;
bakuba cloth, African. XIX century ; approximately 525 examples of laces and
embroideries, largely Italian of the XVI and XVII centuries, gift of Countess
Phelps-Resse, Rome.
Purchases from the Dunwoody Fund : Painting, "St. Anthony and the Her-
mit," by Ribera ; Egyptian mousharibi panel, XVIII century ; 4 French Gothic
colurnns; XIII to XVI century French Gothic portal; XV century French
Gothic monumental portal ; XV century French Gothic house front ; 12
XVIII century textiles from the Greek Islands ; 10 Near-Eastern textiles,
XVII and XVIII centuries ; velvet portiere from XVI century Italian chausuble.
Exhibitions
September, 1920 — Chinese paintings, lent by Lai-Yuan & Company, New York.
October — Sixth annual exhibition of the work of Minneapolis artists ; memorial
exhibition of Zorn etchings.
November — Exhibition of colonial arts in commemoration of the Pilgrim
Tercentenary ; exhibition of photographs, textiles and reproductions under
the auspices of the Greek Government.
December — Paintings by William Ritschel ; modern Swedish textiles ; Bible
illustrations from the print collection.
January, 1921 — Paintings by Carl Bohnen ; paintings lent by the Anderson
Galleries, Chicago; mezzotints by S. Arlent Edwards.
February— "Vers I'ldeal," tapestry by Mile. Fernande Dublis; laces lent by the
Needle and Bobbin Club, New York.
March — The Emma B. Hodge collection of samplers ; paintings by Gifford
Beal, W. Elmer Schofield and Eugene E. Speicher.
42 MINNESOTA— MISSOURI MUSEUMS
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
Minneapolis Institute of Arts — Continued
April— Early American paintings; exhibition by the Advertising Club of Min-
nesota.
May— Paintings by the Guild of American Painters.
June— Collection of laces and embroideries presented by the Countess Phelps-
Resse.
MINNESOTA ACADEMY OF SCIENCE MUSEUM
Public Library Building, Minneapolis
T. B. Walker President Harlow Gale Rec.-Sec.
Edward C. Gale Treasurer O. W. Oestlund Cor.-Sec.
University of Minn., Minneapolis
Open, free, daily, except Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Includes Greek terra-
cottas, pottery and glass; Persian pottery; coins, carved ivory, Babylonian
tablets, Chinese and other idols, Japanese and Philippine guns and swords, etc.
Most of the objects are lent' by T. B. Walker.
WALKER ART GALLERY
Eighth Street and Hennepin Avenue, Minneapolis
R. H. Adams^ Curator
Collection presented in 1918 to the City of Minneapolis by T. B. Walker.
Open free to the public daily, including Sunday, with free use of all gallery
catalogues. Average annual attendance, 20,000. Collection begun about 1875.
It contains nearly 500 paintings by leading artists of all schools; about 350
original miniatures, 110 portraits of notable Indians, 24 portraits of celebrated
Indian fighters, etc. There are also large collections of jade, amber, ivory,
precious stones, porcelains, Greek pottery, Persian wares. Occasionally lends
pictures.
KANSAS CITY, MO.
NELSON GALLERY OF ART
Public Library Building, Kansas City
D. M. Pinkerton President E. F. S winney Treasurer
J. B. Jackson, Jr., Secretary, Board of Education, Kansas City
Staff
Purd B. Wright Librarian G. Van Millet Artist Caretaker
Calina E. M. Somerville, Curator
Open, free, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. week days; 2 to 5 p.m. Sundays.
Founded 1897 by William R. Nelson, who died in 1915; Mr. Nelson's will
provided a fund for the purchase of pictures and objects of art by artists
who have been dead at least 30 years. New galleries completed 1918. The
collection consists of 63 faithful copies of masterpieces of painting of all
schools from the fourteenth to the seventeenth centuries. These copies are the
exact size of the originals and as far as possible the original framing has
been reproduced. There are also 500 carbon photographs of Old Masters and
100 reproductions in bronze, marble, terra cotta and plaster of antique and
Renaissance sculpture.
ST. LOUIS, MO.
^CITY ART MUSEUM
Forest Park, St. Louis
William K. Bixby, President
Edward Mallinckrodt.. . . Vice-Pres. Charles Parsons Pettus, Treasurer
MISSOURI MUSEUMS 43
ST. LOUIS, MO.
City Art Museum — Continued
Executive Officers
Samuel L, Sheker, Administrator.
Robert Allen Holland, Director.
Madeleine Borggraefe, Secretary.
Charles Percy Davis, Curator.
For foundation and history see Vol. XI, p. 183.
Open, free, daily, including Sundays, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. (closed Christ-
mas and New Year's Day).
Founded in 1879 as the St. Louis Museum of Fine Arts; reorganized 1908.
Board meetings first Friday after the first Tuesday of each month ; annual in
May. Supported by city tax of one-fifth of a mill per dollar on the assessed
valuation of the property in the city. Income for 1920-21 was $188,107.91.
Attendance for the year ending April 1, 1921, was 258,943.
The permanent collections include paintings, sculpture, prints and extensive
groups of objects illustrative of the decorative arts. American paintings have
received special attention, but foreign schools, particularly the modern French
impressionists are represented, and there is a small group of paintings by artists
who lived prior to the XIX Century. The print collection contains examples
representative of almost every period in the development of the graphic arts.
The sculpture collection embraces numerous examples in bronze, marble and
plaster by American and European artists. A collection of French furniture
and woodwork has been assembled which illustrates the development of the
craft in France from the early XVI Century until the period of Louis XVI.
English furniture is represented by examples of all the important types of the
XVIII Century. There is an extensive collection of textiles embracing Gothic
and Renaissance tapestries, Gothic velvets, embroidered vestments and laces.
The Chinese department contains ceramics, bronzes and jades of most of the
historic periods, as well as paintings, textiles, Buddhist sculpture, carved
stones, glass, enamel and lacquer. Japanese art is represented by color prints,
lacquer, armor, arms and other metal work, textiles, sculptures and carvings.
There are also collections of Corean ceramics ; Egyptian antiquities ; Greek
marble sculpture, vases and other objects; Graeco-Roman glass; Persian tex-
tiles, metal work and ceramics ; and casts of Greek, Roman and Renaissance
sculpture.
The educational work of the Museum includes ; a course of lectures on
paintings ; a course of lectures on household and decorative arts ; a classroom
with lantern for teachers and pupils, where the work is conducted with the
co-operation of art schools, colleges, high schools, elementary public schools,
private schools, civic societies, women's clubs and the general public. The
Museum lends exhibits to the Public Library, the high school. Teachers' College
and grade schools. Facilities are offered students and copyists. A quarterly
bulletin dealing with the activities of the Museum and special exhibition cata-
logues are published. Photographs and photogravures of paintings and sculp-
ture in the collections are on sale.
Acquisitions, 1920-1921 — "Study Head" and "Bridge at Florence" by Duv-
eneck; "The Black Cape" by Sidney E. Dickinson. "Luna" by John Douglas
Patrick. Prints by Meryon, Haden, Durer, Bellows, Pennell, Horter and
others ; Chinese paintings of the T'ang and Sung dynasties ; Japanese color
prints by Toyonobu, Koriusai, Shunko, Kiyonaga, Yeishi, Sharaku, Toyokuni,
Hokusai, Hiroshige, and Hokkei ; two Greek marble statues, c. 300 B.C.;
Roman portrait head; silver tea caddy by Samuel Godbehere, London, 1789;
pair of silver gilt coasters, London, 1806; one hundred and three Chinese
bronzes of the Han dynasty, from the Bushnell collection ; five examples
early Chinese bronzes from other sources ; nine examples of early Chinese
jades; two panels of polychrome glass with coats of arms, Nuremberg, early
44 MISSOURI— NEW HAMPSHIRE MUSEUMS
ST. LOUIS, MO.
City Art Museum — Continued
XVI century; panel of polychrome glass with St. Maurice, Nuremberg, late
XV century ; French Armoire, Lyonese school, c. 1580, and French ebony
cabinet, Lyonese school, c. 1630, both from the Chabriere-Arles collection;
two six-fold screens by Sotatsu, Japanese, XVII century ; Japanese lacquer
writing box, XVII-XVIII century.
Exhibitions
April and May, 1920 — Paintings and sculpture by a group of American artists.
July and August — Rotary Exhibition of American Water Color Society.
September and November — Fifteenth Annual Exhibition of Paintings by
American artists.
November and December — Paintings in oil and tempera by Henry G. Keller.
December and January, 1921 — Decorative screens by Robert W. Chanler.
January — Wrought Iron by Thomas F. Googerty, and wood carvings by
Charles Haag.
February — Recent accessions of the City Art Museum.
March — St. Louis School of Fine Arts Exhibition; collection of batik dec-
orations.
April — 'Photographs of scenes in Greece by Fred. Boissonnas, and Persian art
lent by the Persian Antique Gallery, New York.
OMAHA, NEB.
LININGER ART GALLERY
224 North 18th Street, Omaha
Established 1888 by George W. Lininger. A private collection of 300 pic-
tures and statuary and bric-a-brac. Open to the public free of charge on ap-
pointment. An Egyptian collection belonging to the Lininger collection has
been lent to the Omaha Public Library.
OMAHA PUBLIC LIBRARY AND MUSEUM
19th and Harney Streets, Omaha, Neb.
C. N. DiETZ President Bruce McCulloch Secretary
U. C. Eraser Vice-President Edith Tobitt Librarian
Museum open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. week days; 2 to 5 p.m. Sundays and holi-
days. Founded 1877. The Museum occupies five rooms and consists of a
small collection of paintings and of Indian objects; also the Byron Reed
collection of coins and manuscripts.
CORNISH, N. H.
AUGUSTUS SAINT-GAUDENS MEMORIAL
Cornish, N. H. (P. O. Windsor, Vt.)
Charles A. Platt, President
Daniel C. French 1st Vice-Pres. Charles D. Norton Treasurer
R. W. DE Forest 2d Vice-Pres. George B. Upham Secretary
Open free, throughout the year. Founded 1919. Annual meeting in
August. A memorial to Augustus Saint-Gaudens in the township where
he had his studios during the latter years of his life. It contains original
models of virtually all the famous works by Augustus Saint-Gaudens and partly
finished subjects. The studios are the property of the artist's widow.
NEW HAMPSHIRE— NEW JERSEY MUSEUMS 45
MANCHESTER, N. H.
CURRIER GALLERY OF ART
Arthur M. Heard, Trustee
Amoskeag National Bank, Manchester
The will, made public July 2, 1915, of Mrs. Hannah M. Currier, widow of
ex-Governor Moody Currier, gave nearly a million dollars to establish an art
institution in Manchester, to be known as the Currier Gallery of Art. Trus-
tees are allowing the money to accumulate.
MONTCLAIR, N. J.
i^MONTCLAIR ART MUSEUM
MONTCLAIR ART ASSOCIATION
Bloomfield and South Mountain Aves., Montclair
F. Ballard Williams President Charles Bull Treasurer
Burt Brown Barker.. 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. M. M. LeBrun Secretary
Mrs. Henry Lang 2d Vice-Pres. 8 South Mountain Ave., Montclair
Katherine Innes, Director
For foundation sec Vol. XI, p. 195.
Organized 1910 ; building opened 1914. Permanent collection and monthly
loan exhibits. Board meetings second Monday each month ; annual in
February. Annual dues $10; sustaining $25; life $100; membership 400.
Co-operates with the schools in interesting the pupils in an appreciation
of art ; gives special lectures to children. Concerts and lectures for members.
Exhibitions, 1920-21. — Paintings and sketches by New York artists, and
sculpture by Abastenia St. Leger Eberle ; drawings of New York by Peter
Marcus ; paintings by Blakelock, Carlsen, Crane, Couse, Murphy, Ranger and
Wyant from the Isidor collection ; pictorial photographs by Kenneth and
Guy Gayler Clark; paintings in oil by Julius Rolshoven ; rugs lent by S.
K. Costikyan ; work by artists of Montclair and vicinity ; and annual flower
show.
NEWARK, N. J.
^NEWARK MUSEUM ASSOCIATION
Free Public Library Building, 5 Washington Street, Newark
Chester R. Hoag President Arthur F. Egner.. ..2d Vice-Pres.
Milton E. Blanchard, 1st Vice-Pres. Louis Bamberger Treasurer
John Cotton Dana, Secretary and Director
Beatrice Winser, Assistant Secretary and Assistant Director
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 196.
Open daily, 12 to 6.30 and 7.30 to 9.30 p.m. ; Sundays and holidays, 2 to 6
and 7.30 to 9 p.m. During July, August and September, daily excepting
Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, 2 to 6 p.m. only.
Organized 1909. Annual meeting fourth Tuesday in January; Trustees'
meetings third Tuesday in April, October and January. Annual dues from
$1 to $25 ; life $100. The Musuem occupies the whole of the fourth floor and
two rooms on third floor of the Free Public Library.
The collections include : Archaeology — classical, Assyrian and Egyptian ;
arms and armor ; bronzes, casts, coins and medals ; ceramics — Indian, Etrus-
can and modern; metalwork ; Oriental objects; paintings — old and modern;
photographs ; prints ; textiles ; ethnological models ; insects and birds for
nature study. The most notable collection is the Disbrow collection of min-
erals and economic botanical specimens and the Edward N. Crane Memorial
collection of objects from Tibet; J. Ackerman Coles collection of paintings,
sculpture and art objects. Educational work is carried on in cooperation
with the elementary public schools and the general public; school lending
46 NEW JERSEY— NEW MEXICO MUSEUMS
NEWARK, N. J.
Newark Museum Association — Continued
collections cover art, science and nature study, life and customs, geography,
products, natural and industrial.
Attendance during 1920 was 66,385; membership 3,291.
Publications, 1920 : The Annual Report ; educational pamphlets. Stories
of Statues, Habitations of Man, Shells and Animals ; works on museum science
by J. C. Dana; catalogues of exhibitions.
Exhibitions
March, 1920 — Collections of J. Ackerman Coles.
August — Loan exhibition of ship models.
September — Fans and old China.
October and November — Noorian collection of early American domestic art.
December and January, 1921 — Colonial America — an exhibition in connection
with the Pilgrim Tercentenary.
April — Work of the Newark Keramic Art Society.
June — Woodblock prints by Provincetown artists; posters by high school
students.
October — The products, industries and arts of the Philippines.
PRINCETON, N. J,
MUSEUM OF HISTORIC ART OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
Princeton, N. J.
Allan Marquand Director Jane Wright Librarian
Charles R. Morey, Secretary of Department of Art and Archaeology
For foundation and details see Vol. XI, p. 197.
Open, free, daily 9 a.m to 5 p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m. Department founded
1882 ; Museum Building 1889. Collections include Trumbull-Prime collec-
tion of pottery; Syrian collection of casts; Greek and Roman coins; paint-
ings and sculpture. Large library of art and architectural books ; photo-
graphs and slides.
SANTA FE, N. M.
MUSEUM OF NEW MEXICO
Palace of the Governors, Santa Fe
John R. McFie President Paul A. F. Walter Secretary
Napoleon B. Laughlin. . .Treasurer Edgar Lee Hewitt Director
Lansing Bloom, Asst. Director
Kenneth M. Chapman, Associate in Charge of Art Department
Sheldon Parsons, Associate in Charge of Exhibitions
Founded 1909; a State institution occupying the historic Palace of the
Governors at Santa Fe. Art gallery in Temple of St. Francis and the Mar-
tyrs dedicated November 24, 1917. Annual meeting in August. Conducts
archaelogical expeditions ; does research work in ethnology ; special attention
is given to revival of native American art.
Exhibitions
July, 1920 — Water colors by Indian pupils.
August — 'Paintings, etchings and water colors by resident and visiting artists.
September and October — Exhibiton of Southwestern art, by artists of Taos
and Santa Fe.
November — Paintings by Williard Nash.
December — Paintings by Will Schuster, Jr.
January, 1921 — Third New Mexico Loan Exhibition (paintings lent by resi-
dents of Santa Fe.)
NEW MEXICO— NEW YORK CITY MUSEUMS 47
SANTA FE, N. M.
Museum of New Mexico — Continued
February — Paintings by Gerald Cassidy.
March— Paintings by W. E. Mruk.
April and May — Paintings by J. G. Bakos, J. B. O. Nordfelt, Sheldon Parsons,
and Randall Davey ; water color drawings by Pueblo Indians ; silver work
by Bettie Massie ; designs adapted from Mayan and Pueblo Indian motives;
paintings by Will Schuster.
June — Character studies of Blackfoot and Pueblo Indians by Willard L.
Kihn ; monotypes by John Anson James ; etchings by Ralph Pearson ;
exhibition of the art classes of the public schools of Santa Fe.
NEW YORK CITY
AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY
77th Street and Central Park West, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Henry Fairfield Osborn, President
Henry P. Davison Treasurer Adrian Iselin Secretary
F. A. Lucas, Director
Founded 1869. Open, free, to the public every week day, including legal
holidays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and on Sundays from 1 to 5 p.m. Large
natural history collections artistically displayed, including many groups of
birds and other animals which are exhibited amid their natural surroundings.
Exhibits of special interest to artists and designers, comprising collections
from the various tribes of North American Indians and those from Northern
Siberia. Especially rich in pottery and textiles from ancient Peru, and gold
and pottery from Mexico and Central America.
AMERICAN NUMISMATIC SOCIETY (Museum)
Broadway, between 155th and I56th Streets, Borough of Manhattan.
Edward T. Newell, President
John Reilly, Jr Treasurer Howland Wood Curator
Sydney P. Noe, Secretary and Librarian
Museum and Library open, free 10 a.m to 5 p.m. daily, except Mondays; Sun-
days (Museum only), 1 to 5 p.m. Permanent exhibition of American and
foreign coins and medals, ancient coins, decorations and war medals, etc.
BARNARD CLOISTERS
Fort Washington Avenue at 191st Street, Borough of Manhattan
Open daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission fee $1 on week days; 50 cents
on Sundays. Erected 1914. Antique sculpture collected by George Grey
Barnard is shown in the building of the type of a French Gothic monastery of
about the 13th century.
i^BROOKLYN INSTITUTE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
Academy of Music, Lafayette Ave., Borough of Brooklyn, New York
Officers of the Board of Trustees
Frank L. Babbott President Herman Stutzer Secretary
George Foster Smith Treasurer 815 St. Marks Avenue, Borough
of Brooklyn, New York
Organized 1823; re-incorporated 1890; reorganized 1915 into Departments
of Education, of Museums and of Botanical Gardens.
48 NEW YORK CITY MUSEUMS
Brooklyn Institute — Continued
DEPARTMENT OF MUSEUMS
Walter H, Crittenden, Chairman Department of Museums
Chairmen of Committees
Painting, Sculpture, Ethnology Herman Stutzer
Walter H. Crittenden Archaeology John Hill Morgan
Decorative Applied Art, Library George W. Brush
Luke Vincent Lockwood Childrens' Museum,
Prints Edward C. Blum Herman Stutzer
BROOKLYN MUSEUM
(Central Museum)
Eastern Parkway and Washington Avenue, Borough of Brooklyn
Museum Staff
(Exclusive of scientific departments)
William Henry Fox, Director.
William H. Goodyear, Curator, Department of Fine Arts.
Stewart Culin, Curator, Department of Ethnology.
Susan A. Hutchinson, Librarian and Curator of Prints.
Herbert B. Tschudy, Artist Assistant.
Gertrude M. Young, Assitant.
Lewis T. Hart, Business Manager.
For details see Vol. XI, p. 218.
The Central Museum open week days from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ; on Sunday
2 to 6 P.M. Admission is free, except on Mondays and Tuesdays, when a fee
of 25 cents is charged for adults and 10 cents for all under the age of 16.
Copyists and public and private school teachers and pupils are admitted free
at all times. All holidays are free days.
The Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences has two museums, the Cen-
tral (Brooklyn) Museum and the Children's Museum. Both include in their
scope natural science and ethnology, as well as art, the main or Central
Musuem being organized on a well-defined departmental plan. At present
comparatively little art work is done at the Children's Museum, except through
its library.
The Central Museum established 1889; first section of the present building
dedicated 1897. Annual membership dues $10.
The art collections include Egyptology; architecture; bronzes; a hall of
casts of Greek and Roman antiquity ; casts of the Renaissance period ;
modern sculpture; Greek terra cottas (Tanagra) ; Greek vases (small);
ancient glass ; coins and medals ; drawings ; Oriental and European ceramics ;
paintings, old and modern ; photographs ; prints ; textiles and vestments.
The Central Museum has docent service, including motion pictures and
illustrated lectures for school children in co-operation with the School Art
League; lectures for the public; furnishes classroom or lectureroom for
societies, teachers, etc.; an information bureau; research work is done by
various members of the staff. The Library, containing about 25,000 vol-
umes for reference, is open daily 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and on Sundays 2 to 6 p.m.
The Museum publishes an annual report, a Quarterly Magazine, and
scientific bulletins. Also Memoirs on Art and Archaeology and catalogues of
its various collections.
Statistics for the year ending December 31, 1920: 305,556 visitors to the
Central Museum; 171,581 visitors to the Children's Museum; total attendance,
477,137.
Recent accessions include : Oil paintings by DeCamps, Ziem, Monet, Mrs.
Swinnerton, Kever, Schofield; water colors and drawings by Signac, Maufra,
NEW YORK CITY MUSEUMS 49
Brooklyn Institute — Continued
Boudin, Forain, Jongkind, Steer, Mary Cassatt, C. C. Coleman ; sculpture by
MacMonnies and Chester Beach ; ancient Chinese bronzes and gold bronzes ;
additions to the collections of Chinese cloisonne; Greco-Roman glass; Colonial
and early American furniture and Colonial relics ; books, prints, Oriental ob-
jects, laces and textiles.
Exhibitions, 1920-21 : Fifth annual exhibition of the Brooklyn Society of
Etchers; exhibition of the White and Benson collections of illuminated manu-
scripts and printed Bibles; Swiss National Exhibition of paintings and sculp-
ture; Post Impressionists and their Predecessors; costumes and textiles of
central and eastern Europe ; American and European book-plates ; Reilly col-
lection of Japanese gift clothes; prints of old Brooklyn, etc.
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Academy of Music, Lafayette Avenue, Borough of Brooklyn, New York
Charles D. Atkins, Director of Department
Council of Associate Members
Rev. Charles C. Albertson . . . Pres. J. Herbert Low Secretary
Organized 1823. Annual dues : Associate members, $7 ; registration fee,
first year, $5 ; membership, about 10,000.
There are over three hundred lectures, exhibitions and department meetings
open to every member. The member's weekly ticket admits two persons in
the evening and one person in the daytime ; all lectures and other functions
relating to the fine arts are under the joint auspices of the Institute and
Brooklyn Art Association, Weekly Bulletins sent to all members.
DEPARTMENT OF ARCHITECTURE
Arne Dehli, President
Annual meeting in June. Collections of casts and photographs illustrating
history of architecture and sculpture. Lectures and conferences from Novem-
ber to April, open to members.
DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS
William H. Goodyear, President
Annual meeting in June. Courses of lectures each season are conducted
in conjunction with Brooklyn Art Association. Also courses in co-operation
with the School of Pedagogy of the Institute.
DEPARTMENT OF PHOTOGRAPHY
William E. Macnaughton Pres. Sophie L. Lauffer Secretary
157 Bainbridge St., Borough of
Manhattan
Annual meeting in April. Lectures, conferences and exhibitions. Photo-
graphic room and apparatus in Academy of Music building. Instruction in
rudiments of photography and in artistic photography; frequent exhibitions in
Studio. A collection of photographs and lantern slides of Long Island is de-
posited at the Museum.
BRONX SOCIETY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES (MUSEUM)
The Mansion, Bronx Park, Borough of Bronx, New York
W. Stebbins Smith President Olin James Stephens Treasurer
Gunther K. Ackerman, Secretary
Museum open 10 a.m to 5 p.m.; admision free; contains objects of science,
art and history. Also in charge of Poe cottage, Poe Park ; open for visitors
every day, contains many souvenirs of Edgar Allen Poe.
50 NEW YORK CITY MUSEUMS
COOPER UNION
FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE AND ART
Fourth Avenue and Eighth Street, Horough of Manhattan, New York
R. Fulton Cutting President Edward R. Hewitt Treasurer
Peter Cooper Bryce, Secretary
Executive Staff
Charles R. Richards Director Frederick Dielman. . . . Art Director
Edward L. Rehm, Assistant Secretary
For foundation and history see Vol. XI, p. 223.
Founded 1854. The foundation building houses the Night Art School,
Woman's Art School (see school section). Library Museum for the Arts of
Decoration, School of Stenography, and the Great Hall, where lectures and
meetings are held.
MUSEUM FOR THE ARTS OF DECORATION
Directors
Mrs. J. O. Green Sarah Cooper Hewitt Eleanor G. Hewitt
Custodians
Mary S. M. Gibson, Mrs. Jessie B. Carner, Berthe Stieble, John Geion,
Leila V. Gordon
Open, free, daily, except Sunday and Monday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 6.30 to
9.30 p.m. ; closed July 1 to September 15.
Dedicated 1897. There are three departments : Encyclopaedic library, with
1,500 scrapbooks; Reference library of about 2,500 books on arts and trades;
objects arranged in chronological sequence — furniture, textiles, wood carvings,
interiors, decorative panels, etc. Decloux collection of about 500 original draw-
ings for ornament and decoration; Piancastilli collection of 4,000 original
drawings for ornamental decoration.
Over 700 outside workers made over 6,825 copies, studies and designs ; some
1,700 students of the two schools work in the Museum as part of their regular
curriculum. Attendance, 4,120.
DYCKMAN HOUSE, PARK AND MUSEUM
204th Street and Broadway, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Honorary Curators
Bashford Dean Alexander McM. Welch
Open, free, daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; except mornings of Sunday and Monday.
Building erected 1783-85 by William Dyckman, and lived in by his family
until 1868; restored and given to the city in 1916 by two of the descendants,
Mrs. Bashford Dean and Mrs. Alexander McM. Welch in memory of their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac M. Dyckman.
It is the last Dutch farmhouse on Manhattan Island, has been restored to
its early condition and furnished with its original furniture and family belong-
ings. In the garden is the restoration of a Revolutionary Army hut, materials
for which were obtained in the neighboring hillside.
Collections of family furniture, costumes, portraits, china, glass, silver,
Revolutionary documents of local interest, etc., lent by Mrs. Dean and Mrs.
Welch. Archaeological finds from the neighborhood lent by R. P. Bolton.
NEW YORK CITY MUSEUMS 51
HISPANIC SOCIETY OF AMERICA
155th Street, West of Broadway, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Archer M. Huntington. . .President George B. Grinnell Secretary
H. F. Osborn Vice-President Juan Riano Hon. Vice-Pres.
Museum open, free, daily and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Permanent collections of paintings, sculpture, wood carving and other works
of Spanish art. Occasional special exhibitions. Annual meeting in January.
Members limited to 100.
Founded 1904. Building opened 1908 (see Vol. VIII, p. 187). For the ad-
vancement of the study of the Spanish and Portuguese languages, literature,
history and art. The publications (some out of print) number 150 and in-
clude catalogues, reprints and works upon special Hispanic subjects. The
"Revue Hispanique" is issued every two months in Paris ($4 a year). Photo-
graphs of the chief objects have been prepared.
During 1921 a new wing for the photograph collection and publications of
the Society was opened. The photograph collection numbers about 40,000.
►^METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART
Fifth Avenue at 82d Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Robert W. de Forest President Henry Walters 2d Vice-Pres.
Elihu Root 1st Vice-President Howard Mansfield Treasurer
Henry W. Kent, Secretary
Executive Staff
Edward Robinson, Director and Curator of Classical Art.
Joseph Breck, Assistant Director and Curator of Decorative Arts.
Bryson Burroughs, Curator of Paintings.
Albert M. Lythgoe, Curator of Egyptian Art.
Bashford Dean, Curator of Armor.
S. C. Bosch Reitz, Curator of Far Eastern Art.
William M. Ivins, Jr., Curator of Prints.
Elial T. Foote, Assistant Treasurer.
GisELA M. A. Richter, Assistant Curator Classical Art.
Arthur C. Mace and Herbert E. Winlock, Assistant Curators Egyptian Art.
Frances Morris, Meyric R. Rogers, Charles O. Cornelius and C. Louise
Avery, Assistant Curators of Decorative Arts.
William Clifford, Librarian.
Alice L. Felton, Assistant in Charge of Photographs.
Edith R. Abbot, Anna Curtis Chandler, Mrs. Elise P. Carey and Alice
T. Coseo, Museum Instructors.
Theodore Y. Hobby, Keeper Benjamin Altman Collection.
Richard F. Bach, Associate in Industrial Art.
Winifred E. Howe and Robert T. Nichol, General Assistants.
Mildred A. Gash, Assistant in charge of cataloguing.
Juliet W. Robinson, Assistant in charge of Information Desk.
Bessie D. Davis, Assistant in charge of Lending Collection.
Henry F. Davidson, Registrar.
Conrad Hewitt, Superintendent of the Building.
For foundation and history see Vol. XI, p. 232.
Open daily; Saturdays and holidays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Sundays and Christ-
mas Day, 1 to 6 p.m. ; other days 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in winter and 6 p.m. in
summer. Free except Monday and Friday, when admission is 25 cents ; free
at all tirnes to members, copyists and Public School teachers and pupils, sol-
diers, sailors and marines.
Four members of the staff are detailed for expert guidance; the cost is
52 NEW YORK CITY MUSEUMS
Metropolitan Museum of Art — Continued
25 cents a person, with minimum charge of $1 an hour, except for members
and Public School teachers and pupils to who/n this service is free.
Photographic copies of all objects belonging to the Museum (not only paint-
ings, but the objects in every collection) are made by the Museum photog-
rapher and by several firms. Prices range from postals two for five cents
to large colored prints at $10. The publications in print number over sixty
and include catalogues of the various departments, handbooks of special ex-
hibitions, and a history of the Museum; a monthly Bulletin is issued, which
is sent free to members, to others $2 a year and 20 cents a number; a quar-
terly Children's Bulletin is issued at $1 a year, 25 cents a number.
Incorporated 1870. Board meetings, February, April, June, October and
December. Dues, annual members, $10; sustaining, $25; fellowship, $100;
contributing, $250; total membership Dec. 31, 1920, was 9,371.
Collections include the fine arts — painting, sculpture and architecture — as
well as what are usually called decorative or industrial arts. Ancient art in-
cludes Egyptian, Babylonian, Assyrian, Phooenician, Cypriote, Etruscan, Greek
and Roman antiquities. In painting the attempt is made to illustrate the history
of the art from the Middle Ages to the present time, with especial attention
to the work of American artists. The decorative arts include woodwork,
metalwork, ceramics and textiles. The collections represent the East and the
Near East (China, Japan, Persia and Asia Minor), Europe and America.
Special attention is given to American art.
Broadly speaking, the first floor of the Museum is filled with the Egyptian
and classical collections, the casts, arms and armor, musical instruments and
modern sculpture ; the second floor with the art of the East and Near East,
textiles, laces, paintings, including the Altman collection, and prints. The
Pierpont Morgan collection of European decorative arts, chronologically
arranged — the Merovingian period to the nineteenth century — occupies a wing
by itself. The Library and Photograph Departments occupy a separate wing.
A guide to the collections, sold at 10 cents, points out the most interesting or
important objects in the different galleries.
The most important event in the history of the Museum during 1920 was
the celebration of the completion of a half-century of growth by formal
exercises with addresses and the unveiling of tablets commemorative of the
founders and the benefactors of the Museum, and by a loan exhibition of
objects_of the highest merit belonging to the most distinguished collections of
the city. The attendance was the largest of any year except 1909, when the
Hudson-Fulton celebration brought large crowds to the city ; and the attend-
ance of those who came to the Museum for instruction the largest of any
year without exception. The most important additions to the collections of
the Museum, either acquired or first exhibited during the year, were the fol-
lowing : two bequests of great value and interest, one an extensive collection
of objects of Near Eastern art from William Milne Grinnell, the other, ten
important paintings and two unique pieces of French furniture from William
K. Vanderbilt; a remarkable Egyptian "find" of painted wooden funerary
models disclosed at Thebes in the tomb of Mehenkwetre, a dignitary of about
2000 B. C. ; important examples of French eighteenth century woodwork — a
shop-front and a paneled room — the gift of J. Pierpont Morgan; a large pot-
tery Lohan of the T'ang period; two complete suits of horse armor, richly
etched, and originally parcel gilt, from a castle of the Princes Collalto ; the
gift from_ William E. Baillie of his collection of approximately 25,000 book-
plates, believed to be the most important collection of its kind ever made by a
private person in America; and the loan from Ogden Codman for an in-
definite period of his large and important collection of prints and illustrated
books about architecture and interior decoration.
The total number of visitors was 926,908. The cost of operating the Museum
NEW YORK CITY MUSEUMS 53
Metropolitan Museum of Art — Continued
was $797,646.84; the amount available for the payment of this expense— city
appropriation ($312,648.29), income from endowment funds, admission fees,
sales of handbooks, etc.— was $524,120.02, leaving a deficit of $273,526.82.
Acquisitions of the year numbered 11.824, of which 290 were received by
bequest, 3,881 by gift and 7,653 by purchase.
The use of the Museum by special classes is shown in the following table :
Artists and Designers : 1919 1920
Working in Galleries 12,702 14,742
Working in Study Rooms 716 1,120
Individuals, with Instructor 2,626 1.410
Lantern Slide Borrowers 1.161 2,177
Lectures, Museum 15,559 21,033
Story Hours, Museum 27,115 26.401
Lectures and Story Hours given by Societies, etc. . 14.173 15,228
Library Readers 16,259 17,161
Library Photograph Users • 3,614 4,987
Photographers 370 1,069
Schools and Instructors in Museum 11.168 16,037
Museum Instructors in Schools 12,118 12,680
Schools without Instructors 21,712 25,593
During the season of 1920-21 the educational work included free public lec-
tures on Saturday and Sunday afternoons from November to March ; story
hours for the children of members weekly during the same period; another
course of story hours from October to April for all children ; a special course
of gallery conferences on Northern Art in the XV and XVI Centuries for
members and others ; weekly lectures throughout the school year, correlating
with the school curriculum, for teachers and pupils in the high schools of the
city; four courses of study hours for practical workers — designers, buyers and
salespeople ; six lectures for the deaf, three lectures for the blind, and two for
crippled children in the public schools. To a greater extent than before the
Museum co-operated with the public schools, meeting classes in the Museum
and giving lectures in both high and elementary schools. The plan of co-
operation between the New York Training School for Teachers and the Voca-
tional School for Boys and the Museum, was continued, including illustrated
talks in the school and classroom meetings; 55.852 objects — lantern slides, pho-
tographs, casts and textiles in the lending collection — were lent for use outside
the Museum in many places cast of the Mississippi River; 38,392 people — stu-
dents, designers and manufacturers — worked in the galleries, study rooms and
library; and 41,630 children came in classes from the schools.
Educational work in the Museum was conducted by many outsiders, among
them Barnard College. Teachers College, Columbia and New York Universities,
Hunter College, Packer Institute, Cooper Union, and Pratt Institute, the
School Art League and various art schools.
Eight free orchestral concerts were given in the main entrance hall on
the Saturday evenings of January and March by a symphony orchestra under
the conductorship of David Mannes to audiences aggregating 43.628. The
cost of these public concerts was a contribution from several public-spirted
friends of the Museum.
Exhibitions and Special Receptions
May 7 to Oct. 31, 1920— Fiftieth Anniversary Exhibition.
Dec. 15, 1920 to Jan. 30, 1921— Fifth Exhibition of work by manufacturers
and designers showing Museum influence.
Jan. 8 to Feb. 11— Loan Exhibition of War Portraits.
Feb. 13 to May 2— Etched Work of J. Alden Weir.
54 NEW YORK CITY MUSEUMS
Metropolitan Museum of Art — Continued
May 2 to Sept. 15 — French Impressionist and Post-Impressionist Paintings.
May 16 to Sept. 15 — Modern French Prints and Drawings.
June 15 to Oct. 15 — Japanese Sword Guards lent by the Armor and Arms Club.
July 15 to Oct. 31. — Drawings, Woodcuts, and Sketches by Florence Wyman
Ivins.
NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY
170 Central Park West (76th Street to 77th Street), Borough of Manhattan,
New York
John Abeel Weekes President Arthur Curtiss James Cor. Sec.
R. Horace Gallatin Treasurer Stuyvesant Fish Rec. Secretary
Alexander J. Wall, Librarian
For foundation and history see Vol. I, p. 266.
Art Gallery and Museum open free to the public daily 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ;
Sundays 2 to 5 p.m. Library 9 a.m to 5 p.m., Sundays excepted; on holidays
1 to 5 P.M., except Christmas, New Year and Fourth of July.
Library founded 1804; present building erected 1908. Board meetings third
Tuesday of each month; annual in January. Annual dues $10; membership 819.
The collection includes the New York Gallery of Fine Arts, received in
1858; the Bryan Gallery of old masters, presented in 1867 by the late Thomas
J. Bryan; the Durr collection, presented in 1882 by the executors of the late
Louis Durr; the Peter Marie collection of miniatures, presented to the Society
in 1905 ; the Isaac J. Greenwood collection of 405 water-color drawings of
powder horns, presented in 1907; a collection of miniatures of the Bryant
family and manuscript poems by William Cullen Bryant ; and the Audubon
collection of 464 original water-color drawings by John James Audubon.
The gallery consists of 1,076 paintings, of which 325 are portraits.
The Department of Antiquities contains the Abbot collection of Egyptian
antiquities, which includes three mummies of Apis, the sacred bull of the
Egyptians, received by the Society in 1859, and the Nineveh Sculptures, pre-
sented by James Lenox in 1857.
The Library contains 132,806 bound volumes, 151,655 pamphlets and 5,386
volumes of newspapers and colonial papers. There is a large collection of
relics, prints and views of New York City. Lectures and exhibitions.
In June, 1921, the New York Historical Society and the Sons of the Revolu-
tion of the State of New York erected a Liberty Pole in City Hall Park.
NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY
ASTOR, LENOX AND TILDEN FOUNDATION
Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
ART GALLERIES
For foundation see Vol, XI, p. 252.
Open, free, daily 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. ; Sundays 1 to 5 p.m., excepting the Stuart
Room. Two large galleries devoted to the Lenox, Astor and Stuart collec-
tions-of paintings and objects of art.
ART AND PRINTS DIVISION
Frank Weitenkampf, Chief
For development see Vol. XI, p. 252.
Department established 1899. The total number of prints is about 75,000.
There arc special facilities for study in the print room, which adjoins the
art reading room (No. 313). Two or more exhibitions always on view; the
principal one in Print Gallery (Room 321).
A permanent exhibition of processes has been established and is being con-
NEW YORK CITY MUSEUMS 55
New York Public Library — Continued
stantly added to : this shows the making of an etching, a line engraving, a
mezzotint, a wood-engraving, a Japanese color-print, a process block.
Numerous publications at nominal cost; list sent upon request.
Exhibitions, 1920-21: Illustrated books of the past four centuries; Amer-
ican etchings of today; the making of a mezzotint; American lithographs of
today ; the making of a Japanese print ; American wood-block prints of today ;
Series of six exhibitions of French prints (old prints, modern portraits, land-
scapes and animal subjects; Manet, Paris in prints) ; French railway posters;
memorial exhibitions of work by J. Alden Weir, C. F. W. Mielatz, Samuel
Colman, Helen Hyde and C. A. Vanderhoof.
STATEN ISLAND INSTITUTE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
Stuyvesant Place and Wall Street, Saint George, Staten Island, New York
Howard R. Bayne President Agnes L. Pollard Curator
William T. Davis Vice-Pres. Charles W. Leng Secretary
Charles A. Ingalls Treasurer 439 Clove Road, West New
Brighton, S. I., N. Y.
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 265.
Museum open, free, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., except Sunday. Art collections in-
clude Roman and Grecian pottery and some mediaeval bronzes. Museum also
has collections of anthropology, botany, zoology, etc.
Institute founded 1885 ; Public Museum established 1907. Annual meeting
third Saturday in May ; Board meetings first Saturday in October, December,
February and April. Entrance fee $3; annual dues $3. There are 338
members.
The work of the Association includes sectional meetings and special museum
exhibits, afternoon lectures for school children and museum exhibition work
in connection with public schools and civic organizations. The proceedings
are published and a monthly leaflet is issued.
Britton Cottage, at New Dorp, Staten Island, presented to the Association
by Dr. and Mrs. Nathaniel L. Britton in 1915. Local chapters of the Daugh-
ters of the American Revolution given privilege of installing objects and
holding meetings. Members and their friends are admitted free to the cottage ;
to all others admission fee is twenty-five cents.
During 1921 there were 177 lectures and meetings; flower show; extension
lectures in schools. There are Z2) loan exhibits of scientific, historical, and
industrial material.
Exhibitions, 1920-1921: Tercentenary exhibition arranged in cooperation-
with the general committee on museums and libraries, showing books, paint-
ings, prints, photographs and medals ; photographs and original documents
relating to George Washington ; exhibition of rare and old laces.
WASHINGTON HEADQUARTERS ASSOCIATION
Jumel Mansion, West 160th Street and Edgecombe Avenue,
Borough of Manhattan, New York
Mrs. Simon Baruch President Mrs. Joseph K. Butler Cor. Sec.
Mrs. O. M. Bostwick. Vice-President 28 Lefferts PI., Brooklyn.
Mrs. C. St. J. Queck-Berner, William H. Shelton Curator
Treasurer
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 266.
Open free, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day in the year, except that from Novem-
ber to May it closes at 4:30. Acquired by the city 1903; opened as public
rnuseum 1907. It is a museum of Washingtoniana and Colonial and Revolu-
tionary relics. Founded by the Daughters of the American Revolution and
the following chapters have individual rooms with collections : Washington
Heights, Mary Washington, Colonial, Manhattan and Knickerbocker.
56 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUMS
BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
ART GALLERY AND MUSEUM OF BINGHAMTON
PUBLIC LIBRARY
William F. Seward, Custodian
The collection, which is in the art gallery of the Public Library, includes
Indian tools, arrowheads, vessels, etc. ; Iroquois pottery, old deeds, maps,
documents and drawings illustrating pioneer days of Binghamton ; portraits
of some of the pioneers. Exhibitions, 1920-21 : Handicraft exhibition ; exhibi-
tion of posters ; children's book week exhibition ; steel engravings and colored
French posters ; paintings by Edward M. C. Hawkins ; architectural exhibition ;
oil paintings by Edgar Keller.
BUFFALO, N. Y.
HhBUFFALO FINE ARTS ACADEMY
ALBRIGHT ART GALLERY
Delaware Park, Buffalo, N. Y.
Charles Clifton President Henry J, Auer Treasurer
Edward B. Green Vice-President Wjlliam Warren Smith. .Secretary
Mrs. Cornelia B. Sage Quinton, Art Director
For foundation and history see Vol. XI, p. 270.
Open daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., except Sundays, Mondays and holidays,
when the hours are 1 to 5 p.m. Admission free Tuesdays, Thursdays, Sat-
urdays, Sundays and holidays; other days (to non-members) 25 cents. Gal-
leries of old and modern paintings, sculpture, drawings, prints, photographs,
library. Collection of work by American artists.
Organized 1862. Albright Gallery dedicated 1905. Annual meeting first
Wednesday after the first Tuesday in January. Board meetings held quar-
terly on the third Wednesday in January, April, July and October. Perma-
nent invested funds $488,360.14; the income of a little over half is restricted
to the purchase of pictures. Annual dues for "Friends" $5. Total member-
ship 612. 'Academy Notes" published semi-annually. Educational work is
carried on with the public schools and with clubs. Museum extension work
is carried on in the local schools, and also includes the New York State
Normal School. An art school is maintained (see school section). Occa-
sional public lectures and lecture promenades by members of the staff. Total
number of sales from exhibitions held in the Gallery during 1920 was 7Z.
Attendance for the year 1920 was 88,901.
Exhibitions
Sept. 14 to Oct. 3, 1920 — Paintings by Victor Higgins, Ernest L. Blumen-
schien, and Walter Ufer; paintings by Everett L. Bryant; pastels of
Indian dancers by William Penhallow Henderson ; pastels by Charles S.
Kaelin.
Oct. 10 to Nov. 15 — Foreign paintings from the Carnegie Institute Inter-
national Exhibition, supplemented by other foreign works, and a group
of recent paintings by Menard.
Nov. 14 to Nov. 28 — Decorative screens by Robert W. Chanler ; batik decora-
tions ; wood carvings by Charles Haag ; wrought iron by Thomas Goog-
erty ; pottery from Adelaide A. Robineau, Rookwood Pottery Co., etc. ;
tapestries from the Herter Looms.
Dec. 11 to Jan. 3, 1921 — Paintings by F. C. Frieseke; paintings by Maurice
Fromkes ; paintings and etchings by Hayley Lever ; paintings by Jonas
Lie.
Jan. 8 to Jan. 31 — Paintings lent by R. C. and N. M. Vose.
Feb, 5 to Feb. 28 — Twenty-seventh annual exhibition of the Buffalo Society
of Artists; second salon of the Buffalo Camera Club; Architectural
drawings by the associated Buffalo architects of the Buffalo School
Program.
NEW YORK STATE MUSEUMS 57
BUFFALO, N. Y.
Buffalo Fine Arts Academy — Conlinucd
Mar. 12 to Mar. 30 — Paintings by Nicolas Roerich.
Mar. 4 to Mar. 28 — Water colors by American artists.
Apr. 10 to May 1 — Exhibition of British Arts and Crafts.
May 8 to May 22 — Paintings, carved jades and other hard stones, cloisonne
enamels and bronzes from collection of the late Edward R. Bacon.
June 4 to Sept. 6 — Fifteenth annual exhibition of selected paintings by Amer-
ican artists and' a group of small selected bronzes by American sculptors;
collection of early American portraits ; paintings and tapestries collected
by Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Albright.
ELMIRA, N. Y.
4-ARNOT ART GALLERY
235 Lake Street, Elmira
Frederick Collin President Casper G, Decker Treasurer
E. J. Dunn Vice Pres. Burton S. Chamberlin Secretary
Mrs. Jeannette Murdock Diven, Director
Incorporated 1911. Annual meeting in May. Board meetings third Tues-
day in month. Income, $10,000 a year. There are 75 paintings of the Flemish,
Dutch, German and French schools. Lectures are given by the director four
days a week to school children. During 1921 acquired portrait of the donor
of the gallery by August Franzen. Exhibitions were held each month during
1920-21.
HUNTINGTON, N. Y.
HERKSCHER PARK ART MUSEUM
Huntington, Long Island
Frederick W. Webber, Curator
Open daily, during summer from 10 a.m. to 12 m., and 2 to 5 p.m.; Sundays
2 to 5 P.M.; during the winter the museum is open only on Sundays and
holidays, from 2 to 5 p.m.
The museum was the gift to the people of Huntington of Mr. and Mrs.
August Heckscher, and was opened to the public on July 10, 1920.
The collection, which numbers about 150 paintings, includes work by Murillo,
Diaz, Sir Thomas Lawrence, Gerome, Meissonier, Cranach, Beechey, Van
Dyck, Courbet, Edward and Thomas Moran, Troyan, Bierstadt, Inness, Blake-
lock, etc. There are also several pieces of statuary, including "The Rape of
Proserpine" by Girardon.
ITHACA, N. Y.
MUSEUM OF CLASSICAL ARCHEOLOGY
Goldwin Smith Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca
Eugene P. Andrews, Curator
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 274.
Open week days, 9 a.m. to 12 m. and 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Dedicated 1894. The collection consists principally of casts from notable
examples of Greek sculpture; collections of Greek pottery and coins and
replicas of pre-Greek antiquities.
The Museum is used primarily for laboratory instruction. The Curator,
who is also Professor of Archaeology, holds his classes in the Museum and
also gives courses of popular lectures there.
58 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUMS
OYSTER BAY, N. Y. r n ^
LOUIS COMFORT TIFFANY FOUNDATION
ART GUILD
Laurelton Hall, Oyster Bay
Stanley Lothrop. .Resident Director George F. Heydt Sec. -Treasurer
Trustees
Louis Comfort Tiffany, Founder
Robert W. de Forest President George F. Kunz
Daniel Chester French. .Vice-Pres. A. Douglas Nash
Francis C. Jones Charles Tiffany
Edwin H, Blashfield
Advisory Art Committee
Cass Gilbert Barry Faulkner
Harry W. Watrous Frederick Wilson
Robert Vonnoh Gifford Beal
Mrs. W. a. A. Stewart Robert Aitken
Paul Manship Gurdon S. Parker
Philip L. Hale Frederick C. Clayter
(The Founder and artist members of the Board of Trustees are ex-officio
members of this committee.)
Established 1919. The purpose of the institution, which provides an at-
tractive place of residence and convenient working facilities, is to bring to-
gether a group of artists and craftsmen of ability and technical training who
will work out their own particular problems, assisting one another by their
various points of view. The artists who enter the Foundation are encouraged
to devote themselves to the study of nature and every variety of natural growth.
The Foundation maintains a museum, which is open to the public on one
afternoon of each month. The art collections contain objects of sculpture,
painting and industrial arts. The collections are especially rich in examples
of oriental art. (See school section).
POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y.
TAYLOR HALL
Vassar College, Poughkeepsie
Frank L. Babbott, Chairman Art Committee
Oliver S. ToNKS Curator Elizabeth D. Pierce. .Asst. Curator
For foundation see Vol. XII, p. 178.
Dedicated 1915. Six exhibition rooms, reference library, and a studio for
the use of the practical art courses. Monthly exhibition from October to
June of work by notable artists and annual exhibit of student work.
ROCHESTER, N. Y.
►IMMEMORIAL ART GALLERY
University of Rochester
Rush Rhees President Julius M. Wile Bursar
James S. Watson Vice-Pres. George L. HERDLE..Sec. and Director
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 276.
Open week days from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and on Sunday afternoon from
1.30 to 5 P.M. Admission free every day except Friday, when the admission is
25 cents.
Dedicated 1913. Annual meeting second Thursday in April; meetings
second Thursdays in June, October, December, February and April. Mem-
bership supporters, $250 a year ; sustaining, $100 a year ; contributing $25 a
NEW YORK STATE MUSEUMS 59
ROCHESTER, N. Y.
Memorial Art Gallery — Continued
year ; annual $10, and associate $5 a year — the last class being confined to
professional artists and teachers. Membership 300. Maintains an art gal-
lery, art library and lecture room for benefit of the public. Picture story
hour for children bi-monthly during season. Regular monthly exhibitions
during the year. Attendance, 1920-1921, about 40,000.
SKANEATELES, N. Y.
SKANEATELES LIBRARY ASSOCIATION
Lydia a. Cobane, Librarian
Open, free, every day except Sunday.
Barrow Art Gallery opened 1900. Presented to the Library by John D.
Barrow and contains over 300 paintings by him. Also by other American
artists, including Charles Elliott, De Cost Smith, S. Montgomery Roosevelt,
etc.
SOUTHAMPTON, N. Y.
•i-PARRISH MEMORIAL ART MUSEUM
Southampton, Long Island, N. Y.
Samuel L. Parri£,h, President-Treasurer
James Parrish Lee Vice-Pres. Frank P. Hoffman Secretary
For description see Vol. I, p. 233.
Open, free, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m and 2.30 to 5.30 p.m. on week days; 2 to 5.30
P.M. on Sundays, from May to October. During the winter, admission may
be obtained upon application to the caretaker.
A private museum established by Samuel L. Parrish in 1898. Contains
casts of noted antique and Renaissance sculpture; a number of paintings
mostly by unknown Italian artists of the fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries ; about a dozen full-sized copies in oil of some of the best-known
Italian Renaissance paintings; also about 100 framed photographs of paint-
ings of the same period.
A pipe organ installed in the main hall permits and encourages the cultiva-
tion of community music throughout the year.
Attendance during four summer months between 6,000 and 7,000 out of resi-
dent population of about 3,000, which is probably doubled in summer.
During 1920 an annex was built, and opened in the form of a Memorial
Hall. Several exhibitions held during 1920-1921.
SYRACUSE, N. Y.
►J-SYRACUSE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS
Carnegie Library Building, Syracuse, N. Y.
George G. Fryer President Newell B. Woodworth. . . .Treasurer
Salem Hyde Vice-President Fernando A. Carter. . .Dir. and Sec.
Open, free, week days from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Sundays, from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Organized 1896. Trustees' annual meeting first Tuesday in February ; stated
meetings first Tuesday in January, February and November. Income from
the City of Syracuse, $10,000 annually, which is used for maintenance. Attend-
ance during the year was 51,140.
The permanent collection contains paintings by American artists ; casts of
ancient and modern sculpture ; arms and armor ; the original Burlingame
collection of Chinese curios ; examples of Robineau pottery ; a large collec-
tion of mounted birds.
Exhibitions
October, 1920 — Exhibition of laces, cameos and India shawls.
November — Paintings and drawings by Louis Maurice De Monvel.
60 NEW YORK STATE— OHIO MUSEUMS
SYRACUSE, N. Y.
Syracuse Museum of Fine Arts — Continued
December — Water colors by a group of American artists.
January, 1921 — Oil paintings by noted American artists, assembled by the
American Federation of Arts.
February — Paintings by Jonas Lie.
March — Landscapes and portraits by Frank Von der Lancken and Harry Leith-
Ross.
April — Paintings and etchings by Hayley Lever.
May — Exhibition of etchings and interior decorations.
June — Paintings by Maurice Fromkes.
July — Portraits by Orlando Rouland.
August — Antique ecclesiastical vestments, paintings, tapestries and rare em-
broideries.
CINCINNATI, OHIO
►^CINCINNATI MUSEUM ASSOCIATION
Eden Park, Cincinnati
Charles P. Taft, President
C. J. LiviNGOOD Vice-President Edward Goepper Treasurer
Executive Staff
J. H. Gest, Director and Secretary.
Henry J. Koch, Cashier.
Elizabeth Kellogg, Librarian.
H. H. Wessel, Curator of Paintings.
C. J. Barnhorn, Curator of Sculpture.
Philip Hinkle, Curator of American Archaeology.
F. W. Hinkle, Curator of Arms and Armor.
J. W. Bullock, Honorary Curator of Book Plates.
F. V. H. Raymond, Official Photographer.
For foundation and history see Vol. XI, p. 284.
Open week days, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m ; Sundays, 1 to 6 p.m.; in winter it closes
at 4.30 p.m. Admission is free on Saturdays, ten cents on Sundays, twenty-
five cents on other days or ten cents by purchasing ten tickets for one dollar.
Teachers with classes from schools admitted free at any time.
Incorporated 1881. Annual meeting first Monday in March; Board meet-
ings second Tuesday of each month. Annual dues, $10; membership, 173.
The collections embrace : the graphic arts — painting, drawing, etching, etc. —
the most notable being the collection of contemporary American painting,
which includes one gallery devoted to the work of Frank Duveneck and one
to that of Robert Blum ; sculpture — casts of Egyptian, Assyrian, Greek, Roman,
Gothic, Renaissance and Modern works ; also original modern sculptures ;
metal work — originals and reproductions of silver and goldsmiths' works;
arms and armor ; textiles— Oriental and European, including an historical
collection of lace and an important series of Indian shawls ; also a collection
of costumes from various sources, but more particularly American of the last
hundred years; ceramics — Oriental, European and American, including the
Rookwood historical collection ; musical instruments from all countries ; and
over 30,000 specimens of American archaeology and ethnology.
An art school is maintained (see school section). There is a large refer-
ence library in the museum and a small circulating library for the use of
students ; in connection with the library various classes in the history of art
are conducted. Expert guidance and instruction are given free to classes
visiting the Museum. Lantern slides are circulated among the public schools
with accompanying explanatory notes.
OHIO MUSEUMS 61
CINCINNATI, OHIO
Cincinnati Museum Association — Conliniicd
During 1920 total income was $84,719.35; 11 objects were purchased; 15,057
objects lent; attendance about 51,000; the Museum owns 90,596 objects; 5,539
bound volumes and 12,173 pamphlets in the library.
Acquisitions, 1920-21 : "An Arrangement in Pink and Purple," by Whistler ;
"Melting Snows," by J. Alden Weir; "Woman with Veil," by Duveneck;
"Beatrice," by Robert Henri ; "Hawk's Nest," by Daniel Garber ; "Eastern
Storm, Rockport Harbor," by C. S. Kaelin; "Niagara Falls," by Godgrey
Frankenstein ; "Madonna, St. Catherine and St. Dominick," XV Century,
Siena ; "Old Docks," by H. H. Wessel ; three drawings by Degas ; prints, guns
and various war relics given by the French Republic ; many additions to textile
collections.
Exhibitions
October, 1920 — Official Greek Government exhibition; pastels by S. S. Kaelin.
November — French Government exhibition of paintings, sculpture, etc.
December — Work by the Duveneck Society of Painters and Sculptors.
January, 1921 — Paintings by Gaston La Touche ; etchings by Lester G. Hornby ;
paintings by F. C. Frieseke.
March — French paintings, mostly from private collections in Cincinnati ;
Chinese textiles, wood engravings and drawings by August Lepere.
April — Italian paintings from Giotto to Titian and Tintoretto.
May to September — Twenty-eighth annual exhibition of American Art.
CLEVELAND, OHIO
i^CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART
East Boulevard, Wade Park, Cleveland
J. H. Wade President John H. Hord Treasurer
Ralph King 1st Vice-Pres. Hermon A. Kelley Secretary
John L, Severance 2d Vice-Pres. Rockefeller Bldg., Cleveland.
Executive Staff
Frederic Allen Whiting, Director.
J. Arthur MacLean, Curator of Oriental Art.
William M. Milliken, Curator of Decorative Arts,
Lawrence Park, Curator of Colonial Art.
Frank J. Pool, Registrar and Assistant Secretary.
Olive Cook Whiting, Assistant to the Director.
Dorothy L. Blair, Secretary to the Director.
Rossiter Howard, Curator, Department of Educational Work.
Gertrude Underhill, in charge of Educational Work for Adults.
Louise M. Dunn, in charge of Educational Work for Children.
Ruth Field Ruggles, in charge Extension Exhibits.
Henry Turner Bailey, Advisor.
Thomas Whitney Surette, in charge of Musical Arts,
William McC. McKee, Librarian and Acting Curator of Prints.
E, A, Ruggles, in charge Sales Department,
Margaret Numsen, Membership Secretary.
L T, Frary, Publicity Secretary.
James F. McCabe, Superintendent of Building and Grounds.
For foundation, see Vol. XI, p. 289.
Open daily, 9 a.m to 5 p.m., except Wednesday and Friday, 9 a.m to 10 p.m.;
Sunday, 1 p.m. to 10 p,m. Admission fee 25 cents on Mondays, Tuesdays,
Thursdays and Fridays to 6 p.m.; free from 6 to 10 p.m. Friday; other days
free, including Sundays and holidays (gallery closed Thanksgiving day, Christ-
mas Day and July 4). Free admission is granted at all times to members and
62 OHIO MUSEUMS
CLEVELAND, OHIO
Cleveland Museum of Art — Continued
their families, students and children; those under 7 years must be accom-
panied by an adult.
Incorporated 1913. Museum building opened 1916. Annual meeting second
Monday in November ; board meetings monthly. Annual dues, $10 ; sustaining,
$25; life, $100. Membership, about 5,000. Bulletin published ten times a year.
Permanent collections include tapestries and armor; classical art; sculpture
and iron work in Garden Court ; prints ; Italian Renaissance paintings ; early
American paintings; modern paintings of all schools; Egyptian, Japanese,
Chinese and Near Eastern art ; textiles and handicrafts. The collections espe-
cially emphasize Colonial art, armor, Oriental art, and early Italian paintings.
Three galleries are reserved for temporary exhibitions.
There is a reference library of works on art, with current art magazines ;
open week days from 9 a.m to 5 p.m. During lecture season is open on Sunday
from 3 to 6 p.m., and on Wednesday until 8 p.m.
The educational work covers a broad field. Lectures are given, on the
average, two or three times a week during the season. Children's entertain-
ments are given on Saturday afternoons and interpretative talks on Sunday
afternoons. Clubs and conventions are invited to the Museum. Docent service
free. About four classes of the public school children of the seventh and
eighth grades come each day for study and instruction under the supervisor
of drawing stationed at the Museum by the school board, and there are special
classes for talented students from these classes. In addition there are frequent
visits from public and private school classes. Extension exhibits are main-
tained in the Branch Libraries of the city each month.
During the season of 1920-21, lecture courses were given on "Oriental Art"
and "Some Phases of American Art," by specialists in those fields. "The Ap-
preciation of Chamber Music," by Thomas Whitney Surette, illustrated by
members of the Cleveland Symphony Orchestra ; "Landscape Architecture," by
seven experts on that subject; "Great Masters of Painting Represented in the
Museum Collections," by Henry Turner Bailey, and a number of lectures on
miscellaneous subjects. Two accredited courses were given for college stu-
dents on "The Appreciation of Beauty," by Henry Turner Bailey, and "The
Appreciation of Music," by Thomas Whitney Surette and Walter S. Pope.
The Department of Musical Arts aims to create a correct appreciation for
good music. Interpretative pictures are given which are illustrated by artists
of recognized ability; periods of singing are held in the lecture hall on Sunday
afternoons; classes in singing are arranged for members' children on Saturday
mornings and short periods of singing are given the public school children
who come to the Museum. A memorial endowment of $250,000 has made
possible a considerable development of this work and an order has been placed
for a pipe organ which will be installed above the Garden Court.
Important accessions, 1920-21 : "La Sortie du Bain," by Mary Cassatt ;
"Mrs. Collyear," by Sir Joshua Reynolds; "Les Bergers," by Rene Menard;
"Mrs. Mason," by Gilbert Stuart; marble relief by Bartollomeo Ballano; wal-
nut settee and armchair, English, XVIII Century ; two pieces XV Century
stained glass ; complete set, in duplicate, of French Government war medals ;
about 500 pieces of lace ; about 550 etchings and other prints ; about 100 Japa-
nese prints ; 134 pieces Japanese pottery and Chinese porcelain ; collection of
Peruvian pottery; collection of Chinese jade and porcelain; Japanese enamel,
pottery and metal work ; collection of Korean pottery ; collection of North
American Indian blankets ; collection of miscellaneous Japanese items.
The Print Club of Cleveland was organized in 1920 for the purpose of
acquiring "prints for the Cleveland Museum of Art, with the object of aiding
in the growth of a Print Department for the Museum, to stimulate an interest
in and an appreciation for prints in the community, and to promote education
OHIO MUSEUMS 63
CLEVELAND, OHIO
Cleveland Museum of Art — Continued
in respect to them." The club has been instrumental in securing about 550
prints during the year and has arranged lectures.
Statistics for the year ending June 20, 1921 : Objects acquired for the col-
lection, 2,285 by gift, 722 by purchase; 3,938 were loaned. Library accessions
included 849 books, 1,395 photographs, 1,740 lantern slides, 447 post cards and
5000 clippings; 4,011 readers visited the library and 5,610 lantern slides were
loaned. Educational Department: 252 exhibits placed in libraries, etc.; 35,105
attended lectures, including 12,100 children and 23,005 adults; 29,648 received
docent service; 89 classes of adults and 792 classes of school children worked
in the Mijseum, the attendance being 22,469 ; 60 clubs met for art study ; dele-
gates from 17 conventions were taken through the galleries. The total attend-
ance was 302,027.
Exhibitions
July 1 to Oct. 15, 1920 — Etchings, lithographs, etc., by August Lepere.
July 3 to Sept. 13 — American paintings owned in Cleveland.
Sept. 17 to Oct. 19 — Paintings, sculpture and posters from the Cleveland School
of Art.
Oct. 15 to Dec. 11 — Lithographs, by Henri Fantin-Latour.
Oct. 24 to Dec. 6 — Japanese prints,
Dec. 8 to Dec. 29 — Printed books and other printed matter.
Dec. 11 to Jan. 11, 1921— Prints of the Barbizon School.
Dec. 11 to Jan. 12 — Prints of the Modern French School.
Dec. 29 to Apr. 4 — The Charles G. King, Jr. collection of Musical Instruments.
Jan. 8 to Feb. 14 — ^Hand illuminations and printing.
Jan. 12 to Mar. 1 — Paintings by A. H. Knighton Hammond.
Jan. 15 to Mar. 3 — Etchings, drypoints, etc., by Frank W. Benson.
Feb. 16 to Mar. 28 — Paintings by contemporary American artists.
Mar. 4 to Apr. 7— Etchings by Otto H. Bacher.
Mar. 30 to Apr. 21 — Paintings, drawings, etc., by Louis Maurice Boutet de
Monvel.
Apr. 2 to June 6 — Third annual exhibition of work by Cleveland artists and
craftsmen.
Apr. 6 to Apr. 27 — Paintings by Gaston La Touche.
Apr. 8 to Apr. 29 — Early Italian engravings, XV and XVI Century.
June to September — Modern Japanese paintings by members _ of Nippon
Bijutsu-in, Tokyo, Japan; paintings by contemporary American artists;
British arts and crafts ; etchings, drypoints, etc., by Troy Kinney, Arthur
Heintzelman and Lester Hornby.
DAYTON, OHIO
4-DAYTON MUSEUM OF ARTS
Monument Avenue and St. Clair Street, Dayton
Mrs. H. G. Carnell President Dan Blau Treasurer
B. B. Thresher Vice-President Mrs. Robert Patterson. .. .Secretary
1115 Oak wood Ave., Dayton.
Reorganized in 1919; new building opened in 1920. Annual meeting in
April ; board meetings third Tuesday of each month. Annual dues, active, $2 ;
sustaining, $10; contributing, $25; friends, $50; life, $500; membership, 309.
Lectures on art given. School maintained. Amount of sales during season,
about $6,000.
Exhibitions
October, 1920 — Paintings by Jaime Carret.
November — Memorial exhil)ition of paintings by Henry Golden Dearth.
December — Etchings lent by Keppel.
January, 1921 — Paintings by American artists.
February — Taos paintings.
64 OHIO MUSEUMS
DAYTON, OHIO
Dayton Museum of Arts — Continued
March — Leigh Hthographs and loan exhibition.
April — Paintings by Robert Henri.
May — Exhibition of local architecture, and high school exhibition.
June — Work of students of Dayton Museum.
July — 'Exhibition of landscape architecture.
OBERLIN, OHIO
DUDLEY PETER ALLEN MEMORIAL ART MUSEUM
Oberlin College, Oberlin
Clarence Ward, Director
Building dedicated 1917. The museum is open free and its contents are the
property of the college. The collection is made up of objects formerly in the
Olney Art Gallery, also a collection of Oriental rugs, Japanese and Chinese
vases and pictures, Rookwood pottery ; a number of paintings and a collection
of casts, all of which are the gifts of benefactors to the college.
TOLEDO, OHIO
HhTOLEDO MUSEUM OF ART
Scott Place, Toledo
Edward D. Libbey President Isaac E. Knisely Treasurer
William Hardee 1st Vice-Pres. Charles A. Schmettau Secretary
Arthur J. Secor 2d Vice-Pres, Irving E. Macomber Asst. Sec.
Executive Staff
George W. Stevens, Director.
Nina Spalding Stevens, Assistant Director.
Blake-More Godwin, Curator.
C. Justus Wilcox, Assistant Treasurer.
Elisabeth Jane Merrill, Supervisor of Education.
Mrs. Caroline Ransom Williams, Honorary Curator of Egypt-
ology.
LiNA C. Keith, in charge of Music.
Molly C. Ohl, Secretary to Assistant Director.
Nell L. Jaffe, Secretary to Curator.
EuLA Lee Anderson, Publicity.
Julia B. Hedborg, Bursar.
Morrison R. Van Cleve, Supervisor of Nature Study.
Mrs. Grace Ri-ioades Dean, Instructor in Graphic Arts.
Miriam R. Harris, Instructor in Theory of Design.
Maude Ide Streeter, Instructor in Applied Design.
William B. Campbell, Superintendent of Buildings.
Charles Foreman, Superintendent of Grounds.
W. H. Steffins, Home Gardens.
For foundation and history, see Vol. XI, p. 295.
Open daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. ; Sundays and holidays, 1 to 5 p.m. Admission
free Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday and holidays; other times, 25
cents ; free at all times to members and their families and to school children
and study clubs. Permanent collections include paintings, sculpture, prints,
ceramics, glass, textiles. Oriental art, Egyptian antiquities, early printed books
and manuscripts.
Incorporated, 1901; building erected, 1911. Annual meeting, second Wednes-
day in January. Annual dues, associate members, $5; active, $10; sustaining,
$25 to $500; total membership, 2,100. During 1920 the total attendance was
113.960.
The most important feature of the Museum is its educational work with
OHIO MUSEUMS 65
TOLEDO, OHIO
Toledo Museum of Art — Continued
the children and adults of Toledo, carried on both in the Museum and outside,
through the schools, clubs, libraries and other organizations. These activities
include : art history classes, weekly concerts for adults, art lectures and lecture
recitals for high school and university students and adults, music hours for
children, classes in the rudiments of music for children, story hours for chil-
dren on the permanent collections, temporary exhibitions, and the artists and
their works, on Saturday and Sunday educational motion pictures, nature study
classes for adults and children, weekly evening lectures and instruction and
guidance in the galleries, all free. The total enrollment for 1920 in the
Museum's free school of design was 1,218 students, including children and
adults. There are classes in Theory of Design and Applied Design and
Graphic Arts on week days, including Saturdays and on two evenings each
week. Numerous other activities include the Museum Bird Club with 15,000
members.
Principal acquisitions, 1920-21: Collection of Amerind objects; 464 pieces
of early American glass ; "Black Angel Fish," water color, by Stephen Haweis ;
23 etchings, including Rembrandt's "Three Trees," "The Virgin and Child"
and "Knight, Death and the Devil," by Diirer ; "The Little Forge," by Jacque ;
"A Sunset in Ireland," by Haden ; "David Playing the Harp Before Saul," by
Lucas Van Leyden ;_ "Souvenir of Tuscany," by Corot; "The Doorway," by
Whistler, and 3 etchings by Millet ; 5 Greek vases ; 3 pieces of Persian pottery ;
2 Assyrian reliefs ; 21 early Spanish, French and English bindings ; "Shrine
of the Rain Gods," by E. Irving Couse, and many standard works on art and
archaeology.
Exhibitions
October, 1920 — Lithographs by Honore Daumier, fifth annual exhibition of con-
temporary. American bookplates; sketches by Thomas S. Parkhurst, David
L. Stine, Benjamin A. Cratz and George W. Stevens.
November — Paintings by George Oberteuff er ; bronze busts by Jo Davidson ;
photographs of domestic architecture ; Whistler etchings and lithographs.
December — Paintings by Martha Walter ; etchings by Arthur W. Heintzelman ;
batik scarfs; lithographs and etchings by Whistler.
January, 1921 — Paintings by Hayley Lever; photographs of interior decora-
tions ; paintings and drawings by H. I. Stickroth.
February — Water colors by American artists ; water color portraits of children
by Elinor M. Barnard.
March — Greek photographs ; paintings by Seven Canadian artists ; paintings
by the Mahoning Society of Artists.
April and May — Fourth annual exhibition of the Toledo Federation of Art
Societies ; exhibition of work of the Museum School of Design.
June to Septem.ber— Tenth annual exhibition of selected paintings by American
artists.
YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO
►I-BUTLER ART INSTITUTE
524 Wick Avenue, Youngstown
J. G. Butler, Jr Pres.-Treas. John W. Ford Secretary
Margaret Evans Director 39 Madison Ave., Youngstown.
May L. Wiesen, Assistant Director
Open week days 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Sundays and holidays, 2 p.m.; Sundays
and holidays, 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Established 1919, by J. G. Butler, Jr., and given by him to the City of
Youngstown. The building was designed by McKim, Mead and White, and is
built of Georgia marble in the style of the early Italian Renaissance. It con-
66 OHIO— OREGON— PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUMS
YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO •
Butler Art Institute — Continued
tains the private collection of paintings of Mr. Butler, the majority of which
are by American artists. Special attention is given to educational work with
children, and in 1921 an art school was opened. (See School Section,) Lec-
tures and musicals are given, and exhibitions are changed every two weeks,
PORTLAND, ORE.
i^PORTLAND ART ASSOCIATION
Fifth and Taylor Streets, Portland
William M. Ladd President Charles F. Adam Treasurer
WiNSLOw Ayer Vice-President Anna B. Crocker Secretary
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 300.
The Museum open week days, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays and holidays (except
Christmas and the Fourth of July), from 2 to 5 p.m. Admission fee, 25
cents ; free the afternoons of Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday
and holidays.
Organized 1892. Building erected 1905. Annual meeting in February;
Board meetings second Monday of each month. Annual dues, $10; annual
student's ticket, $2.50 ; life membership, $100 ; membership, 350.
Collections include 14,955 Braun carbon photographs of noted paintings and
drawings; 107 Arundel chromolithographs; 367 books on art; electrotypes of
Greek and Roman coins ; American medals and bronzes ; 25 oil paintings by
European and American painters and one water color ; 1 Chinese painting ; 90
objects of art, including Rhodian pottery, Chinese porcelains, jades, lacquers,
etc., and over 1200 lantern slides.
Systematic instruction is carried on for public school pupils. Numerous
lectures given ; daily visits of school children. An Art School is maintained
in the Museum Building (see school section). During 1920-21 ten exhibitions
were held.
NEW BRIGHTON, PA.
MERRICK FREE ART GALLERY, MUSEUM AND LIBRARY
E. D. Merrick, Director
Founded 1865; buildings erected 1867, 1888 and 1901. Art department in-
cludes 5,000 prints and engravings; 600 oil paintings, about half being by
E. D. Merrick, balance by European and American artists. Open free to
public week days, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
NATIONAL MUSEUM, INDEPENDENCE HALL GROUP
Independence Square, Philadelphia
Wilfred Jordan, Curator
Open, free, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily; Sundays, 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Organized July 4, 1876. The group consists of the State House, Congress
Hall, Old City Hall and the East and West Wings, forming a public museum
and art gallery. Owns collection of portraits and relics bearing on the his-
tory of the United States from earliest times to 1800. The collection includes
369 paintings and 40 pastels; chiefly of Colonial and Revolutionary characters.
Congress Hall, one of the buildings in the group, was restored in 1913 and
contains, in addition to the permanent collection, a loan exhibition of water
colors by J. L. G. Ferris depicting scenes in American history. Docent serv-
ice. Issues historic bulletins free to public. Special exhibitions on historical
subjects during the winter for school children. In May, 1920, held exhibition
of official photographs of the Great War made by the United States Signal
Corps.
PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUMS 67
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
►^PENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY OF THE FINE ARTS
Broad and Cherry Streets, Philadelphia
John Frederick Lewis President George H. McFadden Treasurer
Arthur H. Lea Vice-President John Andrew Myers Secretary
Eleanor B. Barker, Curator of Schools.
Arthur H. Lea, Chairman Committee on Instruction.
D. Roy Miller, Resident Manager, Chester Springs Summer School.
Clement B. Newbold, Chairman Committee on Exhibitions.
For foundation and history see Vol. I, p. 330, and Vol. XI, p. 309.
Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. week days ; 1 to 5 p.m. Sundays. Permanent collec-
tions free ; fee for special exhibitions.
Founded 1805. Board meetings, monthly, from October to June; annual in
February. Annual dues. $10 ; membership, 4.250.
Permanent collection of early American portraits ; Gibson collection of nine-
teenth century foreign paintings ; contemporary American paintings and sculp-
ture; collection of portraits of artists by artists; Temple collection of modern
American paintings ; Phillips collection of 60,000 old prints. Gallery talks by
artists and critics during exhibitions ; special talks to public school students.
Frequent lectures given. Art school maintained (see school section).
The Temple collection purchase was "The Golden Screen," by Robert Susan ;
the Lambert Fund purchases were "A Fishing Port," by Frank H. Kidder ;
"The Old Antique Shop." by Richard M. Kimbel ; "The Circus," by Edith
McMurtie; "The Easter Window," by George Biddle.
Exhibitions and Awards
Nov. 7 to Dec. 12, 1920 — Eighteenth annual exhibition of Philadelphia Water
Color Club, and nineteenth annual exhibition of Pennsylvania Society of
Miniature Painters. Beck prize awarded to F. Walter Taylor ; Philadelphia
water color prize of $200 to John R. Frazier. The Dana gold medal to
M. W. Zimmerman.
Feb. 6 to Mar. 27, 1921 — 116th annual exhibition of paintings and sculpture.
Edward T. Stotesbury prize of $1,000 awarded to William M. Paxton for
his group of paintings ; Temple gold medal to Leopold Seyffert for "The
Model"; Lippincott prize ($300) to Irving Couse for "The Chant to the
Rain God" ; Mary Smith prize ($100) to Katherine Patton for "Deep in
the Woods" ; Jennie Sesnan gold medal to Charles Morris Young for
"Wind on the Sound"; Beck gold medal to George Bellows for "Eleanor,
Joan and Anna" ; Widener Memorial gold medal to Evelyn Beatrice Long-
man for "The Future"; Philadelphia prize ($250) to picture receiving the
most votes by visitors to the exhibition during the week — $150 to artist
and $100 for scholarship in the schools— to William M. Paxton for "Nude
Girl Combing Her Hair."
Apr. 2 to Apr. 30 — Portraits of distinguished leaders of the American and
Allied Nations, by American artists, circulated by The American Federation
of Arts.
Apr. 9 to Apr. 30 — Paintings and sculpture by artists of Switzerland.
Apr. 16 to May 15 — Paintings and drawings by American artists showing the
Later Tendencies in Art.
PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUM AND SCHOOL OF INDUSTRIAL ART
Museum, Memorial Hall, Fairmount Park; Schools Broad and Pine Streets,
Philadelphia, Pa.
John D. McIlhenny President Charles T. Patton Asst. Treas.
John Story Jenks 1st Vice-Pres. Huger Elliott Principal of
John G. Carruth 2d Vice-Pres. School.
James Butterworth Treasurer Charles H. Winslow Secretary
68 PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUMS
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Art — Continued
Museum Staff
Langdon Warner, Director
Samuel W. Woodhouse, Jr., Keeper of the Collections.
Curator and Lecturer.
Catherine F. Woodhouse, Registrar,
For foundation and history see Vol. XI, p. 311.
Admission to Museum is free. Opening hours : Mondays, closed ; other
week days, 9.30 a.m. ; Sundays, 1 p.m ; closing hour in summer 5 p.m. on
week days and 6 p.m. Sundays; in winter closes a half hour before sunset.
Organized in 1877. Annual meeting, second Monday in June ; Board meet-
ing, second Thursday in each month from September to June, and second
Monday in June. Annual dues, $10. Membership, 1,560.
The art collections include the following departments : Greco-Roman (clas-
sical), Egyptian, arms and armor, ceramics, enamels, furniture, glass, ivories,
lacquers, textiles, woodwork, metal work, numismatics. Oriental art, library.
Among the more important special collections are those of American pottery
and porcelain and American glass.
An Annual Report and a Bulletin, appearing three times a year, are issued ;
several Handbooks and Art Primers on special subjects. The Museum staff
supplies guides and instructors for classes or organizations, on application,
without charge. A Bureau of Identification is maintained, where art objects
may be sent or brought for identification. Numerous scholarships and prizes
are awarded.
PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART
127 City Hall, Philadelphia
E. T. Stotesbury President Sidney W. Keith Treasurer
Eli Kirk Price Vice-President Thomas S. Martin Secretary
Eli Kirk Price, Chairman of Art Museum Committee.
Joseph E. Widener, Chairman, Wilstach Bequest.
Under control of Fairmount Park Cornmission
The Museum Building is now in course of preparation on a raised terrace
facing the Plaza at the end of the Parkway leading from City Hall.
UNIVERSITY MUSEUM
University of Pennsylvania, 33d and Spruce Streets, Philadelphia
C. C. Harrison President Jane M. McHugh Secretary
F. C. Morgan Treasurer G. B. Gordon Director
Open, free, to the public, week days 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. ; Sundays, 2 to 6 p.m.
Sections : Babylonian, Egyptian, Mediterranean, Oriental, Anthropological.
Organized 1889; first section of Museum opened in 1899; second section
opened in 1916. Annual meeting in December ; Board, third Friday of each
month except July and August. Annual dues, $10; sustaining, $25; contribut-
ing, $100; membership, 640.
Total value of accessions during 1920 was $95,285 ; number of visitors, June,
1920, to June, 1921, was 89,190.
Two expeditions are at work abroad. Exhibition of Arabic Art, Primitive
Art and Indian Basketry opened on January 15, 1921. Illustrated lectures
given for adults and also for school children from October to June.
PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUMS 69
PITTSBURGH, PA.
^CARNEGIE INSTITUTE
Schenley Park, Pittsburgh
Samuel H. Church President James H. Reed Treasurer
John D. Shafer Vice-President A. K. Oliver Secretary
FINE ARTS DEPARTMENT
Fine Arts Committee
George E. Shaw, Chairman J. D. Hailman
Taylor Allderdice John L. Porter
W. S. Arbuthnot a. W. Mellon
S, H. Church W. H. Robertson
William Frew A. Bryan Wall
Executive Staff
John W. Beatty, Director of Fine Arts.
Homer Saint Gaudens, Assistant Director.
Edward Duff Balken, Curtor of Prints.
John O'Connor, Jr., Business Manager.
Helen M. Beatty, Educational Department and Editor of Publications.
Anna M. McCracken, Docent.
For foundation and history see Vol. XI, p. 323.
Galleries open free, daily, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. ; Sundays, 2 to 6 p.m. The
permanent collection contains modern paintings, drawings and prints ; bronzes ;
sculpture in marble; and casts of classic and modern sculpture and of
architecture.
Founded 1896. The Carnegie Institute is now composed of the Department
of Fine Arts, the Museum, the Library and the Carnegie Institute of Tech-
nology. The Department of Fine Arts, the Museum, the Library and the Car-
negie Husic Hall occupy the same building. Endowment fund for the Depart-
ment of Fine Arts gives an annual income of $100,000.
Annual International Exhibitions of Paintings are held each spring, ^ and
other special exhibitions are presented throughout the year. The Institute
maintains a Children's Museum of Art for exhibitions, lectures, and other
activities of interest to children; courses of lectures for adults are also pre-
sented.
There is regular co-operation between the public school system of Pitts-
burgh and the Carnegie Institute, whereby the eighth grades of the public
schools, comprising about 5,000 children, are sent for three afternoons each
year to the Institute for instruction. The school board voted the necessary
funds for the payment of carfares and the Superintendent of Schools has made
this instruction a part of the required work. During 1920-21 about 1,500 chil-
dren from the parochial schools and about 1,000 children from schools in
nearby towns also came three times for this instruction, which is always given
by a museum instructor. Three lessons on the appreciation of art, one on
painting, one on sculpture and the third on architecture, have been prepared
for use in this work. These lessons have been published by the Department of
Fine Arts of Carnegie Institute.
Guidance in the galleries is free to all visitors. A School of Design is
maintained as part of the Carnegie Institute of Technology (see school
section).
Exhibitions
April 29 to June 1, 1920— Etchings by D. Y. Cnnicion
June 1 to Oct. 15 — Japanese prints.
July 1 to Oct. 1 — Extension cases.
Oct. 2 to Dec. 1— Silhouettes.
70 PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUMS
PITTSBURGH, PA.
Carnegie Institute — Continued
Oct. 22 to Nov. 20 — Exhibition of work by the Associated Artists of Pitts-
burgh.
Nov. 5 to Dec. 15 — Modern etchings.
Dec. 1 to Dec. 14 — Work by children of Neighborhood Art School, Greenwich
house, New York City.
Dec. 8 to Feb. 7, 1921 — Drawings by Boutet de Monvel.
Dec. 13 to Dec. 31 — Recent accessions.
Dec. 18 to Feb. 5 — Sculpture and paintings of animals by Charles Livingston
Bull.
Jan. 8 to Feb. 7 — Etchings by Anders Zorn.
Feb. 5 to Mar. 14 — Sculpture and paintings of animals by Frank W. Benson.
Feb. 15 to May 17 — Early line engravings.
Mar. 2 to Mar. 31 — Eighth annual Pittsburgh Salon of Photography.
Mar. 15 to Apr. 28 — Water colors by F. Luis Mora.
Apr. 28 to June 30 — Twentieth International Exhibition of Paintings.
May 18 to Sept. 1 — Lithographs by J. McN. Whistler.
READING, PA.
READING PUBLIC MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY
Reading
J, Newton Rhoads President Haery P. Yost Vice-President
Levi W. Men gel. Director
Museum established 1905 ; Art Gallery 1913. .Reading School District pays
all maintenance expenses, but accessions are made by public contributions
and private donations. During 1920-21 paintings by R. B. Farley, George
Sotter and the George De B. Keim collection, including many examples by
Corot, Diaz, Daubigny, Dupre, Ziem, Rousseau, Cazin and others, were pre-
sented to or purchased for the Museum.
Permanent art collection consists of about 300 paintings by American and
foreign artists Greco-Roman pottery, terra cotta, porcelain, glass and bronzes.
Museum collection embraces commercial and natural history material ; collec-
tion of 50,000 specimens of butterflies.
Free public lectures and school lectures. Photographs and small collections
are circulated among the schools.
SCRANTON, PA.
EVERHART MUSEUM OF
NATURAL HISTORY, SCIENCE, AND ART
R. N. Davis, Curator
Organized 1907. Chiefly natural history museum. Art department not yet
organized.
STATE COLLEGE, PA.
MUSEUM OF INDUSTRIAL AND FINE ARTS
OF THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE
A. L. Kocher, Director
Organized 1916. Has permanent collection of paintings by 49 Pennsylvania
artists; numerous prints and 30 pieces of sculpture. Acquisitions, 1920-21:
"Coast of Brittany," by Edward Redfield ; "Spring Time," by Emil Walter;
"Afternoon Sunlight," by Will Coffee; "The Rising Woman," plaster cast by
George Gray Barnard. "
Exhibitions : Nov. 20 to Dec. 8, 1920, water colors by Bertha Perrie ; Jan. 10
to Jan. 29, 1921, American photography, circulated by The American Federa-
tion of Arts; May 1 to May 15, oil paintings by Margaret Law; May 20 to
June 12, water colors by members of the Philadelphia Water Color Society.
RHODE ISLAND MUSEUMS 71
PROVIDENCE, R. I.
ANNMARY BROWN MEMORIAL
21 Brown Street, Providence
Arthur L, Brown President Margaret B. Stillwell Curator
R. H. I. Goddard Vice-President Edwin A. Burlingame Secretary
Walter F. Angell Treasurer
Open free to the public Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, 10 a.m.
to 4 P.M.; summer, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Dedicated 1907. It was the private collection of Gen. Rush C. Hawkins.
The first room contains about 540 examples of printing earlier than 1500;
beyond are paintings. The rooms terminate with a bronze door behind which
is the marble crypt with the tomb of Mrs. Hawkins.
HhRHODE ISLAND SCHOOL OF DESIGN
11 Waterman Street, Providence
Museum
Mrs. Gustav Radeke President Stephen O. Metcalf Treasurer
Theodore Francis Green, Vice-Pres. G. Alder Blumer Secretary
Executive Staff
L. Earle Rowe, Director.
Roger Oilman, Dean.
Lena M. Danforth, Registrar.
Mary Shakespeare -Puech, Librarian.
Sybil A. Fowler, Museum Attendant.
Charles M. Parker, Supt. of Buildings.
For foundation and history, see Vol. XI, p. ?>2>2.
Open to the public daily (except Thanksgiving Day, Christmas and the
Fourth of July) ; July 1st to September 7th from 1 to 5 p.m. on week days
and 2 to 5 p.m. on Sundays; from September 7th to July 1st, from 10 a.m.
to 5 P.M. week days and 2 to 5 p.m. on Sundays. The Pendleton Collection
is open from 2 to 5 p.m daily. Admission to the Museum on Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays is 25 cents ; other days free.
Incorporated 1877. Corporation meeting first Wednesday in June ; Trustees'
meetings second Wednesday of October, January, April and June. Dues :
Annual members, $3; governing, $10; life, $100; total membership, 717.
The Museum contains paintings and engravings, casts and originals of the
masterpieces of classic and Renaissance sculpture; Greek vases; Japanese and
other pottery; metal work, lacquer and textiles; Chinese painting and sculp-
ture ; old Italian paintings and sculpture ; Persian miniatures, pottery and iron
work. The Colonial House contains the Pendleton collection of antique fur-
niture, pottery, textiles and painting.
Educational work is carried on in co-operation with Brown University and
the public schools. There is docent service in the galleries each Sunday,
December to April, inclusive. By arrangement with the city and State authori-
ties special docent service is given to the pupils of the grammar schools by
appointment as part of their school work. Free public lectures are given in
Memorial Hall. Library closed during June, July and August. A year book
and quarterly Bulletin are published. (For details of the School, see school
section.)
During 1920-21 attendance was 78,045 ; there are 4,534 books in the Library,
17,055 photographs, 3,480 postal cards, 3,546 lantern slides; circulated 3,542
books and 8,921 reproductions.
Accessions include: Greco-Roman sarcophagus, II Century; "Madonna and
Child," terra cotta, probably by Jacopo della Quercia ; statuette of "Madonna
and Child" by Andrea Pisano ; bronze statuette of "Eve" by Peter Vischer;
72 RHODE ISLAND— TENNESSEE MUSEUMS
PROVIDENCE, R. I.
Rhode Island School of Design — Continued
statue of St. Peter, French, Languedoc School, XII Century; "Madonna and
Child," Sienese painting, by Andrea di Giovanni ; "Woman in Blue," by Edouard
Manet; "Nude," by Richard E. Miller; water colors by Sargent, Winslow
Homer and B. Jonkind.
Exhibitions
June 24 to Sept. 30, 1920 — Early American partraits and furniture; Renaissance
art, including sculpture, painting, iron work and furniture.
Oct. 6 to Oct. 28 — Annual exhibition of contemporary American painting.
Nov. 3 to Nov. 25 — Exhibition of Chinese paintings; paintings and color studies
by Gaston La Touche.
Dec. 2 to Dec. 27 — ^Early American portraits, furniture and applied arts, in
honor of the Pilgrim Tercentenary celebration.
Jan. 1 to Jan. 24, 1921 — Pictorial photographs of Greece, the work of Frederick
Boissonnas of Geneva, Switzerland.
Jan. 1 to Jan. 13 — Japanese prints showing the Tokaido Road, by Hiroshige.
Jan. 24 to Jan. 26 — French portrait engravings of the XVII and XVIII Cen-
turies.
Feb. 2 to Feb. 27 — French and Flemish tapestries and embroidered armorial
hangings, lent by R. Livingston Beeckman ; water colors by William H.
Drury, John R. Frazier and Anna A. Mitchell.
Mar. 3 to Mar. 23 — Portraits of distinguished leaders of America and the
Allied Nations, circulated by the American Federation of Arts; twenty
pieces of wrought iron work by- Thomas Googerty; pencil sketches by
Kenneth Conant.
Mar. 26 to Apr. 27 — Drawings and color studies of French and English XII
and XIII Century stained glass windows, by Joseph G. Reynolds, Jr.
Apr. 1 to Apr. 27 — Small bronzes and medals by American sculptors, assembled
by National Sculpture Society.
May 3 to June 1 — Chinese paintings and sculpture.
CHARLESTON, S. C.
>^CHARLESTON MUSEUM
Charles W. Kollock President Oscar W. Schleeter Treasurer
Patrick Carter Vice-President Edward A. Simmons Secretary
Laura M. Bragg, Director and Curator of Anthropology.
Nathaniel W. Stephenson, Honorary Curator of Art.
Helen von Kolnitz, Curator of South Carolina Culture Collection.
John Bennett, Honorary Curator of South Carolina Culture Collection.
Edward A. Hyer, Curator of Preparation Department.
Open 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. week days; Sundays, 3.30 to 6 p.m. A natural history
museum in which art museum material is incorporated in culture exhibits illus-
trating the evolution of civilization. This includes Greek, Egyptian and As-
syrian casts; pottery and porcelains; textiles; Colonial furniture; primitive
handicraft.
Founded 1773; incorporated 1915. Meetings in April and October; annual
in January. Annual members, $10; sustaining, $25; annual patrons, $100;
membership, 59. Bulletin published monthly October to May. Research work
is done.
MEMPHIS, TENN.
^BROOKS MEMORIAL
Overton Park, Memphis
Florence McIntyre, Director and Secretary
Mrs. S. H. Brooks gave $115,000 in 1914 for a memorial art gallery, which
was erected in 1916 in Overton Park, Memphis. James Gamble Rogers,
I
TENNESSEE— TEXAS MUSEUMS IZ
MEMPHIS, TENN.
Brooks Memorial — Continued
architect; cost, $115,000. Open daily 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Special efforts made
to reach school children and to encourage local art.
The educational department is conducted by voluntary workers secured
through the Memphis Art Association and the Junior Art Association.
Attendance, 1920, 52,435. Acquired: "Frozen Stream," by E. W. Redfield;
"The Courtyard," by Robert Spencer; miniature by George Healy; "Morning
After Snow," by Birge Harrison; "Cupid Hauling Net," by unknown artist;
"Landscape," by George Inness, Jr.; six pieces of Newcomb Pottery; collec-
tion of gold coins; original print of the last address of George Washington,
bound by Otto Zahn.
Exhibitions
October, 1920 — Paintings by Brush, Carlsen, Metcalf, Hassam, Couse, Crane,
Dewing, Dougherty, Garber, Spencer, Wiggins; work from New York
public schools, circulated by the American Federation of Arts.
November — Loan exhibition of paintings.
December — Portraits by Sully, Copley, West, Peale, Stuart ; exhibition of
domestic architecture, circulated by the American Federation of Arts.
January, 1921 — Textiles, circulated by the American Federation of Arts.
February — Paintings by Mary Cassatt, Waugh, Reid, Miller, Tryon, J. W.
Alexander and other American artists, circulated by the American Federa-
tion of Arts ; artistic photographs and textiles, lent by Mrs. W. M. Chase.
March — Exhibition of work by National Association of Women Painters and
Sculptors.
April — Paintings by Wiles, Symonds, Redfield, Spencer and Hassam ; w^ork by
local artists and from the local schools.
May — Paintings by Gerrit A. Beneker.
June to September — Exhibtion of paintings in Memphis.
AUSTIN, TEXAS
HhTEXAS FINE ARTS ASSOCIATION
AND
ELISABET NEY MUSEUM
"Formosa," Hyde Park, Austin
W. J. Battle President Emma Burleson Custodian
Mrs. Thomas F. Taylor. .Vice-Pres. Samuel Gideon Secretary
Mrs. a. C. Goeth Treasurer University of Texas, Austin
Mrs. R. W. Long Associate Sec.
Organized 1911. Annual meeting in June. Annual dues, $2.50; associates,
$5; life members, $50; honorary members, $100. Membership, 350.
Purpose is to develop interest in art and preserve the art collection of
Elisabet Ney. This consists of sculpture by her given to the University of
Texas, but remaining in her former home and studio. The property was
purchased by Mrs. J. B. Dibrell and gallery fitted up for use of Association.
Frequent exhibitions are held.
FORT WORTH, TEXAS
►^FORT WORTH ART ASSOCIATION
FORT WORTH MUSEUM OF ART
Carnegie Library Building, Fort Worth
Mrs. M. p. Bewley President George W. Steere Auditor
George H. Colvin Treasurer Mrs, Charles Scheuber. . .Secretary
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 339.
Open 9 A.M. to 6 p.m. on week days; 2 to 6 p.m. Sundays and holidays.
74 TEXAS— WASHINGTON MUSEUMS
FORT WORTH, TEXAS
Fort Worth Art Association — Continued
Admission free except during special exliibitions, when an admission fee is
charged on week days, but it is free Sundays ; children admitted free at all
times. Permanent collection of paintings.
Organized 1910. Annual meeting first Saturday in March. Annual dues,
$2 ; active membership, 165.
Exhibitions: Jan. 11 to Feb. 14, 1921, twelfth annual exhibition of selected
paintings by American artists, assembled by the American Federation of Arts;
prizes offered to pupils of grammar, primary and secondary schools for best
estimates of the paintings ; attendance, 6,993.
MONTPELIER, VT.
WOOD ART GALLERY
Montpelier
O. D. Clark President William S. Smith Sec.-Treas.
Charles D. Mather. .Vice-President
Founded 1895. Gallery open three days a week. Annual meeting, third
Tuesday in December. The Gallery contains original paintings by American
artists and a number of copies of noted foreign masters made by Thomas W.
Wood, N. A.
ST. JOHNSBURY, VT.
ST. JOHNSBURY ATHEN.liUM
St. Johnsbury
Cornelia T. Fairbanks, Librarian
Open, free, daily, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sundays, 3 to 5 p.m.
Established 1873. The Art Gallery contains about eighty works of art, chiefly
American and foreign paintings of the nineteenth century and copies of old
masters. There is a bust of the founder by J. Q. A. Ward. The art library
contains some rare and many standard works ; a general library, lecture hall
and reading room also form part of the institution.
RICHMOND, VA.
VALENTINE MUSEUM
Eleventh and Clay Streets, Richmond
Edward V. Valentine President Granville G. Valentine. .Treasurer
M. S. Valentine Vice-Pres. Mary O. Cringan Secretary
Open, free, daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Licorporated 1894. Endowment, $50,000. The Museum contains books, pic-
tures, curios and objects of archaeology, anthropology and other kindred arts.
Meetings second Monday of January, April, July and October. Average
annual attendance, 3,000.
SEATTLE, WASH.
STATE MUSEUM
University of Washington, Seattle
F. S. Hall, Director
Established by Act of Legislature in 1899, and under the direction of the
Board of Regents of the University of Washington. Owing to improvements
to the building only one exhibition was held in 1921, which was of work by the
students in the Fine Arts Department of the University of Washington.
WASHINGTON— WISCONSIN MUSEUMS 75
TACOMA, WASH.
FERRY MUSEUM
401 North Cliff Avenue, Tacoma
W. L. McCoRMiCK President Frank B. Cole Treasurer
Eliza Ferry Leary. , .Vice-President W. P. Bonney Secretary
Organized 1893. Annual meeting in October. Annual dues, $5. Contains
collections of marbles and antiques; also Alaskan, Indian and Oriental curios,
baskets, utensils and pioneer relics. South Hall, first section of the new Ferry
Museum Building, was dedicated October 24, 1918.
BELOIT, WIS.
ART HALL OF BELOIT COLLEGE
Beloit
Caroline L. Burr, Director
For foundation and history see Vol. XII, p. 122.
Open free to the public daily. Collections contain several hundred casts, a
few original sculptures, paintings, prints, 36,000 photographs, lantern slides,
furniture, objects of art and library of several thousand volumes.
Founded 1892. The work is carried on by the income from the Azariah
Eldridge fund and contributions. Lectures given and loan exhibitions held.
Class in drawing and sketching.
A fine arts prize, open to all students, given annually for the best essay
upon a subject connected with art.
GREEN BAY, WIS.
GREEN BAY PUBLIC MUSEUM
Kellogg Public Library, Jefferson Street, Green Bay
Mrs. R. C. Buchanan President A. C. Neville Treasurer
F. T. Blesch Vice-Pres. Mrs. William Joannes .... Secretary
Mrs. Wm. Luckenbach. . .Custodian South Jefferson St., Green Bay
Organized 1916. Annual meeting in May ; Board monthly. Rooms in Public
Library are fitted up with museum cases ; open Wednesdays and Saturdays,
2 to 5 P.M. Lectures given and exhibitions held.
MILWAUKEE, WIS.
-CLAYTON ART GALLERY
438 Jefferson Street, Milwaukee
J. K. Ilsley President Howard Greene Vice-Pres.
Charles Dickens, Secretary-Treasurer
Gallery open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, except Monday; Sundays, 2 to 5 p.m.
Admission free, except Wednesday and Friday, when it is 25 cents. Modern
paintings.
Incorporated 1888. Annual meeting in December. Endowment fund of
$100,000 given by Frederick Layton. The collection originally consisted of 65
modern paintings and a few pieces of sculpture ; it now numbers nearly 300.
" ^MILWAUKEE ART INSTITUTE
456 Jefferson Street, Milwaukee
Samuel O. Buckner President Joseph Huebl Treasurer
Ernest Copeland Vice-President Mrs. William Mayhew. .. Secretary
Dudley Crafts Watson, Director
Open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. week days; 2 to 5 p.m. Sundays. Closed only on
Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day and New Year's Day. Admission fee, 25
cents on four days; free Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday. Permanent col-
16 WISCONSIN MUSEUMS
MILWAUKEE, WIS.
Milwaukee Art Institute — Continued
lection includes American and foreign paintings, sculpture, small collection of
antiques and textiles, library.
Organized 1910. Meetings fourth Thursday in October, January, April and
July; annual in October. Annual dues, $10; school teachers, $2; contributing,
$25; life, $100; supporting, $100; benefactors, $1,000. Membership, 730.
No admission charged to Wisconsin artists, students, and teachers for ex-
hibitions and educational lectures. Total attendance January, 1920, to January,
1921, 59,910; total for activities free to the public, 29,246 (359 programs for
adults) ; 35 gallery tours for school children, attendance, 2,132; twenty-three
lectures at schools, attendance, 15,040; ninety-three gallery tours for adults,
attendance, 3,666; thirty-two outside organizations entertained. Publishes bul-
letin eight times a year.
Exhibitions
January, 1920 — Paintings by Henry Golden Dearth ; Dutch, Polish, Japanese
and Chinese handicrafts; Syrian handicrafts; paintings by Nicolas Mac-
soud.
February — Paintings by Bryson Burroughs ; crayon portraits by Max Wiec-
zorek ; paintings by Edward C. Volkert ; sculpture in bronze, marble and
stone by Cartaino Scarpitta ; students' work in design from Boston Museum
and Rhode Island School of Design, circulated by the American Federation
of Arts; Italian handicrafts; French and Russian handicrafts.
March — Exhibitions by fifteen American artists; handicrafts of the British
Isles ; Roumanian handicrafts ; paintings in tempera by Henry G. Keller ;
paintings by E. Ambrose Webster; exhibition of textiles; Belgian handi-
crafts; Czech-Slav handicrafts; paintings by Mrs. A. M. Ross.
April — Seventh annual exhibition of Wisconsin Painters and Sculptors, and
Wisconsin Society of Applied Arts.
May — Paintings by Martha Walter; bas-reliefs and intaglios by Mary B. Adels-
perger; exhibit of students' work of Milwaukee Art Institute classes;
drawings by Paul Kunze of Munich ; water colors by Vaclav Vytlacil ;
paintings by Frances Cramer Greenman.
June — Official exhibit of French Artin the United States; exhibition of textiles.
July and August — Oil paintings, water colors and etchings by Charles H.
Woodbury ; paintings by Louis Ritman.
August — Flower paintings by Gertrude J. Barnes ; paintings by Ignacio Zulo-
aga ; Wudart toys ; prize drawings for the county hospital. Van Ryn and
De Gelkcke ; line drawings by Ananda Coomarasawamy.
September — Paintings by Emily Groom ; water colors by Mabel Key ; paintings
of Venice by Frida Gugler ; Lepere wood engravings ; exhibition of
American paintings ; paintings by Charles Russell ; water colors by Mrs.
Frank M. Hoyt ; wrought iron work by Thomas Googerty; batiks by
American crafters.
October — Paintings by Stephen Haweis ; wood carvings by Charles Haag ;
Cheney silks ; paintings by business men of Chicago ; Lamson textiles,
coverlets and Persian shawls.
November — Loan portrait. Tercentenary Exhibition of Colonial and early
American textiles ; batiks by Herman Sachs ; paintings by Charles Lesaar.
December — Paintings and etchings by Eugene Higgins ; etchings by Arthur
Heintzelman ; drawings and water colors by Jessie King; Mrs. E. B. Hodge
collection of embroideries of the Near East; toys made by the Saturday
scholarship class ; paintings by six American artists ; paintings by William
E. Ellis; photographs by G. R. Ballance.
Associations and Societies
(Not including museums which are given in separate section, see pages
13-76)
Note. — Each organization is listed under the city where the office is located. State
societies are entered immediately following the State heading and precede the cities in
each State.
Federations and national societies without permanent headquarters form the first
group and are entered before the States. A full index with cross references will be
found at the end of the book.
The Greek cross (►J*) preceding the name of an organization indicates that it is
a Chapter of The American Federation of Arts.
NATIONAL SOCIETIES
THE AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS
1741 New York Avenue, N.W., Washington, D. C.
Robert W. de Forest President
New York
Chas. L. Hutchinson, 1st Vice-Pres.
Chicago
Leila Mechlin Secretary
Washington
Helen H. Cambell. . . Asst. Secretary
Washington
Richard F. Bach. .. .Extension Sec.
New York
Charles D. Norton Treasurer
New York
Irene M. Richards Asst. Treas.
Washington
Vice-Presidents
James Barnes, Princeton
Cecilia Beaux, New York
W. K. BixBY, St. Louis
E. H. Blashfield, Nev/ York
Glenn Brown, Washington
C. T. Crocker, San Francisco
Frederick A. Delano, Washington
A. E. Gallatin, New York
William O. Goodman, Chicago
Morris Gray, Boston
A. A. Hamerschlag, Pittsburgh
Edgar L. Hewett, Santa Fe
Archer M. Huntington, New York
Ralph King, Cleveland
Alexander R. Lawton, Savannah
John F. Lewis, Philadelphia
E. D. Libbey, Toledo
John Barton Payne, Washington
A. W. Mellon, Washington
William B. Sanders,- Cleveland
John R. Van Derlip, Minneapolis
Charles D. Walcott, Washington
Henry White, Washington
1919-1922
Helen C. Frick
Cass Gilbert
Francis C. Jones
R. P. Lamont
Charles Moore
Charles D. Norton
Duncan Phillips
Edward Robinson
Board of Directors
1920-1923
Herbert Adams
George G. Booth
Charles A. Coolidge
Robert W. de Forest
Otto H. Kahn
Charles Allen Munn
Mrs. Gustav Radeke
G. D. Seymour
1921-1924
Mrs. John W. Alexander
John W. Beatty
Robert Woods Bliss
Andrew Wright Crawford
Charles L. Hutchinson
H.W. Kent
Florence N. Levy
Elihu Root
Chairmen of Special Committees
Charles Moore, Chairman General Committee on War Memorials
Charles Allen Munn, Chairman, Publication Committee
Francis C. Jones, Chairman, Exhibition Committee
n
78 AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS
Editorial Staff and Offices
"The American Magazine of Art," Leila Mechlin, Editor.
"American Art Annual," Frances R. Howard, Editor.
Editorial Office, 1741 New York Ave., Washington, D. C.
Organized 1909. Incorporated 1916. The membership is made up of both
individuals and organizations, the latter styled Chapters. Annual dues of
chapters $10; Associate members $3 (receive "The American Magazine of
Art") ; Active members $10 (have the privilege of voting, receive "The
American Magazine of Art," and other publications distributable to members) ;
Contributing members $100 a year. There are 277 chapters, 799 active members,
2,161 associate members.
The Twelfth Annual Convention of the American Federation of Arts was
held in Washington, D. C, May 18th, 19th and 20th, 1921. Over two hundred
delegates were in attendance. Five of the six sessions were held in the
auditorium of the Corcoran Gallery of Art. The exception was the after-
noon session on the first day, which was held in the auditorium of the
National Museum.
Colonel C. O. Sherrill, Secretary of the National Commission of Fine Arts,
made the address of welcome and directed attention to the plan for the
artistic development of Washington drawn up by the Burnham Park Com-
mission, urging those interested in art througl;iout the country to exert their
influence to induce its realization. The address of the President, Mr. Robert
W. de Forest, dealt chiefly with the possible danger of a tariff being placed
on art in the revision of the tariff laws, and called on Mr. John Quinn, of New
York, to amplify the subject. The Secretary, the Treasurer, the Extension
Secretary and Professor Paul H. Grummann, in charge of the Federation's
Western office, presented reports.
The afternoon session on May 18th opened with a demonstration by Mr.
Ross Crane of the Better Homes Institute, of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Mr. L. M. Churbuck, Director of Art of the Brockton, Massachusetts, Fair,
spoke on "Art in State Fairs"; Miss Mary Powell, head of the Art Depart-
ment of the St. Louis Public Library, on "Art in the Public Library" ; Mr.
Allen Eaton on "Art in the Schools"; and Mr. John F. Braun, President of
the Philadelphia Art Alliance, on "The Alliance of the Arts."
The morning session on the 19th had as a general topic, "The Artist's
Point of View," with addresses by Mr. Herbert Adams, on "Sculpture,"
Mr. J. Monroe Hewlett, on "Mural Painting," Mr. George Harding, on "Il-
lustration," Mr. John Taylor Arms, on "Etching and the Graphic Arts," and
Mr. Albert Kelsey on "Architecture." The general topic of the afternoon
session of that day was Professional Art Problems and there was general dis-
cussion of the following sub-topics: Prizes — Do They Stimulate Art?; How
to Promote the Sale of Works by American Artists? The Handicrafts — How
They Can be Encouraged? At this session, by special request Mrs. Whitford
gave a brief talk on "Art for the Farmer's Wife."
On May 20th at the morning session the program was as follows : "The Art
Education We Need," by Leon Loyal Winslow, of the University of the
State of New York; "School of Illustration and Commercial Art for Dis-
abled Soldiers, by W. A. Rogers, director of the school; "The American
Academy in Rome," by Charles D. Norton; "The Tiffany Foundation," by
Stanley Lothrop, Director; "The Peterborough Colony," by Mrs. Edward
MacDowell, Director.
A special feature of the afternoon, and closing session on the 20th was an
illustration of "Methods of Appreciation of Music," by Mr. Thomas Whitney
Surette, of Concord, Massachusetts, Director of Music at the Cleveland Art
Museum, illustrated by Brahms Quartet for violin, viola, violoncello and piano,
and by Mrs. Walter Bruce Howe and members of the National String Quartet.
At this session Mr. Rossiter Howard of the Cleveland Museum spoke on
"Educational Work of an Art Museum," Mr. William Laurel Harris spoke
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS 79
on the "Art Center Incorporated, of New York— Its Objects and Aims."
Certain resolutions were passed, dealing with art education, the tariff laws,
and the advancement of the handicrafts. The annual election took place.
A reception was given in honor of the delegates on the afternoon of May
18th in the National Gallery of Art, where a collection of War Portraits
by eminent American artists was then on view. In the Corcoran Gallery of
Art the exhibition of British Arts and Crafts was set forth for the special
benefit of the delegates to the Convention, through the courtesy of the
Washington Society of the Fine Arts.
On the 19th the delegates were received at the White House by the
President at noon and by Mrs. Harding in the afternoon. That evening the
Pennell Collection of Whistleriana was opened with a private view to the
delegates in the Library of Congress. Opportunity was given the delegates
to visit the Phillips Memorial Gallery on the afternoon of the 20th, and
that evening the convention was concluded with the usual dinner at
Rauscher's. Over three hundred were in attendance. Mr. de Forest pre-
sided, and the speakers were Dr. L. S. Rowe, Director of the Pan-American
Union, Mr. Cass Gilbert, Miss Violet Oakley and Mr. David Mannes.
The regular work of the American Federation of Arts is chiefly along four
lines. It sends out traveling exhibitions ; circulates illustrated lectures and
portfolios of prints; publishes "The American Magazine of Art," an illustrated
monthly magazine, and "The American Art Annual," a standard book of
reference for art in the United States.
The Federation maintains a branch office at Lincoln, Neb., and is repre-
sented on the Pacific Coast by Pedro J. Lemos, Stanford University, Calif.
During the year 1920-21 The American Federation of Arts sent out 50 col-
lections for which there were 214 engagements. A complete list of the last
season's exhibitions is given below. The Federation now has thirty-six il-
lustrated lectures which are sent to places where authoritative lecturers cannot
be secured.
EXHIBITIONS CIRCULATED 1920-1921
1. War Portraits of Leaders in the Great War, painted by Eminent Amer-
ican Artists : 20 pictures — Providence, R. I. ; Philadelphia, Pa. ; Washington,
D. C. ; Princeton, N. J. ; New Haven, Conn. ; Boston, Mass.
2. Collection A — Oil paintings by contemporary American painters, lent
by the artists : 35 pictures— Atlanta, Ga. ; Columbia, S. C. ; Youngstown, O. ;
Jacksonville, 111.; Ann Arbor, Mich.; Allentown, Pa.; Decatur, 111.; Spring-
field, 111.
3. Collection B — Oil paintings of moderate size and cost lent by the artists:
40 pictures — Brookings, S. D.; Lincoln, Neb.; Sioux City, la.; Topeka, Kan.;
Ann Arbor, Mich.
4. Collection D — Oil paintings lent by the Metropolitan Museum of Art :
31 pictures— Rochester, N. Y. ; Meadville, Pa.; Elmira, N. Y. ; Oberlin, O. ;
New Bedford, Mass. ; Emporia, Kan. ; Lincoln, Neb.
5. Collection E — Thirty paintings by early American painters lent by the
Ehrich Galleries— Vermilion, S. D. ; Lincoln, Neb. ; Iowa City, la.
6. Collection G — Fifteen paintings lent by the National Gallery and by
special request — Davenport, la. ; Syracuse, N. Y. ; Memphis, Tenn. ; Oklahoma
City, Okl. ; Jackson, Mich. ; Ann Arbor, Mich. ; La Crosse, Wis.
7. Collection H — Twelve paintings by American artists lent by the Chicago
Art Institute. (Friends of American Art). Rochester, N. Y. ; Atlanta, Ga. ;
South Manchester, Conn. ; Ann Arbor, Mich. ; Dubuque, la.
8. Oil paintings lent by Vose (special collection) — Nashville. Tenn.
9.^ Oil paintings lent by the artists and by dealers (Pacific Coast circuit)
34 pictures— San Diego, Cal. ; Stanford University. Cal. ; Sacramento, Cal.
10. Oil paintings lent by the National Academy of Design and by Boston
and Philadelphia artists; 41 pictures— Prescott, Ariz.; Muskogee, Okla. ; Ft.
Worth, Tex. ; San Antonio, Tex. ; Savannah, Ga. ; Norfolk, Va.
80 AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS
11. Paintings and drawings by Capt. George Harding: 50 pictures —
Rochester, N. Y. ; Baltimore, Md. ; Washington, D. C. ; Elmira, N. Y. ; Spring-
field, 111.
12. Copies of Works of the Old Masters, made by the late Carroll Beck-
with : 32 pictures — Decatur, 111. ; Little Rock, Ark. ; Logansport, Ind. ; Em-
poria, Kan.
13. American Water Color Society — 1920 Rotary : 78 pictures — Des Moines,
la. ; Lincoln, Neb. ; Jacksonville, 111. ; Nashville, Tenn. ; Lancaster, Pa. ; Ypsil-
anti, Mich.; Grand Rapids. Mich.; Oberlin, O.
14. American Water Color Society — 1921 Rotary : 98 pictures — Utica, N. Y. ;
Rochester, N. Y. ; Omaha, Neb. ; Washington, D. C.
15. Water colors assembled from the Philadelphia Water Color Club's
Exhibition: 12 pictures and a group by Cecil Brewer — New Bedford, Mass.;
Indianapolis, Ind. ; Youngstown, O. ; Elmira, N. Y. ; State College, Pa.
16. Studies for Mural Decorations by Violet Oakley : 132 pictures — Phil-
adelphia, Pa.
17. Mural Painting by Allen True ; 72 pictures — Norman, Okla. ; Stillwater,
Okla.
18. Raemaekers' Cartoons : 108 prints — Grand Rapids, Mich.
19. Art School Work from the Rhode Island School of Design, Pratt In-
stitute, Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Art and School of
Boston Museum : 121 mounts — Winnipeg, Can. ; Muskegon, Mich. ; Grand
Forks, N. D. ; Fargo, N. D. ; Greeley, Col. ; Ypsilanti, Mich. ; Highland Park,
Mich. ; Springfield, 111.
20. Etchings lent by the Brooklyn Society of Etchers from their 5th
Annual Exhibition : 100 prints — Columbus, O. ; Oxford, O.
21. Etchings by the foremost contemporary etchers lent by Keppel & Co.;
50 prints — ^Seattle, Wash. ; Indianapolis, Ind. ; Akron, O. ; Winnipeg, Can. ;
Fairmont, W. Va. ; Oxford, O^
22. British Etchings lent by the Print Society of Ringwood, England : 45
prints — Washington, D. C. ; Baltimore, Md. ; Philadelphia, Pa.
23. Lithographs by Joseph Pennell — Akron, O.
24. Wood Block Prints by the late Helen Hyde: 63 exhibits — Saginaw,
Mich.; Columbus, O. ; Oxford, O. (Western College); Oxford, O. (Miami
University).
25. Prints for the Home. #1 — Reproductions chiefly in color of paintings
by distinguished artists (400) : Grand Rapids, Mich. ; New York, N. Y. ;
Albany, N. Y. ; Towson, Md.
26. Prints for the Home. #2 — Reproductions chiefly in color of paintings
by distinguished artists (200) : Hood River, Oregon ; Eugene, Oregon ; Ellens-
burg, Wash. ; Corvallis, Wash. ; Ft. Collins, Col. ; Emporia, Kan.
27. Prints for the Home. #3 — Reproductions chiefly in color of paintings
by distinguished artists (200)— Elmira, N. Y. ; Scranton, Pa.; Birmingham,
Ala. ; University, Ala. ; Fairmont, W. Va. ; Oxford, O.
28. Medici Prints : 47 fac-similes in color of paintings by the Old Masters,
lent by Mr. Robert W. de Forest— Andalusia, Ala. ; Canyon, Tex. ; Elmira,
N. Y. ; Winnipeg, Can.
29. Ninety wood engravings by the late Henry Wolf — Washington, D. C.
30. Dutch Etching in the Seventeenth Century : 24 prints lent by the Metro-
politan Museum — Washington, D. C.
31. Pictorial Photography #1—133 unframed photographs lent by the Pic-
torial Photographers of America— Savannah, Ga. ; State College, Pa.;
Rochester, N. Y. ; Jackson, Mich.
32. Pictorial Photography #2—132 unframed photographs lent by the Pic-
tonal Photgraphers of America— Washington, D. C. ; Stanford University,
Cal. ; San Diego, Cal. ; Brookings, S. D.
2>Z. Pictorial Photographs of Greece by M, Frederic Boissonnas : 50 pictures
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS 81
— Providence, R. I.; Rochester, N. Y. ; Toledo, O. ; St. Louis, Mo.; Boston,
Mass.
34. Industrial Art Exhibition : 90 exhibits — Assembled by the Art Alliance :
Sacramento, Cal. ; New Orleans, La.; Jackson, Miss.
35. Textiles by American Manufacturers assembled by Mr. William Laurel
Harris — Ypsilanti, Mich.; Springfield, 111.; Memphis, Tenn. ; Muskegon, Mich.;
Jacksonville, 111.; Youngstown, O.; Columbus, O.; Kansas City, Mo.
36. Tapestries and Brocades assembled by Mr. William Laurel Harris —
Philadelphia, Pa. ; Kansas City, Mo. ; New Bedford, Mass.
?n . Textile Designs and Fabrics assembled by Mr. William Laurel Harris —
Toledo, O. ; St. Paul, Minn.; Corvallis, Ore.; Berkeley, Cal.
38. British Commercial Posters : 64 exhibits — Asheville, N. C. ; Indian-
apolis, Ind. ; Columbus, O. ; Grand Rapids, Mich. ; Winnipeg, Can. ; Chicago, 111.
39. Printing Exhibit — ^examples by some of the foremost printers, lent by
the Metropolitan Museum — Savannah, Ga.
40. Domestic Architecture — Photographs, plans, etc., assembled by the
Architectural League of New York — Indianapolis, Ind.; Denver, Col.; Toledo,
O. ; Memphis, Tenn. ; Dayton, O. ; New Bedford, Mass.
41. Interior Decoration #1. Color schemes for model rooms and actual
materials, arranged by Mr. Henry W. Frohne — Stanford University, Cal. ;
Los Angeles. Cal. ; Hollywood, Cal. ; Youngstown, O. ; Winnipeg, Can.
42. Interior Decoration #2. Color schemes for model rooms and actual
materials : arranged by Mr. Henry W. Frohne — Mobile, Ala. ; Washington,
D. C. ; Toledo, O. ; New Bedford, Mass.; University, Ala.; Syracuse, N. Y.
43. Landscape Architecture— 30 mounts showing 122 photographs of the
best work in Landscape Architecture, assembled by the American Society of
Landscape Architects — Ypsilanti, Mich. ; Columbus, O. ; Dayton, O.
44. War Memorial Photographs — Set #1 — Racine, Wis. ; Cape Girardeau,
Mo. ; Manhattan, Kan. ; Cairo, 111.
45. War Memorial Photographs : Set #2 — Stanford University, Cal. ; Los
Angeles, Cal.
46. War Memorial Photographs : Set #3 — New Bedford, Mass. ; Baltimore,
Md. ; Washington, D. C.
47. Sculpture Exhibition — 30 small bronzes lent by the sculptors — Mus-
kegon, Mich. ; Ithaca, N. Y. ; Scranton, Pa. ; Providence, R. I.
48. Public School Art Work — 100 mounts of work ifrom schools in Wash-
ington, D. C. — Cape Girardeau, Mo. ; Mobile, Ala. ; Peru, Neb. ; Sioux City,
Iowa ; Knoxville, Tenn.
49. Art Work Done in the New York Public Schools : 40 mounts — Memphis,
Tenn. ; Mobile, Ala. ; Akron, O. ; Erie, Pa. ; New Haven, Conn. ; Bangor,
Me.; Columbia, S. C. ; Oxford, O.
50. Children's Exhibition — pictures, prints, books, handicrafts — Hollywood,
Cal. ; Stanford University, Cal. ; Logansport, Ind. ; Ypsilanti, Mich.
CHAPTERS OF THE AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS
With name and address of secretary, director or delegate
National Societies
American Academy in Rome, C. Grant La Farge, 101 Park Avenue, New
York, N. Y.
American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, Edward H. Hall,
154 Nassau Street, New York, N. Y.
American Society of Landscape Architects, Bremer W. Pond, 18 Tremont
Street, Boston, Mass.
Association of the Alumni of the American Academy in Rome, R. B.
Barnes, 70 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y.
Eastern Arts Association, Frank E. Matthewson, Dickinson High School,
Jersey City. N. J.
Pictorial Photographers of America, J. R. Mason, 65 East 56th Street,
New York, N. Y.
82 AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS
Alabama
Birmingham — Alabama Art League, Margaret McAdory, Room 27, Watts
Building.
Montgomery — Montgomery Chapter of Alabama Art League, Mrs.
Churchill Marks, 301 Church St.
University — Art Department, University of Alabama, Martha F. Fort.
Arkansas
Little Rock — Fine Arts Club, May Danaher, 2022 Izard Street.
California
Hollywood — Art Association, Virginia E. Graefif, director, 1633 Gower
Street.
Laguna Beach — Art Association, Mrs. F. P. MacPherson.
West Coast Arts, Inc., Mrs. Ella H. Tanberg, President.
Los Angeles — California Art Club, Dana Bartlett.
Friday Morning Club, Mrs. Randall Hutchinson, chairman, 2817 Menlo
Avenue.
Oakland — Oakland Art Gallery, Worth Ryder, 12th and Fallon Streets.
Palo Alto — Palo Alto Art Club, Mrs. Ellen C. Elliot, Stanford University,
Calif.
Pasadena — Music and Art Association, Geo. E. Hale, president. Fair
Oaks and Lincoln Avenues.
San Diego — Friends of Art, San Diego Art Guild, A. B. Titus, chairman,
2924 Juniper Street.
San Francisco — Museum of Art, J. Nilsen Laurvik, director.
Stanford University — Leland Stanford Junior University, Pedro J.
Lemos, director of Museum of Fine Arts.
Canada
Toronto — The Art Gallery of Toronto, Edward R. Greig, "The Grange."
Winnipeg — Art Gallery and School of the Board of Trade, A. J. Mus-
grove, director,
Colorado
Colorado Federation of Women's Clubs — Mrs. Joe Mills, chairman, 1012
15th Street, Boulder.
Colorado Springs — Broadmoor Art Academy, Stanley Stoner, director,
West Dale Street.
Denver — Art Commission of the City and County of Denver, Marie L.
Woodson, 832 S. Pearl Street.
Denver Art Association, George William Eggers, Public Library.
Historic Art Club, Mrs. Will S. Arnold, 3814 Vrain Street.
Connecticut
Bridgeport — The Bridgeport Art League, Mrs. Philip Holzer, 1070 Iranis-
ton Avenue.
Hartford— Art Society of Hartford, Mrs. H. B. Freeman, 1045 Asylum
Avenue.
Municipal Art Society of Hartford, William Horniss, president, 102
Huntington Street.
Waterbury — Mattatuck Historical Society, Frederick I. Mason, 119 West
Main Street.
Delaware
Wilmington— Wilmington Society of Fine Arts, George P. Bissell, Du
Pont Bldg.
District of Columbia
Washington— Arts Club, W. E. Safford. 2017 I Street.
Corcoran Gallery of Art, C. Powell Minnigerode.
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS 83
District of Columbia — Continued
Landscape Club, A. J. Schram, 927 M Street.
Public School Art League, Myra M. Hendley, 1216 L Street.
Society of Washington Artists, A. H. O. Rolle, 134 Quincy Place.
Washington Society of the Archseological Institute of America, Mit-
chell Carroll, 1741 New York Avenue.
Washington Society of the Fine Arts, Leila Mechlin, 1741 New York
Avenue.
Washington Water Color Club, A. Elizabeth Sawtelle, 2102 O Street.
Florida
Pensacola — Art Club, Mrs. Susie E. Marble, 730 North 12th Avenue.
St. Petersburg — Art Club, Mary M. Kingsley.
«
Georgia
Athens — Art Association, Laura Blackshear.
Atlanta — Atlanta Art Association, Janet Evins, Cable Piano Co. BIdg.
Macon — Art Association, Mrs. M. B. Hammond, 514 Napier Avenue.
Savannah — Telfair Academy of Arts and Sciences, Charles F. Groves,
P. O. Box 727.
Hawaii
Honolulu — The Art League, Roger Noble Burnham.
Illinois
Bloomington — Woman's Club, Mrs. James Riley.
Charleston — Art Association of Charleston, Mrs. E. H. Taylor, 820 First
Street.
Eastern Illinois State Teachers' College, Grace E. Messer, 1639 South
7th.
Chicago — Arche Club Art Class, Mrs. B. J. Buckingham, chairman, 5652
Kenwood Avenue.
Art Institute of Chicago, Charles H. Burkholder.
Chicago Academy of Fine Arts, Carl N. Werntz, director, 81 East
Madison Street.
Chicago Public School Art Society, Mrs. Theodore Tiecken, 2944
Washington Boulevard.
Chicago Woman's Club, Mrs. Edward L. Murray, treasurer, 4454 Sid-
ney Avenue.
Municipal Art League of Chicago, Mrs. William Foster Young, 5319
Kenmore Avenue.
Danville — Art Association, Mrs. Nelle Wall, 126 N. Vermilion Street.
Decatur — Art Institute, Marie Buckingham, 1171 West Main Street.
Jacksonville — School of Fine Arts of Illinois Woman's College, Nellie
A. Knopf, director.
Peoria — Peoria Society of Allied Arts, Mark H. Whitmeyer.
Springfield — Springfield Art Association, Mrs. Howard T. Wilson, presi-
dent, Goodland Place, Virden, 111.
Indiana
Indianapolis — Art Association of Indianapolis, Evans Woollen, president,
John Herron Art Institute.
Logansport — Logansport Art Association, Jennie B. Alackintosh, 1107
Broadway.
Peru— Peru Art Club, Mrs. Eugene Ensel, 18 South Huntington.
Terre Haute — Art Section of Woman's Club, Junia Rynerson, Fairbanks
Memorial Library.
84 AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS
Iowa
Cedar Rapids — Cedar Rapids Art Association, Airs. Bert Rugh, 2900 First
Avenue, East Cedar Rapids.
Davenport — Davenport Academy of Sciences, Edward K. Putnam.
Tri-City Art League, Mrs. C. N. Chubb, 222^ Main Street.
Dubuque— Dubuque Art Association, Kate K. Van Duzee, 1471 Main
Street.
Fairfield— Art Study Club, Mrs. P. A. Hildreth, 307 South Main Street.
Iowa City — Iowa City Fine Arts Association, Mrs. J. White Brown, 6 East
Court.
Kansas
Emporia — Kansas State Normal School, W. H. Kerr.
Manhattan — Kansas State Agricultural College, Araminta Holman, De-
partment of Home Art. **
ToPEKA — Art Guild, Washburn College, Mrs. L. D. Whittemore.
Wichita — Art Association, C. A. Seward, 213 Wheeler-Kelley Bldg.
Kentucky
Campbellsville — Tuesday Book Club, Mrs. J, T. Moss.
Lexington — University of Kentucky, Department of Art and Design.
Louisville — Louisville Art Association, Caroline Q. Fuller, Free Public
Library.
North Middletown — Kentucky Federation of Women's Clubs, Mrs. Alvan
Harbison, Shelbyville.
Louisiana i] i ^ ■ M
New Orleans — Art Association of New Orleans, Lydia M. Brown, 2103
Chestnut Street.
Isaac Delgado Museum of Art, E. W. Smith, City Park.
Shreveport — Woman's Department Club, Mrs. Henry S. Hinton, 524
Stoner Avenue.
Maine
Brunswick — Bowdoin Museum of Fine Arts, Henry E. Andrews, director.
Portland — Society of Arts and Crafts, Mrs, Edward Stephens, 34 Cod-
man Street.
Maryland
Baltimore — Charcoal Club of Baltimore, Henry H. Wiegand, president,
St. Paul and Preston Streets.
Friends of Art, Adaline D. Piper, 1022 North Calvert Street.
Handicraft Club of Baltimore, Eliza Ingle, 243 West Biddle Street.
Maryland Institute for the Promotion of the Mechanic Arts, Thomas
G. Young, Mt. Royal Avenue.
Municipal Art Society of Baltimore, Josias Pennington, Professional
Bldg.
Peabody Institute of the City of Baltimore, Louis H. Dielman.
Massachusetts
Boston — Boston Art Club, James Fortescue, Newbury and Dartmouth
Streets.
Boston Society of Architects, E. H. Hoyt, 220 Devonshire Street.
Copley Society of Boston, Frederick W. Coburn, Cambridge.
Folk Handicrafts. M. Foster, 93 Tyler Street.
Guild of Boston Artists, Mrs. T. S. Perry, 162 Newbury Street.
Massachusetts Normal Art School, Royal Bailey Farnum, director,
State Board of Education.
Museum of Fine Arts, Benjamin Ives Oilman.
Society of Arts and Crafts. H. Percy Macomber. 9 Park Street.
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS 85
Massachusetts — C ontinucd
Bourne — Old Colony Union, Mrs. M. T. Garland, Buzzards Bay, Mass.
Brockton — Brockton Public Library, Frank H. Whitmore, librarian.
Cambridge — The William Hayes Fogg Art Museum, Edward W. Forbes,
director.
Concord — Concord Art Association, Elizabeth W. Roberts, Estabrook Rd.
Fall River— Fall River Art Club, Alice D. Almy, 579 N. Main Street.
New Bedford — Free Public Library, George H. Tripp, librarian.
Swain Free School, H. A. Neyland, director.
Northampton — ^Hillyer Art Gallery, A. V. Churchill, director. Smith
College.
Provincetown — Provincetown Art Association, Nina Williams.
Springfield — Art League, Harold M. Vanderbilt, 88 Biltmore Street.
Springfield Art Museum, George Walter Vincent Smith, director.
Wakefield — Handicraft Society, Mrs. Alice M. Hill, Summer Street.
Wellesley — Farnsworth Museum of Wellesley College, Alice Van Vech-
ten Brown, director.
Worcester — Worcester Art Museum, Raymond Wyer, director.
Michigan
Michigan Chapter A. I. A., A. G. Donaldson, 1314 Penobscot Bldg.,
Detroit.
Ann Arbor — Ann Arbor Art Association, Louise Douglas, 502 Huron
Street.
Detroit— Detroit Institute of Arts, Clyde H. Burroughs.
Detroit Public Schools, Art Department, Lily E. Goodhew, 504 Yost
Building.
Scarab Club, Clyde H. Burroughs, Detroit Institute of Arts.
Society of Arts and Crafts, Helen Plumb, 47 Watson Street.
Twentieth Century Club, Mrs. August Helbig, chairman, Lenox Hotel.
Grand Rapids— Grand Rapids Art Association, Mabel Perkins, 327 Wash-
ington Street.
Jackson — Jackson Art Association, E. W. Browning, Public Library.
Lansing — Michigan State Library, Mrs. Mary C. Spencer, librarian.
Muskegon— Hackley Gallery of Art, Lulu F. Miller, director.
Minnesota
Minneapolis— Federal Schools Incorporated, John C. Buckbee, Jr., 15
_S. 6th Street.
Society of Fine Arts, G. S. Houston, Jr., secretary.
St. Paul — Saint Paul Institute, Caryl Spiller, Auditorium Building.
Missouri
Kansas City— Art Institute, H. M. Kurtzworth, director. Armour and
Warwick Boulevards.
St. Louis— City Art Museum. R. A. Holland, director.
St. Louis Art League, F. E. A. Curley, Planters' Hotel.
St. Louis Chapter A. I. A., W. O. Mullgardt, Chemical Building.
St. Louis Public Library, Arthur E. Bostwick, librarian.
Nebraska
GoTHENSBURG— Art Department of Woman's Club, Bess O'Kane.
Lincoln — Nebraska Art Association, Paul H. Grummann, State Univer-
sity.
Omaha— Central High School Art Department. Ruth Tompsett, 20th and
Dodge Streets, Omaha.
Omaha Society of Fine Arts, Mrs. William O. Martin, Public Library.
Peru— Art Department of State Normal School, Mamie R. Mutz.
86 AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS
New Hampshire
Hanover — Department of Fine Arts, Dartmouth College, Prof. George B.
Zug.
Manchester — Art Club of St. Anselm's College, P. Raphael.
Institute of Arts and Sciences, George L. Kibbe, 514 Hanover Street.
New Jersey
New Jersey Chapter A. I. A., Hugh Roberts, 1 Exchange PI., Jersey City.
Montclair — Art Museum, Mrs. M. M. Le Brun, 8 South Mountain
Avenue.
Newark — Newark Museum Association, John Cotton Dana.
New York
Central New York Chapter A. I. A., W. V. Madden, 125 Sibley Block,
Rochester.
Albany — Dramatic and Art Association, New York State College for Teachers,
Agnes Scott Smith.
Alfred — New York State School of Clay-Working and Ceramics, Charles
F. Binns, director.
Buffalo — Buffalo" Chapter A. I. A., Louis Greenstein, Prudential Bldg.
Buffalo Fine Arts Academy, Cornelia B. Sage Quinton, art director.
Guild of Allied Arts, Priscilla Pierce, 269 Summer Street.
Dunkirk — Art Club, Mrs. Jessie H. Woodruff, JZZ Central Avenue.
Elmira — Arnot Art Gallery, Mrs. Jeannette M. Diven, director.
Mt. Vernon — Art Club of Mt. Vernon High School, I. L. Robinson.
New York City —
American Fine Arts Society, Charles J. Miller, 215 West 57th Street.
American Society of Miniature Painters, Helen Winslow Durkee, 124
West 72nd Street.
American Water Color Society, Harry L. Hoffman, 50 West 67th St.
Architectural League of New York, Russell F. Whitehead, 215 West
57th Street.
Art Alliance of America, Elizabeth B. Grimball, 65 East 56th Street.
Art Center, Mrs. Ripley Hitchcock, president, 65 East 56th Street.
Art in Trades Club, James P. Rome, 381 Fourth Avenue.
Art Students League, Josephine C. Howell, 215 West 57th Street.
Association of Manufacturers of Decorative Furniture, John P.
Adams, Kensington Manufacturing Co., 14 East 32nd Street.
Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, Lloyd Warren, director, 126 East 75th
Street.
Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, William Henry Fox, director,
Eastern Parkway and Washington Avenue, Borough of Brooklyn.
Keramic Society of Greater New York, Miss C. P. 'Nelson, 32 Elk
Avenue, New Rochelle. N. Y.
Master Craftsmen, Robert Dulk. 70 Fifth Avenue.
Metropolitan Museum of Art, H. W. Kent, Fifth Avenue and 82d
Street.
Municipal Art Society, Mrs. Herbert B. Keen. 119 E. 19th Street.
Mural Painters, Ezra Winter, 58 West 57th Street.
National Academy of Design. Charles C. Curran, 39 West 67th Street.
National Arts Club, John Clyde Oswald, 15 Gramercy Park.
National Association of Portrait Painters, Earl Stetson Crawford,
4 West 40th Street.
National Association of Women Pamters and Sculptors, Elizabeth H.
Ingham, Corresponding Secretary, 215 West 57th Street.
National Sculpture Society, Charles L. Hinton, 215 West 57th Street.
I
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS 87
New York — Continued
Needle and Bobbin Club, Mrs. W. T. Van Alstyne, Corresponding
Secretary, 1 West 72nd Street.
New York Chapter A. I. A., R. H. Shreve, 215 W. 57th Street.
New York School of Applied Design for Women, Ellen J. Pond,
Superintendent, 160 Lexington Avenue.
New York Society of Craftsmen, Jane Hoagland, 65 East 56th Street.
New York Water Color Club, Alphseus Cole, 33 West 67th Street.
Pratt Institute of Fine and Applied Arts, Walter Scott Perry, Ryer-
son Street, Borough of Brooklyn.
School Art League, Florence N. Levy, 599 Fifth Avenue.
Societe des Architects Diplomes par le Gouvernement, Edwin H,
Denby, 333 Fourth Avenue.
Society of Illustrators, Ray Greenleaf, Corresponding Secretary, 50
Union Square.
Nyack — Nyack Club, Arthur F. Buys, Voorhis Point.
Rochester — Memorial Art Gallery, George L. Herdle, University of
Rochester.
Rochester Athenaeum and Mechanics Institute, CliiTord M. Ulp, direc-
tor, Department of Applied and Fine Arts.
Rochester Industrial Exposition Association, George L. Herdle, 306
Powers Bldg.
Southampton, L. I. — Parrish Memorial Art Museum, Samuel L. Par-
rish, president.
Syracuse — Syracuse Museum of Fine Arts, Fernando Carter, Public
Library.
North Dakota
Fargo — Art Department of Fargo High School, Clara L. Rose, supervisor.
Art Section, Fine Arts Club, Mrs. Kent E. Darrow, 716 8th Street, S.
Art Department of the North Dakota Agricultural College, Pauline
Blake, director.
Ohio
Akron — Fine Arts Club, J. S. Stevens, 169 Rhodes Avenue.
Cincinnati — Cincinnati Museum Association, L. H. Gest, director.
Woman's Art Club of Cincinnati, Mrs. Grace C. Cone, 194 East Mc-
Millan Street, Mt. Auburn, Cinncinnati.
Cleveland — Cleveland Museum of Art, F. Allen Whiting, director, Wade
Park.
Cleveland School of Art, Whiting Williams, Juniper Road and Mag-
nolia Drive.
Columbus — Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts, R. H, Piatt, 478 East Broad
Street.
Ohio State University, Carl E. Steeb, business manager.
Dayton — Dayton Museum of Art, Mrs. Robert Patterson, 1115 Oakwood
Avenue.
Delaware — ^^Ohio Wesleyan University, C. B. Austin, dean.
Lima — Art Club of Lima High School, Ysabelle Glentzer, 131 East North
Street.
Oberlin — Oberlin Art Association, Clarence Ward, president, 335 E. Col-
lege Street.
Sandusky — Art Study Club, Mrs. R. H. Williams.
Toledo — Toledo Museum of Art, George W. Stevens, director.
Youngstown — Butler Art Institute, J. G. Butler, Jr., president.
Oklahoma
Muskogee — Art Association, Mrs. W. M. Brison, president, N Street and
Cincinnati Avenue.
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS
Oklahoma — Continued
Norman — Les Beaux Arts of the University of Oklahoma, Oscar B.
Jacobson, president.
Oklahoma City — Oklahom_a Art League, Mrs. Byron D. Shear, Carnegie
Library.
Oklahoma State Fair, L S. Mahn, Box 974.
Oregon
Portland — Portland Art Association, Anna B. Crocker, Fifth and Taylor
Streets.
Pennsylvania
Allentown — A. R. K. Art Club, Mrs. A. R. Krauss, president, 116 North
8th Street.
Fine Arts Association, Tod Lindenmuth, 26 North 6th Street.
Erie— The Art Club, Mrs. W. L. Speece, Box 328.
Jenkintown — Beechwood School of Fine Arts, R. C. Nuse, director.
Lancaster — Iris Club, Agnes Shand, 305 East Orange Street.
Meadville — Meadville Art Association, T. J. Meek, 650 Arch Street.
Philadelphia — Alumnse Philadelphia School of Design for Women, Broad
and Master Streets, Clara V. Richardson.
Alumni Association of the Pennsylvania Museum and School of In-
dustrial Art, John R. Sinnock, Broad and Pine Streets.
Art Club of Philadelphia, Samuel W. Cooper, 220 South Broad Street.
Arts and Crafts Guild, Margaret A. Neall, 237 South 11th Street.
City Parks Association, Andrew Wright Crawford, 701 Stephen
Girard Building.
Fairmount Park Art Association, Roland L. Taylor, 320 South Broad
Fellowship of the Pannsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Elinor
Earle, Pennsylvania Academy.
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, John Andrew Myers.
Pennsylvania School of Industrial Art, Memorial Hall, Fairmount
Park, Huger Elliott, principal of school.
Pennsylvania Society of Miniature Painters, A. Margaretta Archam-
bault, 1710 Chestnut Street.
Philadelphia Art Alliance, Clara R. Mason, Rittenhouse Square.
Philadelphia Chapter A. I. A., Paul A. Davis III, 1713 Sansom Street.
Philadelphia School of Design for Women, Harriet Sartain.
Philadelphia Sketch Club, S. C. Lomas, 235 South Camac Street.
Philadelphia Water Color Club, Thornton Oakley, 905 Clinton Street.
Plastic Club, Emma J. Lawrence, 1954 Bridge Street, Frankford,
Philadelphia.
Print Club, Mrs. William B. Linn, 1614 Latimer Street.
T Square Club, Ellery K. Taylor, 1627 Sansom Street.
School of Fine Arts, University of Pennsylvania, Warren P. Laird.
Pittsburgh — Art Society of Pittsburgh, Mrs. K. DeN. Wilson, manager,
313 Sixth Avenue.
Beaux Arts Salon, Mrs. Roy A. Hunt, Amberson Place.
Carnegie Institute, John W. Beatty, director of fine arts.
Carnegie Institute of Technology, E. Raymond Bossange, dean.
Warren — Art Club, Sallie M. Todd, treasurer.
William sport — Williamsport Public School Art League, Lulu Yount, 937
Lligh Street.
Rhode Island
Rhode Island Chapter A. I. A., Norman M. Isham, 915 Turks Head Bldg.,
Providence.
Newport— Art Association of Newport, Mrs. Maud Howe Elliott, Melville.
I
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS 89
Rhode Island — Continued
Providence — Providence Art Club, George L. Cooke, P. O. Box 813.
Rhode Island School of Design, Mrs. Gustav Radeke, president, 11
Waterman Street.
South Carolina
Charleston — Carolina Art Association, T. R. Waring, Gibbes Memorial
Art Building.
Charleston Museum, Laura M. Bragg, director.
Columbia — Art Association, Harold Tatum, 803 Sumter Street.
South Dakota
Rapid City — Current Events Club, Mrs. Arthur Clift, 1215 West Boulevard.
Sioux Falls — Sioux Falls Art Society, Mary Perkins, 1607 South Sum-
mit Avenue.
Vermilion — University of South Dakota, J. H. Julian.
Tennessee
Chattanooga — Art Study Club, Ava L. Wright, president, 1600 Union
Avenue.
Memphis — Art Association, Florence Mclntyre, Corresponding Secretary,
707 Adams Street.
Brooks Memorial Art Gallery, Florence M. Mclntyre, director, Over-
ton Park.
Tri-State Fair, Frank D. Fuller.
Nashville— Nashville Art Association, Mrs. Robert W. Nichol, 1910
Ridley Avenue.
Art Department of Tennessee Federation of Women's Clubs, Mrs.
George Washington, chairman, Washington Hall, Cedar Hill, Tenn.
Art Department of Tennesse State Fair, Mrs. R. W. Nichol, director,
1910 Ridley Avenue.
Winchester — Twentieth Century Association, Mrs. Roy Baker.
Texas
Austin — -Texas Fine Arts Association and Elisabet Ney Museum, Samuel
Edward Gideon, University Station, Austin.
Canyon — West Texas State Normal College, Alimae Aiken, P. O. Box 261.
Dallas — Dallas Art Association, Ruth de Capree, South Akard Street.
Fort Worth — Fort Worth Art Association, Mrs. Charles Scheuber, Car-
negie Library.
Texas Christian University, Mrs. E. R. Cockrell.
Galveston — Art League, Mrs. Robert Tschumy, 926 Sixth Street.
Houston— Houston Art League, Mrs. O. L. Norsworthy, 3015 Main Street.
San Antonio — San Antonio Art League, Mrs. H. P. Drought, president,
529 Oakland Street.
Virginia
Lynchburg — Woman's Club, Georgia Morgan, chairman, 700 Church
Street.
Norfolk — Norfolk Society of Arts, Mrs. F. F. Ferguson, 816 Westover
Avenue.
Richmond — Virginia League of Fine Arts and Handicrafts, Adele Clark,
519 East Franklin Street.
Washington
Seattle — Seattle Fine Arts Society, Irene Ewing Davis, 25 West Roy
Street.
West Seattle Art Club, Mrs. Dana W. Brown. 2711 37th Street, West
90 AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS
Wisconsin
Madison — Madison Art Association, Mrs. Clara Fuller Taylor.
Milwaukee — Layton Art Gallery, James K. Ilsley, president.
Milwaukee Art Institute, Dudley Crafts Watson, director, 456 Jef-
ferson Street.
Wyoming
Caspar — Natrona Delphian Club, Mrs. L. D. Scott, 614 South Grant Street,
Cheyenne — Cheyenne Art Association, Miss Olive Williams, chairman.
Societies
►^AMERICAN ACADEMY IN ROME
101 Park Avenue, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Wm. Rutherford Mead President C. Grant LaFarge Secretary
Breck Trowbridge Vice-President Roscoe Guernsey Executive Sec.
William A. Boring Treasurer
For foundation and history see Vol. V, p. 252, and Vol. XI, p. 199.
Organized 1894; chartered by the State of New York 1897; incorporated by
the Congress of the United States 1905, Consolidated with School of Classical
Studies 1913.
SCHOOLS IN ROME
Porta San Pancrazio, Rome, Italy
GoRHAM P. Stevens, Director of the Academy
Frank P. Fairbanks, Professor in charge, School of Fine Arts
George M. Whicher, Professor in charge. School of Classical Studies
Felix Lamond, Professor of Musical Composition
For details of Fellowship see Vol. XIV , p. 44.
Awards Fellowships in architecture, painting, sculpture, classical studies and
Lazarus scholarship for painting. (See school section.)
►J^ASSOCIATION OF THE ALUMNI OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY IN ROME
101 Park Avenue, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Charles Keck President George Koyle Treasurer
Eugene Savage Vice-President R. B. Barnes Secretary
70 Fifth Ave., New York
Organized 1910. Exhibitions are held.
AMERICAN ACADEMY OF ARTS AND LETTERS
15 West 81st Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
W. M. Sloane. President Robert Underwood Johnson Sec.
Brander Matthews Chancellor Hamlin Garland.. .Acting Secretary
Thomas Hastings Treasurer 71 East 92d St., New York, N. Y.
For descriptive article see Vol. XIII, p. 55 ; membership Vol. XIV , p. 45.
Organized 1904 by the National Institute of Arts and Letters (which see) ;
membership limited to fifty. Scries of addresses during season.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF MUSEUMS
Frederic A. Whiting President W. P. Wilson Treasurer
Cleveland Museum of Art Philadelphia Commercial Museum
C. J. Hamlin Vice-President Harold L. Madison Secretary
Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences Cleveland Museum of Natural His-
tory
For history see Vol. XI, p. 28.
Organized 1906. Publishes "Museum Work"; also "Museum News Letter."
91
92 NATIONAL SOCIETIES
AMERICAN BOOKPLATE SOCIETY
W. E. Fisher President J. M. Andreini Vice-Pres.
611 West 136th St., Manhattan, 29 West 75th St., Manhattan, New
New York. York,
Alfred Fowler, Secretary-Treasurer, 17 Board of Trade, Kansas City, Mo.
Organized 1913. Annual exhibitions of contemparary designs are held in
New York. A quarterly periodical is published.
AMERICAN CIVIC ASSOCIATION
905 Union Trust Building, Washington, D. C.
J. Horace McFarland, . President Frank A. Vanderlip Treasurer
Clinton R. Woodruff. 1st Vice-Pres. Harlean James Secretary
For activities see Vol. XI, p. 29.
Organized 1904.
The Association is active in improvement of outdoor conditions in American
cities and towns, giving special attention to the acquirement and maintenance
of city parks ; also directs movements for preservation, extension and larger
administration of the national parks. Numerous pamphlets are issued.
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
The Octagon, 1741 New York Ave., Washington, D. C.
Henry H. Kendall President D. Everett Waid Treasurer
Boston, Mass. New York
William B. Faville ... 1st Vice-Pres. W. S. Parker Secretary
San Francisco 120 Boylston St., Boston
Robert D. Kohn 2d Vice-Pres. E. C. Kemper Executive Secretary
New York Washington
For history see Vol. XI, p. 31 ; chairman of Committees, Vol. XIV , p. 47.
Chartered 1857. Annual conventions. The proceedings have been published
annually since 1867 ; an Annuary is issued and a monthly Journal was estab-
lished in January, 1913.
chapters and state associations
With date of organization and name of secretary
Alabama, 1916 — Eugene H. Knight, 1607 Empire Bldg., Birmingham.
Arkansas — Lawson L. Delony, Little Rock.
Baltimore. 1870 — Laurence Hall Fowler, 347 North Charles St.
Boston, 1870— E. H. Hoyt, 220 Devonshire St.
Brooklyn, 1894 — Thomas E. Snook, Jr., 261 Broadway, Alanhattan, New
York, N. Y.
Buffalo, 1890— Paul F. Mann, 222 Elicott Square.
Central New York, 1887— W. V. Madden, 125 Sibley Block, Rochester.
Cincinnati, 1870 — Joseph G. Steinkamp, Mercantile Library Bldg.
Cleveland, 1890— Albert E. Skeel, 4500 Euclid Ave.
Colorado, 1892 — R. O. Parry, 407 Clarkson St., Denver.
Columbus, 1913 — Charles L. Inscho, Brunson Bldg.
Connecticut, 1902 — Delbert K. Perry, City Hall, New Britain.
Dayton, 1899— H. J. Williams, 904 Mutual Home Bldg.
Florida — Henrietta C. Dozier, 607 Bisbee Bldg, Jacksonville.
Georgia, 1906 — Arthur N. Robinson, Candler Bldg., Atlanta.
Illinois, 1869 — John A. Armstrong, 11 South La Salle St., Chicago.
lowA, 1903 — Eugene H. Taylor, 617 Cedar Rapids Savings Bank Bldg., Cedar
Rapids.
Kansas City, 1890— C. H. Payson, 202 Reliance Bldg.
Kansas State — Cecil F. Baker, acting president, Manhattan, Kan.
Kentucky, 1908— Val P. Collins, Paul Jones Bldg.
NATIONAL SOCIETIES 93
American Institute of Architects — Continued
Louisiana, 1910 — Solis Seiferth, Maison Blanche Bldg., New Orleans.
Michigan, 1887— A. G. Donaldson, 1314 Penobscot Bldg., Detroit.
Minnesota, 1892 — ^Jerome Paul Jackson, 2309 First Ave., South, Minneapolis.
Montana — George H. Shouley, Great Falls.
Nebraska, 1919— J. D. Sandham, World Herald Bldg., Omaha.
New Jersey, 1900 — Hugh Roberts, 1 Exchange Place, Jersey City.
New York, 1867— R. H. Shreve, 215 West 57th St., Manhattan, New York,
N. Y.
North Carolina, 1913 — Erie G. Stillwell, Hendersonville.
Oregon, 1911 — George M. Post, 619 Railway Exchange Bldg., Portland.
Philadelphia, 1869 — Paul A. Davis, III, 1713 Sansom St.
Pittsburgh, 1891 — Stanley L. Rousli, City-County Bldg.
Rhode Island, 1875 — Norman M. Isham, 915 Turk's Head Bldg., Providence.
San Francisco, 1881— J. Stewart Fairweather, 1001 Balboa Bldg.
South Carolina, 1913 — H. Olin Jones, Greenville.
Southern California, 1907 — R. G. Hubby, 6412 Hollywood Blvd., Los
Angeles.
Southern Pennsylvania, 1909 — Edward Leber, 42 W. Market St., York.
St. Louis, 1890— W. O. Mullgardt, Chemical Bldg.
Tennessee, 1919 — Joseph W. Holman, 701 Stahlman Bldg., Nashville,
Texas, 1913— Roy E. Lane, Waco.
Toledo, 1914— Charles A. Langdon, Nicholas Bldg.
Utah — Taylor Woolley, Mclntire Bldg., Salt Lake City.
Virginia, 1914 — C. J. Calrow, Hanover Ave., Norfolk.
Washington, 1887— L. P. Wheat, Jr., 808 Seventeenth St., N.W., Washington,
D. C.
Washington State, 1894 — H. O. Sexsmith, University of Washington, Seattle.
Wisconsin, 1911— W. W. Judell, 615 Colby-Abbott Bldg., Milwaukee.
AMERICAN NUMISMATIC ASSOCIATION
Waldo C. Moore President George J. Bauer Treasurer
Lewisburg, Ohio. 192 St. Paul St., Rochester, N. Y.
H. H. Yawger, General Secretary, 438 South Sixth St., Indiana, Pa.
E. D. Putnam, Librarian, Municipal Museum, Rochester, N. Y.
Moritz Wormser, Chairman Board of Governors, 95 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
district secretaries
First — Harry A. Gray, 41 Rockland St., Roxbury, Mass.
Second — Rudolph Kohler, 70 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y.
Third — Henry Chapman, 333 South Sixteenth St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Fourth— M. Marcuson, 1611 East 82d St., N. E., Cleveland, O.
Fifth — Fred Michael, 8 South Dearborn St., Chicago, 111.
Sixth — A. H. YoDER, University, N. D.
Seventh — George H. King, Denver National Bank, Denver, Colo.
Eighth — I. Leland Steinman, Room 329, 235 Montgomery St., San Francisco,
Calif.
Ninth— B. Max Mehl, P. O. Drawer 976, Fort Worth, Texas.
Tenth — John A. Wood, 165 Oak Ave., Hamilton, Ontario.
Eleventh — R. L. Reid, Vancouver, B. C.
Twelfth — H. L. Doane, Truro, Nova Scotia.
British Isles — S. H. Hamer, Halifax, Yorkshire, England.
Organized 1891 ; Federal charter 1912. Official organ, "The Numismatist,"
$1.50 a year; Frank G. Duffield, editor and business manager, 1811 Mosher
Street, Baltimore, Md. Library maintained and books lent free to members.
Affiliated Branch Societies offer facilities to members. Holds annual con-
vention.
94 NATIONAL SOCIETIES
.^AMERICAN SCENIC AND HISTORIC PRESERVATION SOCIETY
Tribune Building, 154 Nassau St., New York, N. Y.
George F. Kunz President Edward Hagaman Hall. . . Secretary
Henry W. Sackett 1st Vice-Pres. N, Taylor Phillips Treasurer
Incorporated 1895. A national society for the protection of natural scenery,
the preservation of historic landmarks and the improvement of cities. An
illustrated report of the parks and monuments that are under the care of the
Society is published annually.
►^AMERICAN SOCIETY OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS
F. L. Olmsted President Bremer W. Pond Secretary
J. L. Greenleaf Vice-Pres. 18 Tremont St., Boston, Mass.
Carl R. Parker Treasurer
Organized 1899.
ARCH^OLOGICAL INSTITUTE OF AMERICA
Columbia University, Borough of Manhattan, New York, N. Y.
J. C. Egbert President Charles Hallam Keep Treasurer
Columbia University, New York Columbia Trust Co., New York
City City.
W. B. Dinsmoor^ Acting General Secretary, Columbia University, New York,
N. Y.
Curator — ^Mitchell Carroll, The Octagon, 1741 New York Ave., Washington,
D. C.
Recorder — R. V. D. Magoffin, Baltimore.
Editor-in-Chief "American Journal of Archaeology" — W. N. Bates, University
of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa.
Director and Editor of "Art and Archaeology" — Mitchell Carroll, The Octa-
gon, 1741 New York Ave., Washington, D. C.
Chairman of Managing Committees
American School in Athens — Edward Capps, Princeton University, N. J.
American School in Jerusalem — J. A. Montgomery, University of Pennsyl-
vania, Philadelphia.
School of American Archaeology — William H. Holmes, Smithsonian Insti-
tution, Washington, D. C.
Mediaeval and Renaissance Studies — Allan Marquand, Princeton University.
Colonial and National Art in North America — Fiske Kimball, University of
Virginia, Charlottesville.
For further data see Vol. XVII, p. 106.
Organized 1879; incorporated 1906. Managed by a Council, composed of its
officers and of representatives of its Societies, one councillor for each fifty
members.
The Institute publishes quarterly the "American Journal of Archaeology."
The subscription price is $5, but the Journal is sent free to all members. Also
a popular monthly magazine, "Art and Archaeology," subscription, $5.
affiliated societies of the arch^ological institute
With date of organization and name of Secretary
Baltimore Society, 1884 — L. H. Baker, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore,
Md.
Boston Society, 1879— Seth T. Cans, 44 State St., Boston, Mass.
Buffalo Society, 1909— Mrs. J. J. Albright, 730 West Ferry St., Buffalo, N. Y.
Chicago Society, 1889— Gordon J. Laing, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111.
Cincinnati Society, 1905— Frank L. Clark, Miami University, Oxford, O.
Cleveland Society, 1895 — L. C. West, Citizens' Bldg., Cleveland, O.
NATIONAL SOCIETIES 95
Archaeological Institute — Continued
Colorado Springs Branch, Colorado State Society, 1912 — J. G. McMurtry,
Colorado College, Colorado Springs, Colo.
Connecticut Society, 1898 — H. M. Hubbell, 268 Willow Road, New Haven,
Conn.
Denver Brancli, Colorado Society, 1904 — Mrs. William W. Grant, 7020 East
12th Ave., Denver, Colo.
Detroit Society, 1889 — Isobel Weadock, Institute of Arts, Detroit, Mich.
Hartford Society, 1911 — O. W. Means, 44 Forest Street, Hartford, Conn.
Independence Society, 1918 — Mrs. J. G. Pointer, 301 South Spring St., Indepen-
dence, Mo.
Iowa Society, 1902 — E. B. T. Spencer, Grinnell, Iowa.
Kansas City Society, 1906 — Maclay Lyon, Bryant Bldg., Kansas City, Mo.
Los Angeles Society, 1904 — Mrs. Hector Alliot, 910 Catalina St., Los Angeles,
Calif.
MiDDLETOwN (CoNN.) SociETY, 1920 — K. P. Harrington, Middletown.
New Jersey Society, 1908 — Mrs. P. C. Nye, 64 Nassau St., Princeton, N. J.
New York Society. 1884— Allan P. Ball, College of the City of New 'York,
New York, N. Y.
Pennsylvania Society, 1889 — Rhys Carpenter, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Pittsburgh Society, 1903 — J. B. Hench, 5524 Kentucky Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Portland Society, 1909 — A. E. Doyle, Worcester Bldg., Portland, Ore.
Pueblo Branch, Colorado State Society, 1912 — R. W. Corwin, President,
Minnequa Hospital, Pueblo, Colo.
Rhode Island Society, 1908 — John Shapley, Brown University, Providence,
R. I.
Richmond Society, 1912 — W. A. Harris, Richmond College, Richmond, Va.
Rochester Society, 1906 — Theodore A. Miller, 18 Sibley Place, Rochester,
N. Y.
St. Louis Society, 1906— Geo. R. Throop, Public Library, St. Louis, Mo.
St. Paul Branch Minnesota Society — Mrs. George R. Metcalf, The Com-
modore, St. Paul, Minn.
San Diego Society, 1912— Mrs. M. W. Kraemer, 3201 First St., San Diego,
Calif.
San Francisco Society, 1906— .H. R. Fairclough, Stanford University, Calif.
Santa Fe, 1916— Lansing B. Bloom, Santa Fe, N. M.
Syracuse Society, 1911—1. J. Peritz, 608 University Ave., Spracuse, N. Y.
Toledo Society, 1917— Blake-More Godwin, Toledo Museum, Toledo.
Walla Walla Branch, Washington State Society, 1906— Louis F. An-
derson, 364 Boyne Avenue, Walla Walla, Wash.
•i«WASHiNGT0N SociETY, 1902— MitchcU Carroll, The Octagon, Washington.
D. C.
Wisconsin Society, 1889— Katharine Allen, 228 Langdon St., Madison, Wis.
Canada
Montreal Society, 1908— R. A. MacLean, McGill University.
Toronto Society, 1908— N. W. DeWitt, Victoria College, Toronto, Can.
Vancouver Society, 1911— Lemuel Robertson, 2705 Second Ave., W. Van-
couver, B. C,
Winnipeg Society, 1909-^John W. Taylor, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg.
ASSOCIATION OF ART MUSEUM DIRECTORS
George W. Stevens President Clyde H. Burroughs ,..Vice-Pres.
Toledo Museum Detroit Institute of Art's
Robert B. Harshe, Secretary-Treasurer, Chicago Art Institute
Organized 1916. Handles circulating exhibitions and other art museum
problems.
96 NATIONAL SOCIETIES
ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGIATE SCHOOLS OF ARCHITECTURE
Emil Lorch, President, Ann Arbor, Mich.
William Emerson Vice-Pres. Clarence A. Martin Sec.-Treas.
Mass Inst, of Techology Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.
"^Organized 1912. Annual meeting just prior to convention of American Insti-
tute of Architects.
ASSOCIATION OF PICTURE PUBLISHERS
S. L. Newman President A. F. Rice Vice-President
E. W. Tanner, Secretary-Treasurer
225 Fifth Avenue, New York City
Organized 1916 for betterment of conditions in the picture industry. Annual
meeting last Tuesday in March. Membership, 10.
COLLEGE ART ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA
D. M. Robinson President Paul J. Sachs Vice-President
Johns Hopkins University, Balti- Harvard University, Cambridge
more
John Shapley, Sec.-Treas., Brown University, Providence
For list of colleges represented see Vol. XIV, p. 53.
Organized 1912. Holds annual meeting. Publishes bulletin with scientific
studies and the results of investigation of problems connected with art work
in colleges.
.^EASTERN ARTS ASSOCIATION
Fred R. Preagle President A. H. Wentworth Treasurer
Board of Education, Montclair Board of Education, New Haven
Frances H. Bacheler Vice-Pres. Frank E. Matthewson Secretary
Public High School, Hartford Dickinson High School, Jersey City
Organized 1899; re-organized 1913.
GENERAL FEDERATION OF WOMEN'S CLUBS
Mrs. Thomas G. Winter^ President, 2617 Dean Boulevard, Minneapolis, Minn.
FINE arts department
Mrs. Rose V. S. Berry, Chairman,'2975 Piedmont Ave., Berkeley, Calif.
Mrs. Walter S. Little, Chairman Division of Art, 15 Plymouth St., Bridge-
water, Mass.
The Art Division offers outlines for art study and many traveling lectures,
illustrated with exhibits of prints, slides of paintings, of civic a"rt in the home,
also exhibits of pottery, of industrial art products, and of school art.
STATE ART CHAIRMEN, GENERAL FEDERATION OF WOMEN's CLUBS
Alabama — Miss Margaret McAdory, 27 Watts Bldg., Birmingham.
Arizona — Miss May Noble, R. 2, Box 162 A, Phoenix.
Arkansas — Mrs. J. I. Moore, Sr., Helena.
California — Mrs. George A. Cheney, Coronado,
Colorado— Mrs. Joe Mills, 1012 15th St., Boulder.
Connecticut — Mrs. Philip Holzer, 1071 Iranistan Ave., Bridgeport.
Delaware — Mrs. J. Pearce Cann, Newark.
District of Columbia — Mrs. S. L. Peackam, 3177 18th St., Washington.
Florida — Miss Lucy W. Jordan, Homestead.
Georgia — Miss Marcia L. Buchhols, 21 King St., Dalton.
Idaho— Mrs. F. C. Hollingshead, 1605 North 7th St., Boise.
Illinois — Miss Catherine Lester, 307 North Orange St., Peoria.
Indiana — Mrs. J. W. Riddle, Lawrenceburg.
NATIONAL SOCIETIES 97
General Federation of Women's Clubs — Continued
Iowa — Miss Frances B. Mason, Boone.
Kansas — Mrs. Nelson A. Case, Oswego.
Kentucky — Miss Cora L. Webb, Owensboro.
Louisiana — Miss Helen Graham, Ruston.
Maine — Mrs. Annie E. Smith, Brunswick.
Maryland — Miss Annie L. Wilson, Kensington.
Massachusetts — Mrs. C. D. Thor, 51 High St., Everett.
Minnesota — Mrs. J. H. Palmer, 2806 West Lake of Isles Blvd., Minneapolis.
Michigan — Mrs. B. W. Wells, Ewart.
Mississippi — Miss Marie Ascher, 404 Amite St., Jackson.
Missouri — Mrs. Philip S. Elliott, Rockhill Manor, Kansas City.
Montana— Mrs. T. A. Grigg, 210 North Clark St., Butte.
Nebraska — Mrs, Anna R. Morey, 726 North Hastings Ave., Hastings.
Nevada — Mrs. E. O. Norton, Reno.
New Hampshire — Dr. Mary R. Farnham, 45 Water St., Peancook.
New Jersey — Mrs. Alvoni R. Allen, 55 Bentley Place, Jersey City.
New Mexico — Mrs. E. D. Hewett, Santa Fe.
New York— Miss Anna M. Jones, 230 West 205th St., New York City.
North Carolina — Mrs. Marshall Williams, Faison.
North Dakota — Mrs. F. J. Thompson, 714 Front St., Fargo.
Ohio — Mrs. John MacKee, Springfield, O.
Oklahoma — Mrs. L. S. Hysmith, Wilburton.
Oregon— Mrs. T. G. Hein, 910 West 10th St., Medford.
Pennsylvania — Mrs. A. Duncan Yoacum, Ridley Park.
Rhode Island — Miss Nellie Philips, 54 Wesleyan Ave., Providence.
South Carolina — Miss Elise Langley, 114 Church St., Charleston.
South Dakota — Mrs. U. L. Ferguson, Midland.
Tennessee — Mrs. George A. Washington, Cedar Hill.
Texas— Mrs. W. S. Douglas, Hamlin.
Utah — Miss Myra Sawyer, 763 East 5th St., Salt Lake City.
Vermont — Mrs. Clarence Coon, Castleton.
Virginia — Mrs. W. R. Meech, Edgewater, Norfolk.
Washington— Mrs. Henry Osterman, 508 Lincoln St., Walla Walla.
West Virginia — Mrs. P. A. George, Ronceverte.
Wisconsin— Mrs. W. J. Fancher, 1401 Wisconsin St., Racine.
Wyoming — Mrs. D. E. Goddard, Lusk.
committee of art division
Art in the Home and Garden, Mrs. Walter S. Little, 15 Plymouth St., Bridge-
water, Mass.
Civic Art and War Memorials, Mrs. John McKee, 731 East High St., Spring-
field, O.
School and Industrial Art, Frances B. Mason, Boone.
Painting and Sculpture, Mrs. R. V. S. Berry, 2975 Piedmont Ave., Berkeley,
Calif.
Fine Arts Exhibits — Prints, Mrs. H. B. Burnet, 1864 North Pennsylvania St..
Indianapolis, Ind.
Fine Arts Exhibits — Slides, Mrs. Anna R. Morey, 728 North Hastings St.,
Hastings, Neb.
Arts and Crafts — Pottery, Mrs. Fred Crowley, 1721 Pleasant St., Des Moines,
la., and Alrs; J. S. Carpenter, Des Moines, la.
PIONORARY advisors TO THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Art in the Home, Mrs. John W. Alexander.
Art in the Garden, Mrs. Herman Rosse.
Civic Art and War Memorials, Mrs. James E. Eraser.
School and Industrial Art, Helen E. Cleaves.
98 NATIONAL SOCIETIES
General Federation of Women's Clubs — Continued
Painting, Violet Oakley.
Sculpture, Anna Coleman Ladd.
Art and Crafts, Mrs. Douglas Donaldson.
Representing Art Organizations
American Federation of Arts, Leila Mechlin.
Art Alliance of America, Anna Vaughn Hyatt.
Art and Archaeology, Mrs. Mitchell Carroll.
Decorative Art and Industries, Lucy D. Taylor.
NATIONAL COMMISSION OF FINE ARTS
1729 New York Avenue, N.W., Washington, D. C.
Charles Moore, Chairman
John Russell Pope Henry Bacon
James L. Greenleaf Louis Ayres
James E. Eraser H. Siddons Mowbray
Lieut. -Col. C. O. Shebrill, Secretary and Executive Officer
Established by Act of Congress, 1910. For the Act see Vol. XI, p. 7Z.
The Commission is composed of three architects, one landscape architect,
one painter, one sculptor, and one layman. Annual report issued covering
work.
The plans for all new structures to be erected in the District of Columbia
under the direction of the Federal Government and all questions involving
matters of art with which the Federal Governrnent is concerned, must be sub-
mitted to the commission for comment and advice before final action is taken.
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ARTS AND LETTERS
15 West 81st Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Robert Grant, President
Robert I. Aitken 1st Vice-Pres. Arnold W. Brunner Treasurer
Walter Damrosch. . . .2d Vice-Pres. Jefferson B. Fletcher Secretary
Organized 1898 by the American Social Science Association ; incorporated by
Act of Congress, 1913. Its purpose is the protection and furtherance of liter-
ature and the arts.
PACIFIC COAST CHAPTER,
AMERICAN SOCIETY OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS
Wilbur D. Cook President Emmanuel T. Mische Treasurer
Hellman" Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif. Henry Bldg., Portland, Ore.
Stephen Child Vice-President George D. Hall Secretary
Fairmount Hotel, San Francisco, Hellman Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif.
Calif.
Organized 1.918.
i^PICTORIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS OF AMERICA
Art Center, 65 East 56th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
A. D. Chaffee President Sophie Lauffer Recording Sec.
John Paul Edwards Vice-Pres. J. R. Mason Cor. Secretary
Adele C. Shkeve Treasurer 611 West 136th St., New York City
Organized 1917. Publishes year book.
PRINT PUBLISHERS' ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA
Benjamin Curtis President Martin Birnbaum Treasurer
Boston New York
W. A. Livingstone, Secretary, Box 555, Detroit, Mich.
Organized 1904. Work consists chiefly of bettering copyright conditions.
NATIONAL— CALIFORNIA 99
WESTERN ARTS ASSOCIATION
Carl T. Cotter President L. R. Abbott Sec-Treasurer
Mabel Williams Vice-President 234 Division Ave., N., Grand Rapids
Organized 1893. Annual convention is held.
ALABAMA
ALABAMA CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
George B. Rogers President Eugene H. Knight Sec.-Treas.
Mobile 1607 Empire Bldg., Birmingham
Bem Price Vice-President
Birmingham
Organized 1916.
BIRMINGHAM BIRMINGHAM
4- ALABAMA ART LEAGUE
27 Watts Building, Birmingham
Two County Chapters
Jefferson County
J. W. Donnelly President Lillian Rosser Treasurer
A. A. Halsted Vice-President Margaret McAdory Secretary
Organized 1918. Membership 250.
•^Montgomery County
Will T. Shehan President Mr. Okel Treasurer
Mrs. Frank Elmore, Jr.. .Vice-Pres. Mrs. Churchill Marks. . .Secretary
BIRMINGHAM PUBLIC LIBRARY
City Hall, Birmingham
L. W. JossELYN, Director
Frequent small exhibits of the work of the Art and Manual Training De-
partment of the Birmingham public schools.
ARIZONA
TUCSON
THE ART ASSOCIATION OF TUCSON
S. L. KiNGAN President D. T. MacDougal Sec-Treasurer
Tucson, Ariz.
Organized March, 1917.
CALIFORNIA
ENGINEERS AND ARCHITECTS ASSOCIATION
OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
625 Metropolitan Bldg., Los Angeles
C. A. Heinze President Everett H. Merritt Treasurer
H. Z. Osborne, Jr Vice-Pres. Willis S. Peffer Secretary
Organized 1894. Monthly addresses, occasional field excursions.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Edwin Bergstrom President Robert H. Orr Treasurer
H. F. WiTHEY Vice-President R. G. Hubby Secretary
6412 Hollywood Blvd., Los Angeles
Organized 1894; incorporated 1907.
100 CALIFORNIA
CARMEL
CARMEL CLUB OF ARTS AND CRAFTS
Mrs. J. W. Hand President Miss M. DeNeale Morgan . Secretary
Mrs. Sydney Yard Vice-President P. O. Box 67, Carmel
Mrs. M. H. Brenner Treasurer
Organized 1907. Exhibitions are held.
DEL MONTE
DEL MONTE ART GALLERY
Del Monte
Josephine Blanch, Director
Advisory Committee •
GOTTARDO PlAZZONI WiLLIAM RiTSCHEL
Armin Hanson Detlif Sammann
Organized 1907. The gallery is maintained by private interests, but managed
by the Committee of Artists. It is a continuous exhibition of work by pro-
fessional artists of California. The pictures are for sale and when one is sold
another by the same artist is invited.
HOLLYWOOD
►^HOLLYWOOD ART ASSOCIATION
Douglas Donaldson President A. E. Sage Treasurer
Jessica Lawrence Vice-President Edith A. Jones Secretary
5628 Carlton Way, Hollywood
Virginia E. Graeff, Educational Director, 1633 Gower St., Hollywood.
Organized 1920. Lectures are given, and exhibitions are held.
LACUNA BEACH
►^LAGUNA BEACH ART ASSOCIATION
F. W. CuPRiEN President Jessie Washburn Treasurer
Anna A. Hills 1st Vice-President Mrs. J. S. Thurston Secretary
Emily White 2d Vice-President Mrs. F. P. MacPherson. . .Cor.-Sec.
Organized 1918. Lectures given and exhibitions held.
^WEST COAST ARTS
Mrs. Ella H. Tanberg. . . .President Beulah May Treasurer
Donna Schuster 1st Vice-Pres. Mabelle Lord Frost Secretary
Lillian P. Ferguson. . .2d Vice-Pres.
Organized 1921. Exhibitions are held.
LONG BEACH
LONG BEACH PUBLIC LIBRARY
Miss Zaidee Brown, Librarian
Florence M. Freeman, in Charge of Art Gallery
Exhibitions are held.
LOS ANGELES
4<CALIF0RNIA ART CLUB OF LOS ANGELES
623 Park View Street, Los Angeles
Jack W. Smith President Max Wieczorek Treasurer
Katheryn E. Leighton 1st Vice- Dana Bartlett Cor. -Secretary
President E. Roscoe Shrader Rec. -Secretary
Orrin E. White. . .2d Vice-President
For history see Vol. XI, p. 47.
Organized 1910. Exhibitions are held.
CALIFORNIA 101
LOS ANGELES
CALIFORNIA WATER COLOR SOCIETY
516 South Hill Street, Los Angeles
Dana B artlett President J. W. Cotton Treasurer
Max Wieczorek. . .1st Vice-President Henri de Kruif Secretary
C. O. BoRG 2d Vice-President
Organized 1920. Exhibitions are held.
EBELL OF LOS ANGELES
1719 South Figueroa .Street, Los Angeles
Mrs. Charles H. Toll President Mrs. Birney Donnell Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. O. a. Trippet Vice-Pres. Mrs. Edward Crumley Cor.-Sec.
Mrs. L. C. Carlisle Treasurer Mrs. W. H. Millspaugh. ..Chairman
Art Committee
Founded 1894. Lectures are given.
.^FRIDAY MORNING CLUB
940 South Figueroa Street, Los Angeles
Mrs. a. S. Lobingier President Mrs. H. R. Callender Treasurer
Mrs, a. C. Wier 1st Vice-Pres. Helen Louise Kimball Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. Randall Hutchinson. .2d Vice- Mrs. W. W. Slayden Cor.-Sec.
President and Chairman Art Com-
mittee
Organized 1891. Exhibitions are held.
MUNICIPAL ART COMMISSJON
City Hall, Los Angeles
J. W. Mitchell President Mrs. Sumner P. Hunt Vice-Pres.
J. J. Backus, Secretary
Founded 1903; Charter granted 1911. Considers and approves plans for
city buildings.
PRINT MAKERS OF CALIFORNIA
Benjamin C. Brown President Howell C. Brown Secretary
Frances H. Gearhart Treasurer' 120 N. El Molino Ave., Pasadena
Organized 1914. Circulates traveling exhibitions.
PASADENA
4*PASADENA MUSIC AND ART ASSOCIATION
Fair Oaks and Lincoln Avenues, Pasadena
George E. Hale President George S. Patton Treasurer
Henry E. Huntington. . .Vice-Pres. Ernest A. Batchelder Secretary
Organized 1900. Exhibitions are arranged and the St:ckney Memorial School
of Fine Arts is maintained. (See school section.)
SACRAMENTO
KINGSLEY ART CLUB
Mary Patten President A. A. Osler Treasurer
Mrs. Wallace A. Briggs. .Vice-Pres. Mrs. W. A. Briggs Secretary
Organized 1892. Lectures given and exhibits held.
102 CALIFORNIA
SAN DIEGO
.^FRIENDS OF ART
Lyman J. Gage, Honorary President
Joseph W. Sefton, Jr President W. S. Borland Treasurer
Alice Klauber 1st Vice-Pres. W. H. McFetridge Rec.-Sec.
Milton McRae 2d Vice-Pres. Mrs. Henry Foote Cor. -Sec.
Mrs. George McKENziE.3d Vice-Pres. 3775 Utah St., San Diego
Organized 1920, Exhibitions are held.
SAN DIEGO ART GUILD
B and 6th Streets, San Diego
A. R. Valentien President Sarah E. Truax Sec. -Treasurer
Eugene De Vol Vice-President 3620 Fairmount Ave., East San
Diego
Organized 1915. Lectures given and exhibitions held.
SAN FRANCISCO
CALIFORNIA SOCIETY OF ETCHERS
540 Sutter Street, San Francisco
Perham Nahl President Mrs, M. H, Pope Treasurer
Clark Hobart Vice-President L. W, Scammon Secretary-
Organized 1913.
SAN FRANCISCO CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
George A. Applegarth President Ernest A, Coxhead, ..Vice-President
J. Stewart Fairweather, Secretary-Treasurer, 1001 Balboa Bldg., San Francisco
Organized 1881.
SAN FRANCISCO ART ASSOCIATION
Palace of Fine Arts, San Francisco
Arthur Brown, Jr President Walter S. Martin Treasurer
Charles T, Crocker Vice-Pres, Mrs, Walter Fife Secretary
NiLSEN Laurvik, Director
Lee F. Randolph, Director of the School
For history see Vol. XI, p. 52, and Vol XVII, p. 114,
Open daily, except Sunday, 9 a,m,, to 5 p,m,; Tuesday and Saturdays, ad-
mission free ; other days, 25 cents. Permanent and special exhibitions.
Organized 1872; incorporated 1889; affiliated with the University of Cali-
fornia, February, 1893; reorganized 1915 when the San Francisco Society of
Artists and the Sketch Club were united with the Association. California
School of Fine Arts is conducted by the Association (see School section).
For exhibitions see San Francisco Museum of Art, which is conducted by
the San Francisco Art Association,
SANTA CRUZ
SANTA CRUZ ART LEAGUE
Seabright Crafts Building, Santa Cruz
Philip H^nry Dodge President Mrs. J. M. Blazer Treasurer
Margaret Rogers Vice-President Mrs. V. E. Arthur Secretary
Organized 1919, Continuous exhibition with complete change quarterly.
CALIFORNIA— COLORADO 103
SEABRIGHT
SEABRIGHT CRAFTS
Seabright, Santa Cruz County
Margaret Rogers President Mrs. Samuel Unsworth . .Sec.-Treas.
Rose Edwards Vice-President
Organized 1916. The purpose of the Society is to encourage artistic handi-
craft, and to furnished a market for the output of homes as well as of the
craft house. Studio open throughout the year.
COLORADO
COLORADO CHAPTER AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Arthur A. Fisher President Richard Phillips Treasurer
Albert J. Norton Vice-President R. O. Parry Secretary
407 Clarkson St., Denver
Organized 1892 ; incorporated 1898. "
COLORADO SPRINGS
4<BR0ADM00R ART ACADEMY
West Dale Street, Colorado Springs
Julie V. L. Penrose President Stanley Stoner ". Director
,D. V. Donaldson Vice-President Ruth Harter Registrar
Trustees
Julie V. L. Penbose Roland L. Boutwell
Anne Gregory Ritter D. V. Donaldson
Regina Lunt Dodge
Organized 1920, when Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Penrose gave as a foundation
their city residence at Colorado Springs. Classes are held in the main building.
Exhibitions are held monthly in the Gallery. Concerts and performances by
the Drama League are given in Assembly Room.
DENVER
►^ART COMMISSION OF THE CITY AND COUNTY OF DENVER
623 Commonwealth Building, Denver
E. W. Robinson President Marie L. Woodson Secretary
832 South Pearl St., Denver
For ivork see previous volumes.
Organized 1904. The Commission consists of six members. Routine work,
chiefly city planning and ornamental municipal lighting.
►X<DENVER ART ASSOCIATION
Public Library, Denver
Platt Rogers President C. S. Haugh wout Treasurer
S. Nelson Hicks Vice-President Mrs. A. F. Rollins Secretary
George William Eggers Director
Organized 1893 as Artists' Club of Denver.
Permanent collection in Museum at City Park. Exhibitions are held in the
Public Library and changed frequently. Co-operates with many other societies
in pageants and other functions.
104 COLORADO— CONNECTICUT
DENVER
PUBLIC LIBRARY OF THE CITY AND COUNTY OF DENVER
West Colfax Avenue, Denver
Chalmers Hadley, Librarian.
Founded 1898. Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
There is a well lighted art gallery under the management of the Art Associa-
tion of Denver, which provides all exhibitions, lectures, addresses, receptions
and other functions.
PUEBLO
PUEBLO ARTS AND CRAFTS SOCIETY
Herman W. Nash President Ida Peterson Treasurer
Judith D. Baxter, Secretary, 226 W. Abriendo Ave., Pueblo
Organized 1916. Exhibitions are held,
CONNECTICUT
CONNECTICUT CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Louis O. Walsh President D. K. Perry Secretary-Treasurer
W. H. Hunt.. Vice-President City Hall, New Britain
Organized 1902.
CONNECTICUT ARTS ASSOCIATION
Maud A. Simpson President Rosemary Brady Secretary-Treas.
Cora M. Crane Vice-President 774 East Main St., Meriden
Organized 1908 ; name changed from Connecticut Manual Art Teachers' As-
sociation. Exhibitions are held.
BRIDGEPORT
►^BRIDGEPORT ART LEAGUE
528 Clinton Avenue, Bridgeport
Mrs. S. W. Gledhill President Mks. Guy L. Hammond Treasurer
Mrs. p. L. Holzer 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. F. S. Trumbull Secretary
Organized 1894. Exhibitions are held.
GREENWICH
GREENWICH SOCIETY OF ARTISTS
Leonard Ochtman President W. B. Tubby Treasurer
Edward C. Potter. .. .Vice-President George Wharton Edwards Sec.
Organized 1912. Owns collection of paintings, drawings and sculpture. Ex-
hibitions are held in the Bruce Art Museum.
HARTFORD
►I-ART SOCIETY OF HARTFORD
904 Main Street, Hartford
Mrs. Howell Cheney President Helen Forbest Rec. -Secretary
Mrs. Archibald A. Welch. .V.-Pres. AIrs. H. B. Freeman. .Cor.-Secretary
Elizabeth Burt Treasurer
Organized 1877. Annual exhibition is held in May. An art school is main-
tained (see school section).
CONNECTICUT 105
HARTFORD
CONNECTICUT ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS
Box 298, Hartford, Conn.
Daniel F. Wentworth. .. .President James G. McManus Secretary
Henry C. White Vice-President 86 Pratt St., Hartford
Ralph R. Seymour Treasurer
Organized 1910. Exhibitions are held.
CONNECTICUT COMMISSION OF SCULPTURE
The Capitol, Hartford
Burton Mansfield/ Chairman, H. Siddons Mowbray, Washington
New Haven Geo. Dudley Seymour, New Haven
Frank Cheney, South Manchester Francis Parsons, Hartford
Arthur L. Shipman, Clerk, Hartford
Commission established 1886, by act of Legislature, which states "All mat-
ters relating to the decoration of the Capitol building and grounds with his-
torical statues or works of art shall, before final action by the General
Assembly, be referred to said Commission." Powers of the Commission were
enlarged in 1907.
HARTFORD ART CLUB
Mrs. J. L. English President Gertrude O. Lewis Treasurer
Mrs. Edwin H. Bingham. Vice-Pres. Mrs. Alfred Weatherby.. .Secretary
11 Wells Ave., East Hartford
Organized 1885.
HARTFORD ARTS AND CRAFTS CLUB
Mrs. F. Minot Blake President Howard M. Penrose Treasurer
William B. Green Vice-President Jane L. Dresser Secretary
Organized 1903. Holds two sales a year.
HARTFORD KERAMIC ART CLUB
Atheneum Annex, Hartford
Mrs. William Seaver President Mrs. George Merchant. . ..Treasurer
Mrs. a. J. Benedict. . . 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. Eric Peterson Secretary
Mrs. James J. MoRCOM.2d Vice-Pres.
Organized 1914.
HhMUNICIPAL ART SOCIETY
102 Huntington Street, Hartford
William Honiss President Charles C. Russ Treasurer
Organized 1904.
LITCHFIELD
LITCHFIELD HISTORICAL SOCIETY
George M. Woodruff President Alain C. White Treasurer
Mrs. J. A. Vanderpoel. . . .Vice-Pres. C. R. Duffie Secretary
Organized 1853. Exhibitions held.
NEEDLE AND BOBBIN CLUB
Miss Quincy President Mrs. Hazel Vanderpoel. . .Treasurer
Kate Thomas, Secretary
Organized 1918. (No report 1921).
106 CONNECTICUT
LYME
LYME ART ASSOCIATION
W. H. Howe President Charles Ebert Treasurer
William Chadwick. .Vice-President Clark G. Voorhees Secretary
Founded 1914. Art Gallery completed 1921. Annual exhibition in summer.
MYSTIC
MYSTIC ART ASSOCIATION
G. S. B. Leonard President G. Albert Thompson Sec.-Treas.
Founded 1914. Annual exhibition in summer.
NEW BRITAIN
NEW BRITAIN INSTITUTE
Andrew J. Sloper President George S. Talcott,
Fred B. Chamberlain Treasurer Trustee Talcott Art Fund
Marcus White Secretary
Areta E. Brown, Acting Librarian
Founded 1853. A few special loan exhibitions have been held.
NEW CANAAN
NEW CANAAN SOCIETY OF ARTISTS
Augustus M. Gerdes President William Francis Weed. .Sec.-Treas.
Ernest Albert Vice-President New Canaan
Re-organized 1914. Exhibitions held. (No report 1921.)
NEW HAVEN
MUNICIPAL ART COMMISSION OF NEW HAVEN
Burton Mansfield, President
For powers see Vol. XI, p. 66.
Organized January, 1914, and consists of five members appointed by the
Mayor to serve for term of five years. Public works are referred to the
commission for approval.
NEW HAVEN PAINT AND CLAY CLUB
P. O. Box 918, New Haven
John I. H. Downes President George H. Langzettel Treasurer
E. C. Taylor Vice-President Theodore Diedricksen Secretary
Organized 1900. Exhibitions are held.
SCHOOL OF THE FINE ARTS
Yale University, New Haven
James Rowland Angell, President
Wm. Sergeant Kendall Director George H. Langzettel, Secretary and
J. I. H. Downes Librarian Assistant Curator
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 68.
School founded 1866; building erected 1864. The Library has about 1,500
volumes. Illustrated lectures are given. Exhibitions are held.
SILVERMINE
SILVERMINE GROUP OF ARTISTS
Silvermine, Norwalk
Solon H. Borglum President William A. Boring Treasurer
Hamilton Hamilton Vice-Pres. Henry Salem Hubbell Secretary
Organized 1908. Weekly Sunday morning meetings during summer, when
artists bring work with them. Annual exhibition during summer.
CONNECTICUT— DELAWARE— DISTRICT of COLUMBIA 107
WATERBURY
i^MATTATUCK HISTORICAL SOCIETY
119 West Main Street, Waterbury
Arthur Reed Kimball, President
Charles L. Holmes Treasurer Walter W. Holmes Curator
Frederick G. Mason Secretary Lucy Peck Bush Asst. Curator
Society founded 1877; re-organized and incorporated 1902; Archaeological
Museum opened 1913. Lectures given and epchibitions held.
Its chief object has been to collect and preserve whatever may serve to
explain or illustrate the archaeology, the art, the literature and the history
(civil, ecclesiastical or natural) of the State of Connecticut, especially in
the region anciently known as Mattatuck. The annex includes exhibition hall
and museum. In addition to objects of historic interest, the Museum contains
minerals, birds, invertebrates, etc., but is especially noted for its archaeological
collections, which include Babylonian and Egyptian specimens, rare artifacts
from Europe and from many localities in the United States.
WESTPORT
MORRIS K. JESUP MEMORIAL LIBRARY
Mrs. Edith Very Sherwood, Librarian
Occasional exhibitions.
DELAWARE
WILMINGTON
SAMUEL BANCROFT, JR., COLLECTION
"Rockford," Wilmington
The private collection of the late Samuel Bancroft, Jr., which is rich in
works by the English Pre-Raphaelite painters, may be seen by appointment
through writing to Mrs. Samuel Bancroft, Jr.
►^WILMINGTON SOCIETY OF THE FINE ARTS
Mrs. Charles Copeland President George P. Bissel Treasurer
H. R. Sharp Vice-President Constance Moore Secretary
Pro tern., Gilpin Ave., Wilmington
Organized 1912. Exhibitions are held.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
WASHINGTON
►^ARCH^LOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON
1741 New York Avenue, Washington
Robert Lansing President John B. Earner Treasurer
R. M. Thompson. .1st Vice-President Mitchell Carroll Secretary
Henry White 2d Vice-President
For details of zvork see Vol. XV 11, p. 120.
Organized 1913.
^ARTS CLUB OF WASHINGTON
2017 I Street, N. W., Washington
George Julian Zolnay. .. .President W. E. S afford Cor. -Secretary
Mitchell Carroll Vice-Pres. G. H. Dawson Rec- Secretary
R. L. Neuhauser Treasurer
Founded 1916 to bring into association those devoted to painting, sculpture,
architecture, music, literature and the drama. Exhibitions, musicales, lectures
and weekly dinners.
108 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
WASHINGTON
►^PUBLIC SCHOOL ART LEAGUE OF THE DISTRICT
OF COLUMBIA
Grace Lincoln Temple President Charles J. Bell Treasurer
Mrs. F. a. Delano 1st Vice-Pres. Myra M. Hendley Secretary
Leila Mechlin 2d Vice-Pres. 1216 L St., N. W., Washington
For details of work see Vol. XI, p. 74.
Organized 1908.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
DIVISION OF PRINTS
Richard A. Rice, Acting Chief
For foundation and details see Vol. XI, pp. 74-75.
Open, free, week days 9 a.m. to 4.30 p.m. ; Sundays and holidays (except
Christmas and Fourth of July) 2 to 10 p.m.
PUBLIC LIBRARY OF DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Washington
George F. Bowerman, Librarian
Founded 1896. Exhibitions are held.
^SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON ARTISTS
William H. Holmes President Annie D. Kelly Treasurer
Sarah Munroe Vice-President A. H. O. Rolle Secretary
134 Quincy PI., Washington
Organized 1890. Exhibitions are held in the Corcoran Gallery.
WASHINGTON CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
P. C. Adams President T. A. Mullett Treasurer
R. B. Atkinson 1st Vice-Pres. L, P. Wheat, Jr Secretary
Louis A. Simon 2d Vice-Pres. 808 17th St., N. W., Washington
Organized 1887.
WASHINGTON CHAPTER
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF WOMEN PAINTERS AND
SCULPTORS
Bertha Noyes, Secretary
614 19th St., N. W., Washington
►^WASHINGTON SOCIETY OF THE FINE ARTS
William Bruce King President Leila Mechlin. Secretary
Edson B. Olds Treasurer 1741 New York Ave., Washington
Organized 1905. Membership, 1,290. Courses of lectures on art, literature,
and music, also concerts and lecture recitals for members and the public ; exhi-
bitions are held, other organizations assisted in holding exhibitions and civic
improvement actively promoted. The American Magazine of Arts is sent to
all members.
4-WASHINGTON WATER COLOR CLUB
William H. Holmes President A. Elizabeth Sawtelle Secretary
Mary K. Porter Treasurer 2102 O St., N. W., Washington
Organized 1896. Annual exhibitions are held at the Corcoran Gallery.
FLORIDA— GEORGIA— ILLINOIS 109
PLORIDA
TAMPA
STUDENTS' ART CLUB
Plant Park Club House, Tampa
Mrs. G. F. O'Brien President Ena Sherrill Treasurer
Mrs. L. L. Buchanan.. 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. J. D. Clark, Jr .Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. Oscar Windhorst.. .2d Vice-P. Mrs. Jack Knight Cor.-Sec.
Organized 1902. Annual exhibition in December.
GEORGIA
GEORGIA CHAPTER, AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
William J. J. Chase President Arthur N. Robinson Sec.-Treas.
Candler Building, Atlanta
Organized 1906.
ATHENS
i^ATHENS ART ASSOCIATION
University of Georgia, Athens
Laura Blackshear „ President Nina Scudder Treasurer
John Morris Vice-President Mary Morris Secretary
Organized 1919. Exhibitions are held, and lectures are given.
ATLANTA
►^ATLANTA ART ASSOCIATION
Cable Piano Building, Atlanta
C B. BiDWELL President Mrs. E. W. More Treasurer
A. Ten Eyck Brown Vice-Pres. Janet Evins Secretary
38 East 14th St., Atlanta
Organized 1917.
MACON
.^MACON ART ASSOCIATION
Lutie Westcott President Mrs. L. P. Hillyer 2d Vice-Pres.
Mrs. T. E. Blackshear. ..1st Vice-P. Emma Smith Treasurer
Mrs. J. E. Wright Secretary
Mrs. M. B. Hammond, Corresponding Secretary
514 Napier Avenue, Macon
Organized 1918.
ILLINOIS
ILLINOIS CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Henry K. Holsman President Richard E. Schmidt Treasurer
F. W. Puckey 1st Vice-Pres. John A. Armstrong Secretary
E. H. Clark 2d Vice-Pres. 11 South La Salle St., Chicago
Organized 1869 as Chicago Chapter; incorporated 1890 as Illinois Chapter
The Illinois Chapter co-operates with the Chicago Architectural Club in holding
an annual exhibit of works of architecture, when a gold medal of merit is
awarded.
110 ILLINOIS
AURORA
ART LEAGUE
303 Traction Terminal Building, Aurora
James M. Cowan President J. Frank Harral Treasurer
Mrs. D. B. Pierson 1st Vice-Pres. Gladys Trantman Secretary
L. J. Mead 2d Vice-Pres. Mrs. W. S. Frazier Cor.-Sec.
Organized 1919. Exhibitions are held.
CHARLESTON
^CHARLESTON ART ASSOCIATION
Public Library, Charleston
Mrs. L. M. Jones President Mrs. H. H. Blair Treasurer
Mrs. J. H. Marshall. .. .Vice-Pres. Mrs. E. H. Taylor Secretary
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 85.
Organized 1912. Occasional exhibitions.
CHICAGO
ART COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF CHICAGO
L. C. Kuhnert President Emil R. Zettler Secretary
4 East Ohio St., Chicago
Established 1899; amended by Illinois Legislature 1915; first appointments
made in December, 1917. Six members appointed by Mayor, who is also an
ex-officio member. (No report 1921.)
ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY
OF THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO
Mrs. Potter Palmer President Mrs. A. A. Carpenter Sec.-Treas.
Mrs. Benjamin F. Ayer. .Vice-Pres. 1130 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago
Organized 1878 as the Decorative Art Society ; re-organized 1894 as the Anti-
quarians ; known by its present name since 1908. An organization of ladies,
which maintains permanent exhibition galleries in the Art Institute for which
it purchases antique objects of industrial art, including textiles, carvings and
furniture.
ART INSTITUTE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Adams and Michigan Boulevard, Chicago
Oliver Dennett Grover, Honorary President
Thomas E. Talmadge President Gertrude T. Williams Treasurer
Jessie P. Lacey 1st Vice-Pres. Genevieve Sissing Rec.-Secretary
James H. Winn 2d Vice-Pres. Elizabeth T. Holsman Cor.-Sec.
Organized 1912. Membership consists of former students of the Chicago Art
Institute School. Exhibitions held.
ART SERVICE LEAGUE
Fine Arts Building, Chicago
Oliver D. Grover President James H. Kehler Treasurer
Carleton Hackett Vice-President F. W. Perkins Secretary
Founded 1918. Occasional exhibitions. (No report 1921.)
ART STUDENTS' LEAGUE
Art Institute, Chicago
Thelma Paddock President Y. Edward Sodenburg Treasurer
Walter H. Gage Vice-President Jerome G. Rosen. ..Business Manager
and Secretary
Organized 1894. Exhibitions held.
ILLINOIS 111
CHICAGO
ARTISTS' GUILD
Fine Arts Building, 410 South Michigan Boulevard, Chicago
F. J. Reichmann President Ruth L. Brooks Secretary
Charles A. Herbert, Treasurer
Galleries open daily 8 :30 a.m to 5 :30 p.m.
Organized 1910; incorporated 1911. Maintains permanent exhibition and
salesrooms for work of members, approved by the committee; bureau of infor-
mation ; lecturers furnished. Fine Arts Building prizes $100 at each of 5
exhibitions.
ARTS CLUB OF CHICAGO
610 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago
Mrs. J. A. Carpenter President C. S. Dewey Treasurer
F. J. Reichmann Vice-President Fames MacVeagh Secretary
Organized 1916. Clubrooms and exhibition galleries maintained. Numerous
exhibitions.
BUSINESS MEN'S ART CLUB
133 West Washington Street, Chicago
E. G. Drew President H. B. Colby Secretary-Treasurer
Walter Sargent Vice-President 6111 Langley Ave., Chicago
Organized 1920. Exhibitions held.
CHICAGO ARCHITECTURAL CLUB
40 South Clark Street, Chicago
Elmer J. Fox President Charles H. Markel Treasurer
Curt A. Esser Vice-President Joseph B. Lindquist Secretary
Organized 1885. Lecture courses, competitions and criticisms. Special Home
Traveling Scholarship, $325, for study of Colonial architecture. Annual ex-
hibition at the Art Institute with co-operation of Illinois Chapter of the
American Institute of Architects, Illinois Society of Architects, and the Art
Institute (see Institute exhibitions).
CHICAGO PUBLIC LIBRARY
Washington Street and Michigan Avenue, Chicago, 111.
Carl B. Roden^ Librarian
The Arts and Crafts Division contains books on art, portfolios of engravings,
and rare or unusually beautiful books. Several thousand volumes on fine and
applied arts, periodicals and pamphlets on art ; mounted pictures of birds,
animals, Indians, costumes, etc. ; newspaper and magazine clippings filed alpha-
betically.
^CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOL ART SOCIETY
Mrs. John Buckingham, Honorary President
Samuella Crosby President Frances L. Walshe Treasurer
Mrs. W. S. North Vice-President AIrs. Theodore Tieken Secretary
2944 Washington Blvd., Chicago
For foundation and zvork see Vol. VI, p. 150, and Vol. XI, p, 95.
Organized 1894; incorporated 1900. Pictures, casts and decorations lent to
schools. Exhibitions held.
112 ILLINOIS
CHICAGO
CHICAGO SOCIETY OF ARTISTS
Art Institute of Chicago
Rudolph F. Ingerle President Charles W. Dahlgreen. . .Treasurer
Carl R. Krafft Vice-President Marie E. Blanke Sec. -Treasurer
418 Deming PL, Chicago
Organized 1901. During the Annual Exhibition of works by Artists of
Chicago and vicinity, held at the Art Institute, the Chicago Society of Artists
awards its Silver Medal for the most artistic exhibit. (See institute exhi-
bitions.)
CHICAGO SOCIETY OF ETCHERS
Otto J. Schneider President Lee Sturges Vice-President
Mrs Bertha E. Jaques, Secretary and Treasurer
4316 Greenwood Avenue, Chicago, 111.
Organized 1910. Purchases etchings for the Chicago Art Institute.
CHICAGO SOCIETY OF MINIATURE PAINTERS
Art Institute, Chicago
Anna Lynch President Eda N. Casterton Treasurer
Magda Heuermann Vice-Pres. Carolyn D. Tyler Secretary
1401 East 53d St., Chicago
Organized 1912, Holds annual exhibition and sends occasional traveling
exhibitions.
COMMISSION FOR THE ENCOURAGEMENT OF LOCAL ART
Carter H. Harrison President Frank A. Werner
Victor Higgins Robert H. McCormick
Wilson Irvine Frank G. Logan Secretary
William O. Goodman C. H. Burkholder Asst. Secretary
Chicago Art Institute.
Established by City ordinance November 9, 1914. Consists of seven members
appointed for terms of four years. It is empowered to select and purchase
paintings, sculpture, and other works of art produced by residents of Chicago,
and to place them in City buildings.
CORS ARDENS
C. Raymond Jonson President H. Leon Roecker Asst. Treasurer
Rudolph Weisenborn Vice-Pres. Carl Hoeckner Secretary
Ramon Shiva Treasurer 63 West Ontario St., Chicago
Agnes Squire Potter, Assistant Secretary
Organized 1921. Exhibitions are held.
ENGLEWOOD WOMAN'S CLUB
6734 Wentworth Avenue, Chicago
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. Howard B. Chappel, Chairman
Lectures are given ; prize awarded to a young artist during annual exhibition
of Chicago artists.
B. F. FERGUSON. MONUMENT FUND
Art Institute of Chicago
For work accomplished see Volume XI, p. 99, and subsequent issues.
Established by bequest of Benjamin Franklin Ferguson of Chicago, who died
in 1905. The principal is $1,100,000, the net income from which, after deduct-
ing all charges, is expended by the Art Institute of Chicago in the erection and
maintenance of statuary and monuments in the parks and other public places
of Chicago.
ILLINOIS 113
CHICAGO
FRIENDS OF AMERICAN ART
Art Institute, Chicago
William O. Goodman President Ernest A. Hamill Treasurer
Frank G. Logan Vice-President Arthur T. Aldis Secretary
C. H. Burkholder, Assistant Secretary, Chicago Institute of Art
For previous purchases see Vol. IX, p. 131 and subsequent issues.
Incorporated 1910. Works by American artists purchased each year for the
Art Institute.
MUNICIPAL ART COMMISSION OF CHICAGO
City Hall, Chicago
William H. Thompson, Mayor, President ex-officio
Louis C. Kuhnert President Jarvis Hunt
Carter H. Harrison Frank M. Morris
Victor Higgins Emil R. Zettler Secretary
4 East Ohio St., Chicago
Established 1899 by General Assembly, giving veto power only; 1917 act of
Legislature gave increased scope and power. Composed of Mayor of Chicago
and six other members.
i^MUNICIPAL ART LEAGUE OF CHICAGO
Art Institute, Chicago
Everett L. Millard President Mrs. W. F. Young Secretary
Charles L. Hutchinson. .Treasurer 5319 Kenmore Ave., Chicago
Organized 1900. Exhibitions held.
PALETTE AND CHISEL CLUB
59 East Van Buren Street, Chicago, 111.
David L. Adam President Fred T. Larsen Treasurer
Glen C. Steffer.. .1st Vice-President C. Lynn Coy Rec.-Secret'ary
C. E. Selleck 2d Vice-Pres.
Organized 1895. Permanent free exhibitions ; studio where members work
from model three times a week; summer camp at Fox Lake, 111.
RENAISSANCE SOCIETY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
Edgar J. Goodspeed President James A. Field Treasurer
Mrs. W. A. Nitze 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. Charles H. Beesony. Secretary
Elizabeth Wallace. ...2d Vice-Pres. University of Chicago
Organized 1916. Exhibitions are held.
SVENSKA KLUBBEN
1258 N. LaSalle Street, Chicago
C. S. Peterson President Herbert Hedm an Treasurer
Edwin Olson Vice-President William Larson Secretary
E. W. Benson, Librarian
Organized 1870. Exhibitions are held.
TECHNIC ARTS LEAGUE
Mrs. E. W. Rice President Edna D. Smith Treasurer
Mrs. Anne T. Brown Vice-Pres. Mrs. M. K. Bush Rec. Sec.
Mrs. J. Harlen Bretz, Corresponding Secretary, Homewood
Organized 1893 as the Chicago Ceramic Art Association. Course of lessons
in design under Hermann Rosse.
114 ILLINOIS
CHICAGO
TUESDAY ART AND TRAVEL CLUB
Mrs. G. a. Neafus President Mrs. B. B. Pierson Treasurer
Mrs. John Goebel 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. Ernest Kendall Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. J. B. Schoninger Cor.-Sec.
Organized 1907. Awards scholarships to the Chicago Art Institute. Gives
$100 annually for the distribution of pictures to the public schools.
KEWANEE
KEWANEE PUBLIC LIBRARY
Harriet P. Turner, Librarian
Founded 1875. Art gallery open 9 a.m to 9 p.m., contains the Pierce Art
Collection.
MATTOON
MATTOON ART CLUB
Minnie Bresee President Mrs. Lizzie McNair Treasurer
Katherine Morgan . . .Vice-President Carrie Riddle Secretary
Organized 1912.
MOLINE
TRI-CITY ART LEAGUE
(See report under Davenport, Iowa)
OREGON
OREGON PUBLIC LIBRARY
Emily H. Cartwright Librarian Lorado Taft Chairman Art Com.
Gallery open free 2 to 6 and 7 to 9 p.m., daily except Friday and Sunday.
Collection includes paintings and sculpture. (No report 1921.)
PEORIA
.^PEORIA SOCIETY OF ALLIED ARTS
Lehmann Building, Peoria
Mrs. Jacques Bloom President Mrs. Charles Lung Treasurer
Frank N. Emerson. ... 1st Vice Pres. Charles A. Bennett Curator
Nina Alice Dodge. .2d Vice President Mark H. Whitmeyer Secretary
For foundation and other data see Vol. XI, p. 104.
Incorporated 1913. Exhibitions and lectures given.
ROCKFORD
ROCKFORD ART GUILD
400 Studio Lane, Rockford
Mrs. George D. Roper President Olive M. Ebrich Treasurer
Mrs. D. M. Keith 1st Vice Pres. Mrs. M. R. Harned Secretary
Mrs. John S. Barnes.. 2d Vice-Pres. 415 Whitman St., Rockford
Dudley Crafts Watson, Art Director
Organized 1913 by the Union of the Rockford Art Association and Rockford
Arts and Crafts Society. Salesroom and studio maintained ; lectures and ex-
hibitions held.
ROCK ISLAND
TRI-CITY ART LEAGUE
(See report under Davenport, Iowa)
Torn Lingerie. By Frederick C. Frieseke, N.A.
Potter Palmer Gold Medal and $1,000 Prize, also the W. M. R. French
Gold Medal, Art Institute of Chicago, 1921
C
o
ILLINOIS— INDIANA 115
SPRINGFIELD
BOARD OF ART ADVISORS
Springfield, 111.
Martin Roche, President
Martin A. Ryerson Frederick C. Bartlett, Painter
Irving K. Pond, Architect Nellie V. Walker, Sculptor
LoRADo Taft, Sculptor Hugh S. Magill, Jr., Secretary
Ralph Clarkson, Painter Leland Office Bldg., Springfield
Howard Shaw
Created by Act of Legislature, 1917. The board consists of eight members.
It is connected with the Department of Public Works and Buildings, and its
duties are to advise relative to the artistic merit of all public works.
No report 1920.
.^SPRINGFIELD ART ASSOCIATION
Edwards Place, 801 N. Fifth Street, Springfield
Mrs. Howard T. Willson. .President Mrs. A. L. Bowen Treasurer
Mrs. Latham Smith. .1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. E. E. Staley Secretary
Etta Ackerman 2d Vice-Pres. Mrs. A. D. Mackie Cor.-Secretary
710 South Second St., Springfield
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 106.
Organized 1909; gallery opened 1914 as Art Club of Edwards Place. Fre-
quent lectures and exhibitions.
INDIANA
INDIANA CIRCUIT EXHIBIT
Mrs. Melville F. Johnston, 103 North Tenth Street, Richmond, Ind., sends
out traveling exhibitions to the principal cities in Indiana.
INDIANA SOCIETY OF ARCHITECTS
500 Board of Trade Bldg., Indianapolis
F. S. Cannon President Herman Scherrer Treasurer
Herbert Foltz 1st Vice-Pres. Merritt Harrison Secretary
H. M. Griffin 2d Vice-Pres.
Organized 1917.
INDIANA SOCIETY OF SCULPTORS
Francis M. Goodwin President Mrs. Rena T. Kohlmann.. Treasurer
Newcastle, Ind. Indianapolis
John G. Prasuhn Vice-President Anna E. Turrell Secretary
Indianapolis Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis
Organized 1916. Annual exhibition held in conjunction with Indiana Artists
at Herron Art Institute.
INDIANA STATE FAIR ART GALLERY
art department
John Isenberger, Director, Indianapolis
Annual exhibition of oil paintings, water colors, sculpture and handicraft
at State Fair,
INDIANA STATE LIBRARY
State House, Indianapolis
Demarchus C. Brown, Librarian
Founded 1826. Collection of portraits of governors of the state.
116 INDIANA
STATE TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION
ALLIED ART SECTION
Alice E, Hall President Elizabeth Searle Secretary
Chelsea Stewart Vice-President 169 West Hill St., Wabash
Organized 1915. Annual exhibition at Herron Art Institute.
ANDERSON
ANDERSON ART ASSOCIATION
Mrs. a. W. Brady President Lucia M. Manning Treasurer
Mrs. W. A. Denny 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. W. H. Forse Secretary
303 West 12th St., Anderson
Organized 1911. Permanent collection. Exhibitions held and lectures given.
ANDERSON ART CLUB
Mrs. E. R. Prather President Mrs. Charles Vernon Secretary
12 Delaware St., Anderson
Organized 1918.
BEDFORD
LADIES OF THE ROUND TABLE
Mrs. Miranda R. Avery. . .President Mrs. Homer Franklin Treasurer
Mrs. Blanche Bornff. 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. P. C. Furst Secretary
Ottilia Scherschill. .2d Vice-Pres.
Organized 1895. Art program fortnightly.
BLOOMINGTON
INDIANA LIBRARY ART CLUB
W. S. Bittner, Secretary, Extension Division
Indiana University, Bloomington
Organized 1914. Circulates exhibitions throughout State.
CRAWFORDSVILLE
ART LEAGUE
Florence Schultz President Mrs. Emma Riley Treasurer
Mrs. Elizabeth Linn Vice-Pres. Agnes Miller Secretary
Organized 1896.
FORT WAYNE
FORT WAYNE ART ASSOCIATION
Mrs. Max B. Fisher President Catherine Hamilton Secretary
Clinton and Lewis Streets, Fort
Wayne
Organized 1888. Maintains art school (see school section),
FRANKFORT
FRANKFORT ART ASSOCIATION
Mrs. W. S. Morris President Mrs. Iva Boynton Secretary
Organized 1914, Lectures given.
GREENCASTLE
ART CLUB
Mrs. Louise E. Zaring, Leader
9 Poplar St., Greencastle
Organized 1893. Study class maintained.
INDIANA 117
INDIANAPOLIS
ARCHITECTS' ASSOCIATION OF INDIANAPOLIS
320 Indiana Pythian Bldg., Indianapolis
Wilson B. Parker President Wilbur B. Shook Sec.-Treasurpj-
Herbert Foltz Vice-President
Organized 1908.
ARCHITECTURAL LEAGUE OF INDIANAPOLIS
Robert F. Daggett President F. S. Cannon Treasurer
H. H. Brown 1st Vice-President C. T. Meyers : . . . Secretary
Myra Richards 2d Vice-President 500 Board of Trade Bldg., Indian-
apolis.
Organized 1920.
FRIENDS OF AMERICAN ART
Thomas C. Howe President Edwin A. Hendrickson. . .Treasurer
Mrs. James W. Fesler Vice-Pres. Grace A. Speer Secretary
Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis
Organized 1919. Presents paintings to the Art Association of Indianapolis.
INDIANA ARTISTS' CLUB
Sixteenth and Pennsylvania Streets, Indianapolis
Frederic Polley President Mrs. Emma Sangernebo. .Treasurer
Clifton A. Wheeler.. 1st Vice-Pres. Chelsea Stewart Rec. -Secretary
Mrs. M. K. Eggemeyer. . .2d Vice-P. Elizabeth E. Heuser Cor. -Sec.
1301 N. Alabama St., Indianapolis
Organized 1917. Lectures given and exhibitions held.
INDIANA KERAMIC CLUB
Mrs. W. T. Fugate President Mrs. E. H. Meyers Treasurer
Mrs. G. L. Stayman.. .1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. W. H. W^elch Secretary
2339 Broadway, Indianapolis
Organized 1897. Occasional exhibitions.
INDIANAPOLIS PUBLIC LIBRARY
St. Clair and Meridian Streets, Indianapolis
Charles E. Rush, Librarian
Opened to the public in 1873. Occasional exhibitions.
MEMORIAL ART COMMISSION
Members
Evans Woollen Ernest W. Young
1635 Talbott St., Indianapolis Charles A. Spanley
Myra R. Richards Gardner C. Johnston
Mrs. M. F. Johnston
Established 1919, by an Act of Legislature, for the purpose of passing on
the plans and artistic qualities of proposed memorials of the Great War.
PORTFOLIO CLUB
The Propylaeum, Indianapolis
Charles W. Moores President Kurt Vonnegut Treasurer
Margaret Donnan Vice-Pres. Mrs. Kurt Vonnegut. ... Secretary
Organized 1890.
118 INDIANA
INDIANAPOLIS
SKETCHING CLUB
Julia Walk President Mrs. Frank Brandt Treasurer
Mrs. S. H. Keeney, Secretary, 2752 Ashland Ave., Indianapolis
Organized 1885.
STUDY CLUB
1011 North Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis
Mrs. S. E. Perkins President Mrs. A. L. Lockridge Secretary
1409 N. Pennsylvania St., Indian-
: apolis.
Organized 1895.
WOMAN'S DEPARTMENT CLUB
ART DEPARTMENT
1702 North Meridian St., Indianapolis
Mrs. O. C. Wilcox, Chairman
Organized 1912. Exhibitions and lectures given.
KOKOMO
WOMAN'S DEPARTMENT CLUB
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. C. C. McFann President Mrs. E. E. Russell Secy-Treas.
Mrs. G. E. Bruner Vice-Pres. 402 East Walnut St., Kokomo
Organized 1920.
LA FAYETTE
LA FAYETTE ART CLUB
Alice Brown President Mrs. I. C. Hoffman Treasurer
Stella Fox Vice-Pres. Mrs. O. D. Johnson Secretary
LA FAYETTE ART ASSOCIATION
Henry H. Vinton President Foster Hight Treasurer
Mrs. John Morrison, Secretary, 422 North Seventh St., La Fayette
Organized 1910. Exhibitions are held. (No report 1921.)
LEBANON
FLORENTINE CLUB
Grace Etchison President Nannie Miller Treasurer
Nora Damall Vice-Pres. Helen Caldwell Secretary
Organized 1898. (No report 1921.)
LOGANSPORT
►I-LOGANSPORT ART ASSOCIATION
Mrs. J. W. Ballard President Etha Massena Treasurer
Mrs. Carl Wise 1st Vice-Pres. Jennie B. Mackintosh. . .Secretary
Flora Uhl 2nd Vice-Pres. 1107 Broadway, Logansport
MARION
MARION DEPARTMENT CLUB
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. Alva Ketner, Secretary-Treasurer
Organized 1918.
MARION PUBLIC LIBRARY
Daisy Springer, Librarian
Open 9 A.M to 9 p.m. Permanent collection of paintings, sculpture and
other objects.
INDIANA 119
MARTINSVILLE
MONDAY AFTERNOON CLUB
Mrs. J. E. Bryce President Mrs. Frank Finney Treasurer
Mrs. E. I, PosTON Vice-Pres. Mrs. R. H. Egbert Secretary
Organized 1901. (No report 1921.)
MUNCIE
ART STUDENTS' LEAGUE
Mrs. George A. Ball President Mrs. Philip McAbee Secretary
Mrs. W. p. Stevens Vice-Pres. 416 East Washington St., Muncie
Mrs. F. D. Rose Treasurer
Organized 1892. Study class maintained.
PENDLETON
PENDLETON ART ASSOCIATION
Box 345, Pendleton
Mrs. L. V. Mays President J. P. Amick Vice-President
Jeanette Lewis, Secretary-Treasurer
Organized 1920.
PERU
.^PERU ART CLUB
Mrs. F. M. Stutesman President Mrs. Max Kraus Treasurer
Mrs. J. W. Connaty. .Vice-President Mrs. Eugene Ensel Secretary
Organized 1900.
RICHMOND
ART ASSOCIATION OF RICHMOND
High School, Richmond
William Dudley Foulke. .President Francis Edmunds Treasurer
Mrs. Paul Comstock Vice-Pres. W. G. Bate Secretary
Mrs. M. F. Johnston, Director
103 North Tenth St., Richmond
Organized 1897. The galleries in the high school building are in constant
use by the school children, clubs, art study committee and the public. Holds
annual exhibition of paintings by American artists.
SEYMOUR
SEYMOUR ART LEAGUE
T. A. MoTT President Mrs. Agnes Blish Treasurer
Adelaide Miller Vice-President R. A. Cox Secretary
Organized 1913. Art collection started. Occasional exhibitions.
SHELBYVILLE
CARNEGIE PUBLIC LIBRARY
Shelbyville
Bertha Bowlby, Librarian
Nucleus of an art gallery. Murals by Richard B. Gruelle.
SOUTH BEND
PROGRESS CLUB
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. William M. Shirley, President
828 West Colfax Avenue, South Bend
Organized 1895. Exhibitions and lectures held. (No report 1921.)
120 INDIANA—IOWA
SOUTH WHITNEY
FINE ARTS CLUB
Mrs. George Domer President Mrs. J. M, Richer Secretary
Organized 1920.
TERRE HAUTE
TERRE HAUTE ART ASSOCIATION
Emeline Fairbanks Memorial Library, Terre Haute
F. M. Stalker President Fannie A. Blake Treasurer
Mrs. John White 1st Vice-Pres. Helen Benbridge Secretary
W. T. TuRMAN. . . .2d Vice-President 213 North 7th St., Terre Haute
Organized 1910. Exhibitions are held in the Public Library.
►I^TERRE HAUTE DEPARTMENTAL CLUB
ART SECTION
Zayda Scovell President Mrs. Frank Wagner Treasurer
Mrs. Walker Schell Vice-Pres. Junia Rynerson Secretary
Organized 1908.
TIPTON
TIPTON ART ASSOCIATION
Public Library, Tipton
Mrs. J. A. Gleason President Mrs. J. C. Hogue Vice-President
.Eleanor Clark, Secretary-Treasurer
Organized 1911. Lectures and occasional exhibitions.
VALPARAISO
WOMAN'S CLUB OF VALPARAISO
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. L. S. Dowdell, Chairman
823 Laporte Ave., Valparaiso
Organized 1902. Studies art and holds exhibitions. (No report 1921).
VINCENNES
VINCENNES FORTNIGHTLY CLUB
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. H. T. Watts, Chairman
Organized 1894. Actively interested in work of Indiana artists.
WASHINGTON
SCHOOL ART LEAGUE
Mrs. J. Britman President Mrs. Cameron Hyatt Treasurer
Mrs. L. H. O'Donnell Vice-Pres. Mrs. Mary W. Kennedy. ..Secretary
Organized 1917. Exhibitions held.
IOWA
IOWA CHAPTER AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Charles A. Diem an President Eugene H. Taylor.. . .Sec-Treasurer
Mortimer B. Cleveland. .Vice-Pres. 617 Cedar Rapids Savings Bank
Bldg., Cedar Rapids
Organized 1903. Exhibition of designs at annual meeting.
IOWA 121
CEDAR RAPIDS
►J^CEDAR RAPIDS ART ASSOCIATION
Mrs. F. J. Lazell President Anna Smouse Treasurer
William KREBS..lst Vice-President Mrs. Bert Rugh Secretary
Mrs. E. M. Sefton 2d Vice-Pres. 2900 First Ave., East Cedar Rapids
Organized 1905. Lectures and exhibitions held.
DAVENPORT
►^DAVENPORT ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
Edward K. Putnam, Acting Director
J. H. Paarmann, Curator
Organized 1867. The institution maintains a free public, scientific, archaeo-
logical, historical and art museum.
DAVENPORT PUBLIC LIBRARY
Grace Shellenberger, Librarian
Mrs. C. a. Ficke, Chairman Art Committee
Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. The library has large collection of books on art,
and arranges numerous exhibits of plates from these books and other sources.
The library art gallery is also used by the Tri-City Art League for its ex-
hibits. Sales made at the latter. Exhibitions held.
►|<TRI-CITY ART LEAGUE
Davenport, Rock Island, Moline
Studio 222^ Main Street, Davenport, Iowa
Mrs. Arthur Ficke President Fred Hendrickson Treasurer
William Butterworth. ..1st Vice-P. Mrs, C. N. Chubb Secretary
Mrs. C. p. Skinner 2d Vice-Pres.
Organized 1915 as the Art League Students, re-organized 1916. Exhibitions
are held in three cities.
The studio is used by the Art League Students (see school section), the
Tri-City, Architectural and Camera Clubs, and for classes of folk dances.
Smaller studios are rented to painters, designers and musicians. Conducts
out-of-door sketch club. Exhibitions at Public Libraries.
DES MOINES
DES MOINES ASSOCIATION OF FINE ARTS
City Library Gallery, Des Moines
J. S. Carpenter President Henry S. Nollen Treasurer
F. C. Waterbury Vice-President Grace Rose Secretary
Louise Orwig, Assistant Secretary and Treasurer
Organized 1916. Exhibitions held.
DES MOINES PUBLIC LIBRARY
First and Locust Streets, Des Moines
Grace Rose Librarian Louise Orwig Art Librarian
J. S. Carpenter, President Art Committee
Founded 1916. Open to the public, week days, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Sundays,
3 to 6 P.M. Collection includes several works by contemporary artists. The
exhibitions of the Des Moines Association of Fine Arts are held in the
Library.
122 IOWA— KANSAS
DUBUQUE
CARNEGIE-STOUT PUBLIC LIBRARY
Dubuque
May M, Clark Librarian D. D. Burrell. . .Chairman Art Com.
Art gallery and exhibition room open, free, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. About 500 art
books and 1,100 photographs. Lectures and exhibitions given under the auspices
of the Dubuque Art Association. (No report 1921.)
4-DUBUQUE ART ASSOCIATION
D. D. Burrell President Kate K. Van Duzee Secretary
Eugene Adams Vice-President 1471 Main St., Dubuque
Charles Beach Treasurer
Organized 1910. Lectures given and exhibitions held.
IOWA CITY
4<I0WA CITY FINE ARTS ASSOCIATION
Mary E. Moon President Mrs. J. White Brown Secretary
Edward H. Lauer Vice-President 6 East Court, Iowa City
Mrs. Hardin Craig Treasurer
Organized 1913. Exhibitions held.
KANSAS
LAWRENCE
KANSAS ART ASSOCIATION
University of Kansas, Lawrence
Organized 1907. Exhibitions are held in the Art gallery of the University.
Sends exhibits to several Kansas towns.
LINDSBORG
SMOKY HILL ART CLUB
Bethany College, Lindsborg
Birger Sandzen President Jessie B. Severtson Treasurer
G. A. Peterson Vice-President Amanda Maznuson Secretary
Organized 1913. Works bought by the Society are given to the permanent
collection of Bethany College. Exhibitions held.
Mcpherson
Mcpherson high school
ART DEPARTMENT
Ross W. Potwin Superintendent Lydia Prosser Art Supervisor
Exhibitions first organized in 1911. Permanent collection of paintings,
drawings and lithographs. Occasional exhibitions.
TOPEKA
.^TOPEKA ART GUILD
Mrs. Frank D. Merriam. . .President L. Cady Hodge Treasurer
David Obermeyer Vice-President Marie Witmer Secretary
Organized 1916. Lectures given and exhibitions held.
KANSAS— KENTUCKY 123
WICHITA
TWENTIETH CENTURY CLUB
Wichita, Kan.
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. Charles Higginson. .President Mrs. Harry Brasted Treasurer
Mrs. Cooper King Vice-President Ella Lahey Secretary
Mrs. a. F. Styles, Chairman Art Committee
Organized 1899 for the study of the history of art. Exhibitions and lectures
held. (No report 1921.)
WICHITA ART GALLERY
The City of Wichita will receive the income from $150,000, after the death
of the beneficiaries of the will of Mrs. R. P. Murdock, if the city provides a
suitable housing for the pictures bought with this bequest.
KENTUCKY
KENTUCKY CHAPTER, AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
E. T. HuTCHiNGS President Val P. Collins Sec. -Treasurer
J. J. Gaffney Vice-President 622 Marion E. Taylor Bldg., Louis-
ville
Organized 1908 as the Louisville Chapter, American Institute of Architects.
HENDERSON
ART LEAGUE
Woman's Club, Henderson
LiDA Williams President Salem Starling Secretary
Main St., Henderson
Organized 1919. Occasional lectures and exhibitions.
LEXINGTON
WOMAN'S CLUB OF CENTRAL KENTUCKY
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. W. W. Anderson, Chairman
LOUISVILLE
^LOUISVILLE ART ASSOCIATION
Free Public Library, Louisville
Lafon Allen President Joshua F. Speed Treasurer
CusHMAN Quarrier. ..Vice-President Caroline Q. Fuller Secretary
Organized 1909.
LOUISVILLE HANDICRAFT GUILD
Fourth and Ormsby Avenues, Louisville
Miss Keith Sperry President Alice Cane Treasurer
Mrs. Ira Sayre Barnett. .Vice-Pres. Dorothea Kurk Secretary
Organized 1914. Exhibitions held, also class in design.
PADUCAH
PADUCAH WOMAN'S CLUB
608 Kentucky Avenue, Paducah
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. a. G. Edwards, Chairman, 1722 Jefferson St., Paducah
Study courses and exhibitions are held.
124 KENTUCKY— LOUISIANA
PARIS
BOURBON COUNTY WOMAN'S CLUB
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. Harry Kerslake, Chairman, Second St., Paris
LOUISIANA
LOUISIANA ART TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION
Newcomb College, New Orleans
Ida Barrow President Amelie Roman Treasurer
Miss Rodney Kemp, Secretary
Organized 1899. Conferences are held for members ; lectures for the public ;
and school art works exhibit circulated in the country parishes.
LOUISIANA CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Victor Wogan President Richard Koch Treasurer
Nathaniel C. Curtis Vice-Pres. Solis Seiferth Secretary
Maison Blanche Bldg., New Or-
leans
Organized 1910.
NEW ORLEANS
•i-ART ASSOCIATION OF NEW ORLEANS
Hunt Henderson President George H. Penn Treasurer
Ellsworth Woodward 1st Vice-P. Lydia M. Brown Secretary
J. J. McLouGHLiN 2d Vice-Pres. 2103 Chestnut St., New Orleans
Mrs. I. M. Wands, Chairman Friends of Art
Organized 1900. Association has permanent exhibits, which are held in the
Delgado Museum. Under the auspices of the Association there is held an-
nually an exhibition of works by local artists (see Delgado Museum exhibits).
Members who buy annually a work by a local artist constitute a body
called "Friends of Art," who elect every year an artist to be brought forward
in a special exhibition and dinner.
ARTS AND CRAFTS CLUB
913 St. Charles St., New Orleans
Mrs. p. J. Ford President George G. Westfeldt Treasurer
C. A. Favrot Vice-President George N. Gallup Secretary
Organized 1920.
FINE ARTS CLUB OF NEW ORLEANS
Mrs. Frank L. Nairne President Mrs. H. G. Warren. Treasurer
Mrs. L. C. Reed.. .1st Vice-President Mrs. H. B. Gessner. . .Rec.-Secretary
Mrs. T. C. Hills.. 2d Vice-President
Jennie Gilbert, Corresponding Secretary
1238 Broadway, New Orleans
Organized 1906. Lectures and occasional exhibitions.
NEWCOMB COLLEGE ART SCHOOL
Audubon Place, New Orleans
Ellsworth Woodward, Director
For details see Vol. I, p. 314.
Galleries open, free, daily 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. Permanent collection and fre-
LOUISIANA— MAINE 125
NEW ORLEANS
Newcomb College — Continued
quent special exhibitions ; lecture hall, library with 600 volumes and 1,000
lantern slides.
Founded 1886. Besides the school courses there are a practical pottery, a
book-bindery, and needle-work and jewelry studios. The Alumnae of the
school maintains a permanent exhibition and sales room in the pottery build-
ing. (See also school section.)
The picture gallery, open free to the public, contains paintings in oil and
in water colors by American and modern foreign artists. There are also
numerous etchings, engravings and photographs and a good working library;
enlarged photographs of the historic iron balconies of old New Orleans; and
antique embroideries and brocades.
NEW ORLEANS PUBLIC LIBRARY
Lee Circle and St. Charles Avenue, New Orleans
Henry M. Gill, Librarian
Loans art books.
QUARTIER CLUB
Pontalba Building, St. Ann and Chartres Sts., New Orleans
Mrs. Philip Werbein, 3d. . . President James Dickens Treasurer
Mrs Lelia Kennard, Secretary, 1621 Second St., New Orleans
Re-organized 1921. Established to house a meeting place for those interested
in the allied arts, and to entertain all artists and distinguished visitors arriving
in the city, and to revive the spirit of the famous old French Quarter.
MAINE
MAINE TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION
DRAWING DEPARTMENT
Katherine Abbott, Chairman, Farmington, Me.
BANGOR
BANGOR SOCIETY OF ART
25 Broad Street, Bangor
Orman B. Humphrey. .Chairman of Louise Sawyer Secretary
Board of Trustees 64 Forest Ave., Bangor
George I. Mausur Treasurer Alice P. Walker
Walter Hardy, Trustees
Founded 1913. Lectures, exhibitions and demonstrations given. School
maintained (see school section).
BAR HARBOR
MORRIS K. JESUP MEMORIAL LIBRARY
Bar Harbor
A. E. Gallatin, Curator of Prints
Founded 1915. Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Collection of prints presented by
A. E. Gallatin. Books on art including many on prints; photographs of paint-
ings and objects of art. Exhibitions are held.
BOOTHBAY HARBOR
COMMONWEALTH ART COLONY
Boothbay Harbor
A. G. Randall President John W. Brackett Secretary
(Winter) 498 Broadway, Providence
Founded 1904, and re-organized 1914. A co-operative summer colony with
property valued at $25,000. A summer school of art, music and languages;
exhijbitions held and lectures given. (See school section.)
126 MAINE— MARYLAND
EASTPORT
EASTPORT ART ASSOCIATION
L. H. Newcomb President Charles Wilson Treasurer
WiLBOR A. Shea 1st Vice-Pres. W. C. Beale Secretary
W. H. Col well 2d Vice-President Eastport
PORTLAND
COLUMBIAN ARTS AND CRAFTS LEAGUE
647 Congress Street, Portland
Mrs, W. H. Stevens President Caroline B. Stahl Treasurer
Mrs. H. a. Russell. . .1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. J. O. Burke Secretary
Mrs. Charles Le Grow. . .2d Vice-P.
Organized 1921.
►^PORTLAND SOCIETY OF ARTS AND CRAFTS
664 Congress Street, Portland
Mrs. Grace E. Allyn President Mrs. Arthur N. Smith Treasurer
Mrs. M. D. Kidder 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. E. M. Stephens Secretary
Mrs. Carroll S, Chaplin.. .2d V.-P. 34 Codman St., Portland
Founded 1898. Salesroom at 664 Congress St., Portland ; open during sum-
mer months. Special sales at Christmas and Easter, and summer exhibition
of work by members.
SOUTH POLAND
POLAND SPRING ART EXHIBITION
Maine State Building, Poland Spring, South Poland
Nettie M. Ricker, Director
For foundation, see Vol. I, p. 368.
Gallery open week days 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sundays, 10 a.m. to 8.30 p.m.
Permanent collection contains about fifty works. Occasional exhibitions.
MARYLAND
BALTIMORE
ART CLUB OF THE BALTIMORE CITY COLLEGE
Walter R. Gale, Director
Organized 1913, for the purpose of bringing together the students and fac-
ulty members who are interested in the fine and applied arts. Sketching class
exhibits and addresses; visits galleries.
ART COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF BALTIMORE
City Hall, Baltimore
Mayor William F. Broening.. .Pres. William W. Emmart
Joseph Evans Sperry J. Cookman Boyd
JosiAS Pennington J. Appleton Wilson
W. Hall Harris Lemuel T. Appold
Otis C. Brownley, Acting Secretary
For details see Vol. XI, p. 127.
Organized October 23, 1895. The Commission is composed of the Mayor
of the City of Baltimore and seven others. Approves works of art for the city.
ARUNDEL CLUB
ART SECTION
1004 North Charles Street, Baltimore
Lilian Giffen, Chairman
Organized 1920. Lectures given and exhibitions held.
MARYLAND 127
BALTIMORE
BALTIMORE CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
347 North Charles Street, Baltimore
Howard Sill President W. H. Emory, Jr Treasurer
Howard Mottu Vice-President Lawrence H. Fowler Secretary
Organized 1870.
►^BALTIMORE FRIENDS OF ART
1022 North Calvert Street, Baltimore
W. S. Thayer President Anne G. Turnbull Treasurer
J. H. Pleasants 1st Vice-Pres. Adaline D. Piper Secretary
R. E, L. Taylor 2d Vice-Pres.
Organized 1920, for the purpose of stimulating interest in art, encouraging
Baltimore to raise funds to purchase modern pictures and to procure exhibi-
tions, loans and donations of paintings, sculpture and other forms of art.
BALTIMORE WATER COLOR CLUB
Care of Peabody Institute, Baltimore
Lillian Giffen President Mary Crummer Treasurer
Mrs. H. T. Beacham . . 1st Vice-Pres. Dora Murdoch Secretary
Everett L. Bryant.... 2d Vice-Pres. 245 West Biddle St., Baltimore
Organized 1888. Annual exhibition held at Peabody Institute.
^CHARCOAL CLUB
1230 St. Paul Street, Corner Preston Street, Baltimore
Henry H. Wiegand President F, E. Hecklinger Treasurer
Edward Berge Vice-President Tolly A. Biays Secretary
Organized 1883. Aims to educate by placing good art in public places ; has
large exhibition at City Club which is changed from time to time; conducts
children through galleries and exhibitions. Exhibitions in club studos, at
County Fair and other public places. Lectures given. Owns club house and
school building; Architectudal Section conducts day and night art classes (see
school section).
4-HANDICRAFT CLUB OF BALTIMORE
243 West Biddle Street
Theodore H. Pond President Lillian S. Grief Treasurer
L, H. Fowler 1st Vice-President Eliza Ingle Secretary
Walter R. Gale. . .2d Vice-President 1710 Park Ave., Baltimore
Organized 1908. Exhibitions are held.
MARYLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY
201 West Monument Street, Baltimore
W. Hall Harris President H. E. Boyce Treasurer
Henry Stockbridge. . .Vice-President J. A. Wilson Cor.-Secretary
George L. Radcliffe, Recording Secretary
Gallery open free on special occasions.
Organized 1844. The Society's work is chiefly along historical lines, but the
gallery contains a valuable collection of historical paintings and portrait
sculpture.
128 MARYLAND
BALTIMORE
MARYLAND INSTITUTE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
W. T. Brewer President Nina Irvin. . Corresponding-Secretary
Mrs. B. G. Buck Treasurer 707 North Calvert St., Baltimore
Helen Jones. . . .Recording-Secretary
Organized 1895. Lectures and social meetings, occasional gifts to Institute.
►^MUNICIPAL ART SOCIETY OF BALTIMORE
Henry D. Harlan 1st Vice-Pres. S. Davies Warfield Treasurer
Theodore Marburg 2d Vice-Pres. Josias Pennington Secretary
R, Brent Keyser 3d Vice-Pres. Professional Bldg., Baltimore
Organized 1899. The work is carried on through sixteen committees. Lec-
tures given and exhibitions held. Appropriations given to the Maryland Insti-
tute for prizes and exhibitions, to Home Gardens' Committee for prizes, to
Committee to Abate Smoke Nuisance, to School Art League, etc. The Society
has been instrumental in decorating a number of public school buildings by
suitable coloring for the walls and providing photographs, engravings and
plaster casts throughout the buildings.
RINEHART SCULPTURE FUND OF THE PEABODY INSTITUTE
W. Hall Harris, Vice-Chairman
See Vol XI, p. 132.
Established 1874 by the will of the sculptor, William H. Rinehart. The
Fund is managed by the Peabody Institute and maintains the Rinehart School
of Sculpture at the Maryland Institute (see school section), and two traveling
scholarships of $1,000 a year. The scholarships are open to men, American
citizens, unmarried and not over 2)7 years of age.
SCHOOL ART LEAGUE
Baltimore City College, Baltimore
Walter R. Gale President Mary R. Corse Treasurer
Olivia F. KEECH..lst Vice-President Elizabeth M. Makibbin Cor.-Sec.
Margaret M. Law 2d Vice-Pres. 920 N. Fremont Ave., Baltimore
Founded 1913. The League's purpose is mutual help in art matters, particu-
larly through the public schools. Lectures given and exhibitions held.
THE SIX OF BALTIMORE
Alice Worthington Ball, Chairman
213 West Monument Street, Baltimore
Organized 1913. Membership consists of the following painters : Alice
Worthington Ball, Camelia Whitehurst, Maude D. Bryant, Josephine G. Coch-
rane, Mary Kremelberg and Ruth Anderson. An exhibition is held every year
at the Peabody Institute.
FREDERICK
FREDERICK ART CLUB
344 North Market Street, Frederick
Florence W. Doub President Mrs. Katherine Keefer. . ..Cor.-Sec.
Kate Ramsburgh Treasurer West Second St., Frederick
Mrs. Blanche Rose. ..Rec.-Secretary
Organized 1897.
MASSACHUSETTS 129
MASSACHUSETTS
ART COMMISSION OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF
MASSACHUSETTS
State House, Boston
Walter Oilman Page Chairman Frederick W. Coburn
H. Dudley Murphy Cyrus Dallin
Charles R. Greco, Secretary
8 Beacon Street, Boston
Organized 1910. Above commissioners, appointed in 1915 for five years,
pass upon all works of art to be installed on property of the commonwealth.
LIBRARY ART CLUB
Alice G. Chandler President Joseph L. Harrison Treasurer
Lancaster, Mass. Northampton, Mass.
Beatrice E. Kelliher. Secretary, Springfield, Mass.
Organized 1898 ; incorporated 1900. Sends out circulating exhibitions.
.^MASSACHUSETTS NORMAL ART SCHOOL
STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION, ART EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
Royal Bailey Farnum, Director, Exeter and Newbury Streets, Boston
For foundation and development see Vol. XI, pp. 134, 135.
(For instruction see school section.)
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Newbury and Exeter Streets, Boston
Harold S. Graves President Blanche A. Russell Secretary
Amy a. Whittier. .. .Vice-President Dorchester High Schol, Boston
Arthur ^ Ray Treasurer
Organized 1888. Lectures, musicials and other entertainments given.
ATTLEBORO
PUBLIC LIBRARY
North Main Street, Attleboro
Mrs. Lucinda Spofford, Librarian
' Exhibitions sent to schools and clubs.
BOSTON
ART COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF BOSTON
1001 City Hall Annex, Boston
Thomas Allen, Chairman Charles D. Maginnis
A. W. Longfellow William V. Kellen
J. Templeton Coolidge, Secretary
106 Beacon Street. Boston
Organized 1898. Five members appointed by the Mayor ; one member ap-
pointed on or before May 1st of each year for a term of five years. No work
of art can become the property of the city without the approval of the Art
Commission. A local registry of art prepared with the co-operation of the
Museum of Fine Arts. Various art lists have been published.
BOSTON ARCHITECTURAL CLUB
16 Somerset Street, Boston
W. R. Greeley President F. V. Little Executive Sec.
Louis C. Newhall. Treasurer 16 Somerset St, Boston
A. Francis Law Secretary
Organized 1889. Atelier maintained. Exhibition every two weeks from
October to June.
130 MASSACHUSETTS
BOSTON
^BOSTON ART CLUB
150 Newbury Street, Boston
S. Parker Bremer President J. S. Hathaway Treasurer
C. H. Bayley 1st Vice-President James Fortescue Secretary
C. H. Pepper 2d Vice-President
Organized 1854; incorporated 1871. Tlie Club House contains permanent
collection and galleries for temporary exhibits; annual attendance at exhibi-
tions about 20,000; weekly entertainments.
►I-BOSTON SOCIETY OF ARCHITECTS
BOSTON CHAPTER, AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Charles A. Coolidge President Walter A. Kilham Treasurer
Edward H. Hoyt, Secretary, 220 Devonshire St., Boston
Organized 1867 ; became Chapter American Institute of Architects, 1870.
Prizes are awarded at the Institute of Technology, at Harvard, at Boston
Architectural Club, and to competitors taking second place at the Rotch
Scholarship competitions.
BOSTON SOCIETY OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS
Percival Gallagher President Raymond W. Aldrich Sec.-Treas.
Carl R. Parker Vice-President 89 State St., Boston
Organized 1913. Chapter of American Society of Landscape Architects.
BOSTON SOCIETY OF WATER COLOR PAINTERS
Thomas Allen President Albert P. Button. . . .Sec-Treasurer
Harold B. Warren. . .Vice-President 44 Boylston St., Boston
Organized 1892.
BOSTON WATER COLOR CLUB
Charles H. Woodbury President William J. Kaula Treasurer
Margaret Patterson, Secretary, Trinity Court, Boston
Organized 1887. Exhibitions are held occasionally.
^COPLEY SOCIETY OF BOSTON
491 Boylston Street, Boston
Holker Abbott President D. Blakeley Hoar Treasurer
H. W. Peirce 1st Vice-President F. W. Coburn Secretary
Thomas Allen.... 2d Vice-President Cambridge, Mass.
Organized 1879; incorporated 1888. Drawing and modeling classes main-
tained and rooms open daily, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. There is a library; a collection
of over 1,000 photographs, which are lent for public school use. Monthly
meetings with lectures, musical or dramatic entertainments. Exhibitions are
given.
THE GROUP
Margaret Patterson, Secretary, Trinity Court, Boston
Organized 1917. The Group consists of Laura C. Hills, Margaret Patterson,
Jane Peterson, Elizabeth Wentworth Roberts and Mary Bradish Titcomb.
Exhibits held at Doll and Richards gallery in Boston.
Pilgrim Maiden. By Henry S. Kitson
Erected in Plymouth, Mass.. by the National Society of New
England Women
Allegresse. By Bessie Potter Vonnoh
Elizabeth N. Watrons Gold Medal, National Academy of Design, 1921
MASSACHUSETTS 131
BOSTON
•i^GUILD.PF BOSTON ARTISTS
162 Newbury Street, Boston
Frank W. Benson President William W. Churchill. . .Treasurer
LiLLA Cabot Perry (Mrs. T. S. Perry), Secretary
312 Marlborough St., Boston
For further information see Vol. XVII, p. 150.
Incorporated 1914. A co-operative organization. The Guild owns its build-
ing. There are two galleries ; one with a continuous exhibition in which each
member is entitled to show one work all the time ; the second gallery devoted
to "one man shows" of two weeks by each member in turn ; May to October
general exhibition by entire Guild; attendance from 300 to 1,000 daily.
MASSACHUSETTS CHAPTER
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF WOMEN PAINTERS AND
SCULPTORS
Amy Pleadwell, Secretary, 82 Chestnut Street, Boston
MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, ^
ARCHITECTURAL SOCIETY
491 Boylston Street, Boston
G. S. Holderness President David R. Shotwell Treasurer
W. T. Ferguson Vice-President Bertram A. Weber Secretary
Monthly smokers with addresses by prominent architects ; visits to studios of
artists and craftsmen. Class in clay modeling under auspices of the Society.
Exhibitions held.
PUBLIC LIBRARY OF THE CITY OF BOSTON
Copley Square, Boston
Charles F. D. Belden, Librarian
WiNTHROP Holt Chenery, Chief of Special Libraries Department, including
divisions of Fine and Industrial Arts
For further information see Vol. XVII, p. 150.
Three exhibition rooms open on week days, 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.; Sundays, 12
to 10 P.M., except from June 15 to September 15, when the Library closes at
9 P.M. Frequent special exhibitions.
The Fine Arts Department was opened 1895. A special custodian is in charge.
There are over 20,000 books on art ; 50,000 photographs and process prints ;
over 7,000 lantern slides. Circulation of mounted pictures for school use, about
30,000 a year. Exhibitions are held continuously through the season, chiefly
of photographic material ; collections of similar material are lent to the schools,
and provided for the use of art classes. The Library contains mural decora-
tions by Puvis de Chavannes, John S. Sargent, Edwin A. Abbey, John Elliott,
and Joseph Linden Smith.
ROTCH TRAVELING SCHOLARSHIP, INCORPORATED
Mrs. Annie Lawrence Lamb . . . Pres. C. H. Blackall Secretary
William Rotch Treasurer 20 Beacon St., Boston
Founded 1883, by the children of Benjamin S. Rotch; incorporated 1911.
The scholarship provides $1,000 a year for two years to be spent in foreign
travel and study. The candidate must be under thirty years of age and must
have worked during two years in the employ of an architect resident in Massa-
chusetts. The preliminary examinations are held early in April of each year.
132 MASSACHUSETTS
BOSTON
SOCIETY FOR THE PRESERVATION OF
NEW ENGLAND ANl/QUITIES
Otis House, 2 Lynde Street, Boston
Charles Knowles Bolton Pres. William C. Endicott Treasurer
George P. Winship Librarian Albert Thorndike Rec-Secretary
P. L. Spaulding Dir. of Museum Wm. Sumner Appleton Cor. -Sec.
For further information see Vol. XVII, p. 15L
ST. BOTOLPH CLUB
4 Newbury Street, Boston
Henry Parkman President Hazen Clement Treasurer
Robert G. Dodge.. 1st Vice-President Thomas A. Fox Secretary
Charles M. LoEFFLER..2d Vice-Pres.
Organized 1880. Exhibitions are held.
^SOCIETY OF ARTS AND CRAFTS
9 Park Street, Boston
President H. Percy Macomber. . . Secretary and
Mary Crease Sears... 1st Vice-Pres. Treasurer
Howard L. Rogers 2d Vice-Pres.
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 146.
Salesroom open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., April to No-
vember.
Organized and incorporated 1897.
STUART CLUB
102 Fenway, Boston
Katherine B. Child President Miss Turner Secretary-Treasurer
For further information see Vol. XVII, p. 151.
Organized 1906. It is a home for women students, chiefly of art and music,
but other professions are represented.
BOURNE
.^OLD COLONY UNION
Bourne (P. O. Buzzards Bay, Mass.)
Mrs. Marie T. Garland President Mrs. Maude Myhre Secretary
Mrs. Mercy McDermott. .Vice-Pres. Sagamore, Mass.
Mrs. Amy Tudor Treasurer
For further data see Vol. XVII, p. 152.
Organized 1911. Lectures given. Frequent special exhibitions.
BROCKTON
MUNICIPAL GALLERY
►J.BROCKTON' PUBLIC LIBRARY
Frank H. Whitmore, Librarian
Edward A. Rosendahl, Chairman Art Committee '
Open 9 A.M. to 9 p.m. A special room is used for art exhibitions and the
m.onthly exhibits of the Library. The Library has a collection of mounted
photographs; there are about 1,200 books on the fine and applied arts.
WOMAN'S CLUB OF BROCKTON
Mrs. E. H. Tindale, Chairman Art Committee
64 North Ash Street, Brockton
Annual exhibition in Public Library; lectures given.
MASSACHUSETTS 133
BROOKLINE
BROOKLINE CIVIC SOCIETY
Desmond FitzGerald, President, 410 Washington Street, Brookline
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. Walter H. Kilham, Chairman Art Committee
33 Edge Hill Road, Brookline
Annual exhibition held in Public Library.
BROOKLINE PUBLIC LIBRARY
Louisa M. Hooper, Librarian
Founded 1857. Occasional exhibitions.
CAMBRIDGE
TOPIARIAN CLUB OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY
Robinson Hall, Harvard University, Cambridge
Prentis French President Leon Henry Zach Treasurer
R. N. Cram Vice-President Richard D. Sias. Secretary
Organized 1900 to promote the interests of landscape architecture in the
University. Field trips and series of lectures given,
CONCORD
^CONCORD ART ASSOCIATION
Daniel C. French President Grace B. Keyes Treasurer
George S. Keyes Vice-Pres. Elizabeth W. Roberts Secretary
Estabrook Rd., Concord
Organized 1917. Annual exhibition held.
DEERFIELD
SOCIETY OF DEERFIELD INDUSTRIES
Mrs. Gertrude P. Ashley Pres. Susan B. Hawks Treasurer
Mrs. L. Emma Henry.. 1st Vice-Pres. Eleanor M. Arms Secretary
Mrs. Eleanor Flower. .2d Vice-Pres.
Organized 1899.
DUXBURY
DUXBURY ART ASSOCIATION
Charles Bittinger President Marjorie Conant Sec.-Treas.
Waldo Kennard Vice-President Margaret F. Browne,
Asst. Sec.-Treas.
Organized 1916. Annual exhibition; lectures given.
EAST GLOUCESTER
GALLERY ON THE MOORS
East Gloucester
For further information see Vol. XVII, p. 154.
Opened August, 1916. It provides exhibition galleries for the summer colony
of artists ; at one end is a stage, fully equipped. Annual exhibition held.
FALL RIVER
.^FALL RIVER ART CLUB
First Congregational Church, Fall River
Hannah R. Davis President Alice D. Alm y Sec-Treasurer
Mrs. Randall N. Durfee.. Vice-Pres. 579 North Main St., Fall River
134 MASSACHUSETTS
FITCHBURG
FITCHBURG PUBLIC LIBRARY
610 Main Street, Fitchburg
George E. Nutting, Librarian
H. I. Wallace, Chairman Art Committee
Gallery open free, 9 a.m. to sunset. 800 volumes on the fine arts ; about
1,000 photographs; collection of engravings and prints. Historical and natural
history collections ; oil paintings and statuary.
HAVERHILL
HAVERHILL SOCIETY OF ARTS AND CRAFTS
Stanley D. Gray President Henrietta M. Dresser Treasurer
Lillian B. Edwards, Secretary, 6 Florence Avenue, Haverhill
Organized 1910. Classes in v^eaving, wood-carving, basketry and rug making.
(No report 1921.)
HINGHAM
HINGHAM SOCIETY OF ARTS AND CRAFTS
Mrs. Arthur Hersey President Miss M. E. Nye Treasurer
Samuel Spalding Vice-President Susan B. Willard Secretary
Organized 1901. Classes maintained ; baskets and toy furniture are special-
ties ; teachers are sent to other towns. Occasional lectures. Sales are held at
Christmas and Easter ; annual exhibition and sale.
LYNN
LYNN ART CLUB
Paul W. Rowell President Walter Springer Treasurer
Harry W. Powers Vice-President Carrie W. Putnam Secretary
Lawrence Rainford. ..Cor.-Secretary
12 Webster St., Lynn
Organized 1909. Annual exhibition.
LYNN PUBLIC LIBRARY
50 North Common Street, Lynn
Clarence E. Sherman, Librarian
Open 9 A.M. to 9.30 p.m. Occasional exhibitions.
MALDEN
MALDEN PUBLIC LIBRARY
Herbert W. Fison, Librarian
Francis A. Shore, Chairman Art Committee
Gallery open 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. ; Sundays, 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. Frequent exhibi-
tions. There are over 2,500 mounted prints in the Library.
METHUEN
NEVINS MEMORIAL HALL AND LIBRARY
Methuen
Beatrice N. Weibel, Librarian
Collection of paintings.
MILTON
MILTON PUBLIC LIBRARY
Canton Avenue, Milton
Carrie S. Allen, Librarian
Open Sundays, Nov. to May, 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.;
other week days, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Exhibitions are held.
MASSACHUSETTS 135
NEW BEDFORD
NEW BEDFORD SOCIETY OF FINE ARTS
Herbert P. Bryant President John H. Clifford Treasurer
Edward M. Stetson, Secretary, 47 Ash Street, New Bedford
Organized 1907. Annual exhibition.
►J*FREE PUBLIC LIBRARY
New Bedford
George H. Tripp Librarian Jane E. Gardner Art Librarian
Open daily 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Founded 1853. Permanent art collection and
frequent exhibitions. Pictures lent to neighboring towns.
.^SWAIN FREE SCHOOL OF DESIGN
391 County Street, New Bedford
William W. Crapo President John H. Clifford Sec. -Treasurer
Charles W. Clifford Vice-Pres. H. A. Neyland Director
Founded 1881 ; re-organized as school of art, 1902. Monthly exhibitions
and lectures. A free school (see school section).
SWAIN ART CLUB
A social, educational and business organization for the students. To qualify
for membership, work must pass the jury, composed of club members and
instructors. A sales shop is maintained where orders are also taken.
NORTHAMPTON
FORBES LIBRARY
West Street, Northampton
Joseph LeRoy Harrison, Librarian
For further information see Vol. XVII, p. 156.
Opened to the public in 1894. Occasional special exhibitions.
NORWELL
NORWELL ART AND CRAFT SOCIETY
Mrs. Nellie Sparrel President Mrs. Bertha Henderson Treas.
Mrs. Florence B. PiNSON. . ..Vice-P. Mrs. Jennie Pinson Secretary
Organized 1906. (No report 1921.)
PROVINCETOWN
BEACHCOMBERS' CLUB
George Elmer Browne President H. N. Campbell Sec-Treasurer
Max Bohm Vice-President
Organized 1915. Annual meeting in August. Annual dues, $5 ; member-
ship, 75.
•^PROVINCETOWN ART ASSOCIATION
W. H. Young President Nina S. Williams Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. Eugene Watson. .Acting V.-P. H. N. Campbell Cor.-Secretary
Mrs. W. H. Young Treasurer
Organized 1914. Owns etching press for use of members. Sends out travel-
ing exhibition of work by members, and holds annual exhibition.
SAIL LOFT CLUB
Provincetown, Mass.
Mps. M. M. Chaffee President Ellen Ravenscroft Treasurer
Sarah Munroe. ., .1st Vice-President Mrs. Otto Kirschner Secretary
Mrs. Henry Mottet 2d Vice-Pres.
Organized 1917. Holds annual exhibition.
136 MASSACHUSETTS
SPRINGFIELD
CITY LIBRARY ASSOCIATION
State Street, Springfield
HiLLER C, Wellman Librarian Effalene H. King Art Librarian
The art room is open, free, week days (except Christmas and Fourth of
July), 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Founded 1857 ; art room opened 1905. Holds exhibitions and circulates books
on fine arts and pictures.
SPRINGFIELD ART CLUB
55 Beaumont Street, Springfield
Ector I. Rosati President Andrew A. Phillips Sec.-Treas.
Organized 1912. Weekly lectures. Maintains an outdoor sketching class.
(No report 1921.)
.^SPRINGFIELD ART LEAGUE
George C. Gardner President Harold M. Vanderbilt. . . . Secretary
John H. Miller Vice-President 88 Biltmore St., Springfield
Mrs. E. a. Appleton Treasurer
Organized 1919. Monthly meetings with discussions. Lectures and exhibi-
tions held.
SPRINGFIELD COIN CLUB
Chamber of Commerce, Springfield, Mass.
W. C. Stone President W. E. Morse Vice-President
A. W. Morris, Secretary-Treasurer
Organized 1914. Affiliated with the American Numismatic Association.
Exhibitions are held. (No report 1921.)
STOCKBRIDGE
LAUREL HILL ASSOCIATION
Stockbridge
Alexander Sedgwick President Ralph E. Heath Treasurer
Richard R. BowKER...lst Vice-Pres. Agnes W. Canning Secretary
H. W. Farnum 2d Vice-Pres.
Organized 1853. Does village improvement work, cares for parks, sidewalks,
trees, etc. Occasional exhibitions.
STOCKBRIDGE EXHIBITION
The Casino, Stockbridge
Walter Nettleton, Chairman Art Committee
J. H. Seymour Treasurer Mrs. G. R. Hall Secretary
Since 1909 exhibitions of painting and sculpture have been held in September
for two weeks, open to all artists who have at any time worked in the Berk-
shires. Attendance averages 1,500 and sales about $5,000.
WOBURN
WOBURN PUBLIC LIBRARY
William N. Seaver, Librarian
William F. Davis, Chairman Art Committee
Open, free, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Tuesdays
and Thursdays, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
The art gallery contains 68 paintings and 12 original pieces of sculpture, in-
cluding two Delia Robbia portrait medallions, all from the James Jackson
Jarves collection, the greater part of which belongs to Yale University. About
3,000 books on art. Occasional exhibitions.
MASSACHUSETTS— MICHIGAN 137
WORCESTER
AMERICAN ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY
Salisbury Street, corner of Park Avenue, Worcester
Waldo Lincoln President Samuel B. Woodward Treasurer
Charles L. Nichols Secretary Clarence S. Brigham Librarian
Incorporated 1912. A national institution which is particularly rich in books,
newspapers and manuscripts dating before 1820. The Museum contains a
number of pieces of colonial furniture, a small collection of early portraits,
some historical china, and a large loan collection of early English and American
portraits.
FREE PUBLIC LIBRARY
12 Elm Street, Worcester
Rorert K. Shaw ; . .Librarian Grace W, Wood, Reference Librarian
in charge of Art Collection
Open 9 A.M. to 9.30 p.m. Large collection of carbon photographs illustrating
the history of painting, and many colored reproductions ; photographs of archi-
tecture, sculpture, etc. ; reproductions of the works by American artists. Good
collection of art books. Plates are lent. Art classes hold regular meetings
in the art rooms. Exhibitions are held.
SAINT WULSTAN SOCIETY
Waldo Lincoln President Frank H. Dewey Treasurer
A. George Bullock. . .Vice-President
Charles L. Nichols, Secretary, 38 Cedar Street, Worcester
Charles G. Washburn, Chairman Art Committee
Organized 1890. Administrates the Lucius J. Knowles Art Fund for the
promotion of art in Worcester.
WORCESTER PUBLIC SCHOOL ART LEAGUE
John E. Lynch ...President Carrie A. Hildreth Secretary
Frank J. Darrah Vice-President 769 Main St., Worcester
Robert K. Shaw Treasurer
Organized 1895. The work is largely advisory.
MICHIGAN
^MICHIGAN CHAPTER AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
.,D. J. V. Snyder President A. G. Donaldson Secretary
J. B. Nettleton Vice-President 1314 Penobscot Bldg., Detroit
Walter Lentz Treasurer
Organized 1887
ANN ARBOR
>^ANN ARBOR ART ASSOCIATION
Louis H. BoYNTON President Herbert Slauson Treasurer
W. W. Bishop 1st Vice-Pres. Louise Douglas Secretary
B. M. Donaldson 2d Vice-Pres. 502 Huron St., Ann Arbor
Organized 1909. Exhibitions held.
DETROIT
DETROIT SOCIETY OF WOMEN PAINTERS
Mrs. T. a. McGraw, Jr President Mariam Candler Treasurer
Eleanor S. Candler. . . 1st Vice-Pres. Helen E. Keep Secretary
Katherine McEwen. . .2d Vice-Pres. 2247 Jefferson Ave., East, Detroit
Organized 1903. Exhibitions held.
138 MICHIGAN
DETROIT
.^SCARAB CLUB
2306 Woodward Avenue, Detroit
Frank S. Clark President Horace S. Boutell Treasurer
Harry Woodhouse Vice-President Clyde H. Burroughs Secretary
Organized 1910. Exhibitions are held.
►J-SOCIETY OF ARTS AND CRAFTS
47 Watson Street, Detroit
George G. Booth President William B. Stratton Treasurer
Alexandrine McEwen . 1st Vice-Pres. Helen Plumb Secretary
H. J. M. Grylls 2d Vice-Pres.
For further data see Vol. XVII, p. 160.
Permanent exhibition and salesroom open to the public, daily 9 a.m. to 5
p. M., except Saturdays, when it closes at 1 :30 p. m. Exhibitions are held.
Organized 1906; Incorporated 1915; building erected 1916. Exhibitions are
held.
GRAND RAPIDS
i^GRAND RAPIDS ART ASSOCIATION
Monument Square Bldg., Monroe Avenue, N.E., Grand Rapids
Mrs. F. W. Powers President Mabel H. Perkins Secretary
Maude Collins 1st Vice-Pres. 327 Washington St., S. E., Grand
Mrs. W. B. WiLLARD...2d Vice-Pres. Rapids
Annette Richards Treasurer
Organized 1910. Monthly exhibitions, lectures, studio teas, informal talks,
work with children,
GRAND RAPIDS PUBLIC LIBRARY
Ryerson Public Library Building
Samuel H. Ranck, Librarian
Open week days 8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sundays and holidays 2 to 6 p.m. Col-
lection of over 5,000 books on art, and many prints. Exhibitions are held.
JACKSON
^JACKSON ART ASSOCIATION
Public Library, Jackson
Mrs. C. E. Markham President Martha C. Walcott Treasurer
Leonard H. Field, Jr Vice-Pres. Earl W. Browning Secretary
Organized 1909. Lectures and exhibitions are held at the Public Library.
JACKSON PUBLIC LIBRARY
Earl W. Browning, Librarian
Gallery open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Contains the nucleus of a permanent art col-
lection. About 2,000 books on fine and applied arts. The exhibitions of the
Jackson Art Society are held in the Library.
LANSING
HhMICHIGAN STATE LIBRARY
Lansing
Mrs. Mary C. Spencer, Librarian
Open 8 A.M to 4 p.m. Founded 1828.
For further data see Vol. XVII, p. 161.
MINNESOTA 139
MINNESOTA
MINNESOTA CHAPTER AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
MINNEAPOLIS SOCIETY OF' ARCHITECTS
1200 Second Avenue, South, Minneapolis
Harry T. Downs President F. G. Gorman Vice-President
J. P. Jackson, Secretary-Treasurer, 2309 First Ave., South, MinneapoHs
Organized 1892.
MINNESOTA CHAPTER AMERICAN
SOCIETY OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS
Arthur R. Nichols President George L. Nason Sec-Treasurer
641 Endicott Bldg., St. Paul
Organized 1914.
MINNESOTA STATE ART COMMISSION
MINNESOTA STATE ART SOCIETY
504 Essex Building, Minneapolis
Governing Board
Hon. J. A. O. Prens
Hon. L. D. Coffman, ex-officio
Mrs. J. Howard Palmer H. W. Rubins
Ian B. Stoughton T. G. Holyoke
Mrs. Foster Hannaford Gertrude Gary
Maurice I. Flagg
For history see Vol. XI, p. 173.
Inactive.
MINNEAPOLIS
ATTIC CLUB OF MINNEAPOLIS
Carl W. Rawson President Jesse W. Betlach Treasurer
699 Kenwood Parkway, Minneapolis Clarence Conaughby Secretary
Organized 1910. Club rooms maintained ; classes work from the model two
nights a week; outdoor sketching during summer. (No report 1921.)
MINNEAPOLIS KERAMIC ART CLUB
Frances Ellen Newman . . President Helen DeWanz Secretary
Mrs. E. D. Lacy Vice-President 2018 Dupont Ave., N., Minneapolis
Nell L. Saunders Treasurer
Organized 1912.
MINNEAPOLIS PUBLIC LIBRARY
Corner Hennepin Avenue and 10th Street, Minneapolis
Gratia A. Countryman, Librarian
Marie A. Todd, Art Reference Librarian
Open 9 a.m to 5.30 p.m. Founded 1889. There are about 7,000 books on
the fine arts, 1,500 large photographs and color prints for reference use.
16,500 prints mounted for circulation, with a reserve collection of 40,000
clippings ready for mounting, 5,350 post cards for use with radiopticon.
art gallery
R. H. Adams Curator Lucy Gilbert Attendant
Open, tree, daily, except Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday evening and
Sunday afternoon. With the exception of 5 paintings the entire collection is
owned and lent by T. W. Walker of Minneapolis. Eighty-five artists are
represented by about 100 characteristic paintings. There are also photo-
graphs, art glass, oriental porcelain, etc. Attendance averages about 50,000.
140 MINNESOTA
MINNEAPOLIS
MINNESOTA COLLEGE ART SOCIETY
Harvard and Delaware Streets, S. E., Minneapolis
John A. Holmen President Roy Elmburg Treasurer
Frank Nelson, Secretary
Organized 1909. Frequent lectures given.
SCANDINAVIAN ART SOCIETY OF AMERICA
Institute of Arts, Minneapolis
Lauritz S. Swenson President Andreas Neland Vice-President
SoREN P. Rees, Sec.-Treas.
Organized 1914. The Society acquires works by Scandinavian artists to be
placed in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts in rooms set apart for this purpose.
Lectures given.
VETERANS
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE MINNEAPOLIS SCHOOL OF ART
Minneapolis Institute of Arts
Mary Moulton Cheney
Organized 1911.
WOMAN'S CLUB OF MINNEAPOLIS
1526 Harmon Place, Minneapolis
Mrs. a. E. Zonne President Mrs. Chapin R. Brackett. . . .Treas.
Mrs. H. V. Mercer 1st Vice-Pres. Edna M. Candler Secretary
Mrs. Charles Silverson 2d V.-P.
Organized 1907.
DEPARTMENT OF ARTS AND LETTERS
Mrs. J. B. Pike Chairman Mrs. F. M. Crosby Director
This work of the Art Department includes exhibitions of work by local
artists; an exhibit and sale of industrial art; co-operation with the State
Art Society ; co-operation with the Fine Arts Society ; two art scholarships
for students in local schools; a course of lectures on art. (No report 1921.)
ST. PAUL
ARTISTS' SOCIETY OF SAINT PAUL
Charles H. Goodrich President Hilma Berglund Cor. -Secretary
S. Lydia Tread well Treasurer 1820 Feronia Ave., St. Paul
Alice E. Hugy Rec.-Secretary
Organized 1908. Exhibitions are held.
PUBLIC LIBRARY
Fourth Street, St. Paul
W. Dawson Johnston, Librarian
Edah Burnett, Assistant in charge of Fine Arts Room
Gallery open 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. This collection includes 10,278pictures and
4,800 lantern slides. Exhibitions held.
^ST. PAUL INSTITUTE
Auditorium Building, St. Paul
Arthur Sweeney President W. C. Koch Secretary
Benjamin Sommers. .Vice-President Mrs. M. M. Rasmessen. .Educational
Otto M. Nelson Treasurer Director
Caryl Spiller, Director
For foundation and details see Vol. XI, pp. 179, 180 and Vol. XVII, p. 163,
164.
The art gallery is open free, daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays 2 to 5 p.m.
Incorporated 1908. Exhibitions and lectures are given.
MISSISSIPPI— MISSOURI 141
MISSISSIPPI
JACKSON
MISSISSIPPI ART ASSOCIATION
Mrs. W. Q. Sharp President Bessie C. Lemly Treasurer
Mrs. L. M. Russel. . .Vice-President Geral Knowles Secretary
Marie Ascher, Chairman Junior Art League Committee
Organized 1911. Holds annual exhibition at State Fair and offers three
distinctions, gold medal, silver and bronze ribbons. Work admitted is original
work in fine arts and crafts.
MISSOURI
KANSAS CITY
.^KANSAS CITY ART INSTITUTE
Armour and Warwick Boulevards, Kansas City
J. C. Nichols President John F. Downing Treasury
John F. Huckel . . .1 st Vice-President Secretary
Albert R. Jones. . .2d Vice-President H. M. Kurtzworth Director
Museum open, week days 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.;
Monday and Thursday evenings 7 to 9 :30 p.m.
Incorporated 1907. Art School maintained (see school section). Frequent
lectures and exhibitions.
KANSAS CITY CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
H. F. HoiT President John Van Brunt Treasurer
C. H. Payson, Seci-etary, Reliance Bldg., Kansas City
Organized 1890. Annual exhibition in autumn. (No report 1921.)
ST. JOSEPH
SAINT JOSEPH ART LEAGUE
Mrs. J. C. Story President Mrs. L. B. Vanalta Treasurer
Mrs a. a. Myers Vice-Pres. Mrs. Glen McMichael Rec.-Sec.
Mary S. McNeil, Cor.-Sec, 1022 North 19th St., St. Joseph
Organized 1914. A regular program is given every two weeks. (No report
1921.)
ST. LOUIS
ART ALLIANCE OF SAINT LOUIS
707 Fullerton Building, St. Louis
A. Blair Ridington President Ida G. Heltzell Secretary
Mrs. C. M. Hoyt Vice-President 5325 Bartmer Ave., St. Louis
Mrs. R. L. Sanford Treasurer
Formerly Society for the Promotion of Arts, Crafts and Design. Devotes
itself exclusively to the needs of the art student obtaining scholarships, prizes,
etc., and by co-operation on the part of business men, opportunities for the
sale of work and the securing of positions, is intimately associated with the
St. Louis School of Fine Arts, Washington University.
ART STUDENTb' ASSOCIATION OF THE
SAINT LOUIS SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
Washington University, St. Louis
Robert Wright President Helen Williams Treasurer
Emanuel Essmann . . Vice-President Gladys Alexander Secretary
Organized 1884. Awards two scholarships yearly to needy students. Annual
exhibition in December.
142 MISSOURI
ST, LOUIS
CITY CLUB OF ST. LOUIS
911 Locust St., St. Louis
Nelson Cunliff President S. Roy Culbertson Treasurer
Glen W. Hutchinson, ,. .Vice-Pres. W. A. Sommers Secretary
Exhibitions of paintings are held monthly.
CIVIC LEAGUE OF ST. LOUIS
415 Locust Street, St. Louis
Flint Garrison President Charles Rippin Treasurer
J. H. Gundlach Vice-President J, K. Glasgow Acting Secretary
Organized 1901. Work along art lines is centered in city planning.
FRIENDS OF THE LOCAL ARTISTS
Union and Enright Avenues, St. Louis
Percy Werner Chairman Grace Gooding, ..Secretary-Treasurer
Organized 1919,
MUNICIPAL ART COMMISSION, CITY OF ST, LOUIS
234 Municipal Courts Bldg., St. Louis
Wilbur T. Trueblood President F. E. A. Curley Vice-President
Anita Moore, Secretary, 715 Railway Exchange, St. Louis
For organization see Vol. XIV, p. 163.
Organized 1915 by Municipal Ordinance. Members serve three-year terms
without compensation ; nine members. Work is advisory in connection with
municipal buildings, public works and park improvements. (No report 1921.)
SAINT LOUIS ARCHITECTURAL CLUB
514 Culver Way, St. Louis
H. H. H, Lynch President Herbert Reinhardt Treasurer
Fred Hammond Vice-President F, Ray Leimkeuhler Secretary
Organized 1894. Lectures at regular meetings. A club atelier is maintained
(see school section). Frequent exhibitions of architectural subjects.
SAINT LOUIS ARTISTS' GUILD
812 North Union Boulevard, St, Louis
Clark McAdams President Grace F, Gooding Secretary
T. P. Bostwick Vice-President 812 North Union Blvd,, St. Louis
T. Kajiwara Treasurer
Gallery, open, free, daily, 1 to 5 p.m.; Sunday 3 to 5 p.m.
Organized 1905 ; building erected 1906. The club house contains galleries,
social rooms and crypt. There is a Little Theatre in connection with the gal-
lery, and plays, under the direction of members of the organization, are given
at various times during the season. Holds annual open comparative ex-
hibitions.
.^SAINT LOUIS CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCFIITECTS
Walter L. Rathmann President W. O, Mullgardt Secretary
Harry G. Clymer Vice-President Chemical Bldg., St. Louis.
L. B. Pendleton Treasurer
Organized 1890. Give scholarship known as the John Beverly Robinson
Scholarship for post-graduate work in architecture at Washington University.
MISSOURI— MONTANA 143
ST. LOUIS
^SAINT LOUIS ART LEAGUE
Planters' Hotel, St. Louis
Breckenridge Long President H. M. E. Pasmezoglu Treasurer
Arthur E. Bostwick. .1st' Vice-Pres. F. E. A. Curley Secretary
M. A. Goldstein 2d Vice-Pres.
For further data see Vol. XVII, p. 167.
Organized 1913.
SAINT LUKE ART SOCIETY
3650 Lindell Boulevard, St. Louis
Marie R. Garesche President Julia Dussuchal Treasurer
Mrs. Paul Robyn 1st Vice-Pres. Clara Colman Rec.Sec.
Mrs. J. A. Goodwin.. 2nd Vice-Pres. Anne Waney Cor. -Sec.
Arranges art lectures, and assembles exhibitions of reproductions of paint-
ings for distribution in parochial schools.
.^SAINT LOUIS PUBLIC LIBRARY
Olive, Thirteenth and Fourteenth Streets
Arthur E. Bostwick, Librarian
Mary Powell, in charge Art Department
Open, daily, 9 a.m. to 10 p.m ; Sundays 2 p.m. to 9 p.m.
About 8,000 volumes on fine and applied arts ; art and architectural peri-
odicals and a circulating collection of pictures and slides. Special exhibitions
are constantly being held.
TWO-BY-FOUR SOCIETY
Takuma Kajiwara, President
St. Louis School of Fine Arts, Skinker Road and Lindell Blvd., St. Louis
Organized 1905. An annual exhibition is held at the St. Louis Public Library.
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY ARCHITECTURAL SOCIETY
Washington University, St. Louis
G. W. Wolf President Gabriel Dubuque Vice-Pres.
Louis Trautwein, Secretary-Treasurer
Organized 1907. Exhibitions are held.
SEDALIA
SEDALIA PUBLIC LIBRARY
Margaret Hodges, Acting Librarian
Art Gallery open 9 a.m to 8:30 p.m. There are about 140 photographs of
works of art, 30O books on art, and 2,000 prints.
MONTANA
GREAT FALLS
CITY PLANNING COMMISSION
H. O. Chowen, Chairman
Organized 1917. Seven members. Tentative plans made for a city plan.
(No report 1921.)
144 NEBRASKA— NEW HAMPSHIRE
NEBRASKA
NEBRASKA CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Harry W. Meginnis President J. D. Sandham Sec.-Treas.
Charles W. Steinbaugh. Vice-Pres. 836 World-Herald Bldg., Omaha
Organized 1918.
LINCOLN
^NEBRASKA ART ASSOCIATION
Station A., Lincoln
Frank M. Hall President Katherine Woods Treasurer
Don M. Love Vice-Pres,
Paul H. Grummann, Secretary and Chairman of Exhibitions
Organized 1893 ; incorporated 1902, Permanent collection at University,
Exhibitions held,
OMAHA
OMAHA ART GUILD
DoANE Powell President Cordelia Johnson Secretary
George Barker, Jr Treasurer 2346 South 34th Street, Omaha
J. Laurie Wallace, Chairman Exhibition Committee
Organized 1912. Occasional exhibitions,
.^OMAHA SOCIETY OF FINE ARTS
Omaha Public Library
Mrs. W, M. Burgess President Mrs. C. C. George Treasurer
Mrs, Luther Drake.. 1st Vice-Pres, Mrs. William E, Martin, , Secretary
Mrs, C. O. Rich 2nd Vice-Pres. Maurice Block Director
Organized 1906; incorporated 1911. Lectures and exhibitions are given.
PERU
FORTNIGHTLY ART CLUB
Peru
Mattie C. Ellis President Mrs, E. E. Good Treasurer
Mrs. E. L. Rouse Vice-Pres, Louise Neal Secretary
Organized 1900. Exhibitions are held, (No report 1921.)
NEW HAMPSHIRE
NEW HAMPSHIRE PRACTICAL ARTS CLUB
Roland G. Hartwell President Mary A, Jones Vice-President
Concord Penacook
Josephine Emery, Secretary-Treasurer
Box 310, Tilton, N. H.
Organized 1913, as New Hampshire Manual Training Club, Lectures given.
MANCHESTER
CITY LIBRARY
Pine Street, Manchester
F. Mabel Winchell, Librarian
Art department was opened in 1914, and contains collection of 2,702 books;
15.343 mounted and about 155,000 unmounted pictures, all of which are classi-
fied. About 60,000 pictures are on art subjects. Pictures are lent to schools,
clubs and individuals in the city, and by the inter-library loan system are
sent to other cities and towns when requested. Exhibitions are held.
NEW HAMPSHIRE— NEW JERSEY 145
MANCHESTER
►^INSTITUTE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
Concord and Pine Streets, Manchester
Albert L. Clough . • President Norwin S. Bean Treasurer
Charles J. Abbott Librarian Harrie M. Young Clerk
William H. Huse Curator George L. Kibbee Secretary
Sarah C. Holton Custodian 514 Hanover St., Manchester
Organized 1898. School maintained (see school section). Numerous_jexhi-
bitions are held.
PETERBOROUGH
EDWARD MACDOWELL MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION
Howard C. Smith President Mrs. Edward MacDowell. .Cor.-Sec.
Benjamin Prince Treasurer Peterborough
Howard Mansfield Secretary
Organized 1907 ; incorporated 1909. A summer colony of creative artists —
painters, sculptors, musicians and writers. Nearly 500 acres of land with 16
secluded studios, separate living quarters, out-door stage where pageants and
festivals are given.
HANDICRAFT WORKERS OF PETERBOROUGH
Mary Adams President Mrs. Charles Arnold Treasurer
Mrs. Perkins Bass 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. Helen L. Paquet Secretary
Mrs. Horace Morison 2nd Vice-Pres.
Organized 1905. Workers specialize in Italian cut-work baskets, or fine
sewing; tea-room maintained. Exhibitions held.
NEW JERSEY
HhNEW JERSEY CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Harry T, Stevens President John F. Capen Treasurer
E. F. Fougner 1st Vice-Pres. Hugh Roberts Secretary
C. W. Fairweather. .2nd Vice-Pres. 1 Exchange Place, Jersey City
Organized 1900.
BAYONNE
BAYONNE WOMAN'S CLUB
Mrs. Ralph Templeton. ..President Mrs. H. S. Germond, Jr. . .Secretary
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. H. F. J. Knobloch, Chairman
42 East 39th St., Bayonne
Organized 1915. Holds annual competition among school children of Bayonne
for most original architectural drawings, title pages, posters, interior designs,
and designs of costumes and costume accessories. Exhibitions are held.
JERSEY CITY
FREE PUBLIC LIBRARY
Jersey Avenue, Montgomery and Mercer Streets, Jersey City
Edmund W. Miller, Secretary and Librarian
Open daily, 3 p.m. to 5 p.m., and on request.
Exhibition room open free every afternoon during exhibition. About 1,000
books on art and several thousand prints used in the Reference and School
Department.
146 NEW JERSEY— NEW MEXICO— NEW YORK CITY
JERSEY CITY
JERSEY CITY ARTS CLUB
Joseph H. Hunter Acting Pres. Cyril Sayers Treasurer
Mrs. George Elterich Vice-Pres. Sarah Welsh Secretary
Dr. Henry S. Drayton, Chairman 34 Monticello Ave., Jersey City
Board of Managers
Organized 1904. Inactive.
JERSEY CITY KERAMIC ART CLUB
Mrs. E. F. Manning President Mrs. E. Mount Treasurer
Mrs. J. Allan Vice-Pres. Mrs. F. E. Price Secretary
Organized 1895.
NUTLEY
NUTLEY FREE PUBLIC LIBRARY
Irene C. Phillips, Librarian
For further data see Vol. XVII, p. 171.
TRENTON
SCHOOL OF INDUSTRIAL ARTS
Kelsey Memorial Building, Trenton
Frank Forrest Frederick, Director
Gallery open 2 to 4 p.m. and 7.30 to 9.30 p.m.
Building erected 1910. Valuable collections of ceramics. Current ex-
hibitions of paintings and handicrafts. (See school section.)
NEW MEXICO
TAOS
TAOS SOCIETY OF ARTISTS
Ernest L. Blumenschein . . President Walter Ufer Sec.-Treas.
Organized 1914. The Society is composed of artists who spend their summers
in that part of the country. Sends out traveling exhibition.
NEW YORK
NEW YORK CITY
ALLIED ARTISTS OF AMERICA
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
G. Glenn Newell President Edmund Greacen Rec.-Sec.
Elliot Clark Vice-Pres. Ernest L. . Ipsen Cor.-Sec.
Orlando Rouland Treasurer 119 East 19th St.
Annual exhibition held April 11 to May 1, 1921, at American Fine Arts Build-
ing. No jury, each artist selecting his own exhibit. Membership, 123.
ALLIED ARTS ASSOCIATION OF BROOKLYN
Eugene V. Brewster President L. D. Broughton Treasurer
W. G. Bowdoin, Secretary, 1057 East 39th St., Borough of Brooklyn.
Inactive.
►^AMERICAN FINE ARTS SOCIETY
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
William A. Coffin. .Pres. and Treas. Charles J. Miller Secretary
Incorporated 1889. Maintains galleries that are rented to the art societies.
Pictorial Map of the South Seas. By Barry Faulkner
Cunard Building, New York City
Fleet of Columbus. By Ezra Winter
Cunard Building, New York City
NEW YORK CITY 147
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF GRAPHIC ARTS
Art Center, 65 East 56th St., Borough of Manhattan, New York
Walter Gilliss Hon. President George A. Nelson Secretary
Frederick W. Goudy President 109 East 31st St., Borough of Man-
Henry L. Sparks Treasurer hattan, New York
Exhibition of old prints held in April, 1921, at National Arts Club.
4^AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MINIATURE PAINTERS
Alice Beckington President William J. Baer Treasurer
Helen Winslow Durkee, Secretary
124 West 72d Street, Borough of Manhattan
Twenty-second annual exhibition, Nov. 1 to Nov. 15, 1920, at the Arden
Galleries.
►^AMERICAN WATER COLOR SOCIETY
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Eliot Clark President Roy Brown Treasurer
Harry L. Hoffman, Secretary
50 West 67th St., Borough of Manhattan, New York
For foundation sec Vol. I, p. 242; recipients Evans prize, Vol. XI, p. 204.
Feb. 2 to Feb. 24, 1921— 54th annual exhibition, held at National Arts Club ;
Hudnut prize of $200 awarded to Francis McComas for "Storm Clouds."
.^ARCHITECTURAL LEAGUE OF NEW YORK
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Howard Greenley President Leon V. Solon Treasurer
John Gregory 1st Vice-Pres. Russell F. Whitehead Secretary
April 1 to May 5, 1921— Thirty-sixth annual exhibition held in the un-
finished south wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Opened with a
pageant "The Den of Lions." Medal for architecture awarded to Charles
Z. Klauder ; for decorative painting to Eugene F. Savage ; for sculpture to
John Gregory ; for landscape architecture to James L. Greenleaf ; for industrial
design and craftsmanship to Cheney Brothers for their silks.
•^ART ALLIANCE OF AMERICA
Art Center, 65 East 56th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
W. Frank Purdy President Charles H. Sabin Treasurer
Mrs. Ripley Hitchcock.. 1st V.-Pres.. Elizabeth B. Grimball Secretary
The Placement Section secures positions for designers, decorators and
teachers.
.^ART CENTER
65-67 East 56th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Mrs. Ripley Hitchcock President Wade H. Hayes Treasurer
Charles Dana Gibson. . .Vice-Pres. Heyworth Campbell Secretary
Richard L. Marwede, Assistant Secretary
William Laurel Harris, Managing Director
Building dedicated October 31, 1921. Holding company for real estate in
interest of the following co-operating organizations : Art Alliance of America,
Art Directors' Club, American Institute of Graphic Arts, New York Society
of Craftsmen, Pictorial Photographers of America, Society of Illustrators, and
The Stowaways.
148 NEW YORK CITY
ART COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
City Hall, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Robert W. de Forest President I. N. Phelps Stokes, Trustee N. Y.
Pres., Metropolitan Museum of Art Public Library, Ex-officio
Ex -officio Harry W. Watrous, 1921
John F, Hylan, Mayor of the City Welles Bosworth, 1922
of New York, Ex-officio R. T. H. Halsey, 1922
Frank L. Babbott Vice-Pres. Edward C. Blum, 1923
Pres. Brooklyn Institute of Arts Charles Keck, 1923
and Sciences, Ex-officio.
LuciEN OuDiN, 1921, Secretary
Henry Rutgers Marshall, Executive Secretary
Passes on all city structures. Reference collection of books, maps and
photographs on municipal art.
ART COMMISSION ASSOCIATES
Robert W. de Forest President Daniel C. Fbench Vice-President
Henry Rutgers Marshall, Secretary and Treasurer
City Hall, Borough of Manhattan, New York
ART DIRECTORS' CLUB
Art Center, 65 East 56th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Heyworth Campbell President James Ethridge Secretary
J. H. Chapin Vice-Pres. 23 East 26th St., Borough of Man-
Ralph Shultz Treasurer hattan, New York.
Exhibition of paintings and drawings used in American Advertising, March
2 to March 31, 1921, at National Arts Club.
HhART-IN-TRADES CLUB
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Harry Wearne President Ja mes P. Rome Secretary
Lewis W. Hyde Treasurer 381 Fourth Ave., Bor. of Manhat-
tan, New York
Monthly meetings with addresses on various phases of industrial art.
ART WORKERS' CLUB FOR WOMEN
224 West 58th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Constance Curtis President Caroline T. Foster
Grace Schuyler de Luze. .Treasurer Supf. and Exec. Sec.
Mrs. Charles M. Connfelt Sec.
Employment bureau, costume bureau, restaurant, circulating library, classes
in French and drawing, various entertainments. Open daily, except Sunday,
9 a.m to 6 P.M.
ARTISTS' AID SOCIETY
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Joseph Lauber President Charles J. Hinton Secretary
Jonas Lie Vice-Pres. Bronxville, N. Y.
J. Redding Kelly Treasurer. ;f. || . , | ^ ^ i
Controls a free bed in the Presbyterian Hospital. Deaths 1920-21 : W. H.
Lippincott, W. T. Smedley, Thomas Shields Clarke.
NEW YORK CITY 149
ARTISTS' FUND SOCIETY OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
Alexander C. Morgan President H. Bolton Jones Secretary
William H. Howe Vice-Pres. 33 West 67 St., Borough of Man-
W. Merrttt Post Treasurer hattan, New York
Gives aid to members in distress, and assists families of deceased members ;
also, to the extent of its resources gives temporary assistance to any needy pro-
fessional artist, whether member or not. Deaths, 1920-21 : Mathias Sandor,
Nov. 3, 1920; F. T. Richards, July 8, 1921.
ASSOCIATION FOR CULTURE
Dr. Otto Glogau Treasurer Mrs. Clara Ruge Sec. Art Dept.
8 East 85th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Annual exhibition at Municipal Art Gallery in Washington Irving High
School, Dec. 20, 1920, to Feb. 28, 1921.
BROOKLYN CHAPTER AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
154 Montague Street, Borough of Brooklyn, New York
John B. Slee President T. E. Snook, Jr Secretary
Arthur R. Koch Vice-President 261 Broadway, Borough of Man-
William J. Dilthey Treasurer hattan. New York
BROOKLYN SOCIETY OF ARTISTS
Hamilton Easter Field. , .President W. E. Spader Treasurer
Leon Dabo 1st Vice-Pres. William J. Boylan Rec.-Sec.
Edmond Weill 2d Vice-Pres.
Robert Laurent, Corresponding Secretary
106 Columbia Heights, Borough of Brooklyn, New York
Fourth annual exhibition, December, 1920, at Pratt Institute.
BROOKLYN SOCIETY OF ETCHERS
Eugene Higgins President J. T. Arms Cor. -Sec.
H. B. Shope Vice-Pres. Greenfield Hill, Fairfield, Conn.
Fred. Reynolds Treasurer
Nov. 29 to Dec. 17, 1920— Fifth annual exhibition at Brooklyn Museum;
three prizes. Feb. 1 to Feb. 21, 1921, exhibition at Brown-Robertson Gallery,
Manhattan. Traveling exhibit under auspices of American Federation of
Arts.
BROOKLYN SOCIETY OF MINIATURE PAINTERS
191 Clinton Street, Borough of Brooklyn
Nicholas S. Macsoud President Alexandrina R. Harris. .Treasurer
Edith Sawyer Vice-Pres. Alice T. Searle Secretary
241 Fenimore St., Borough of
Brooklyn.
March 1 to March 28, 1921, third annual exhibition held at Hotel Bossert.
BROOKLYN WATER COLOR CLUB
Mary Langtry President Herbert B. Tschudv .... Sec.-Treas.
William J. Boylan Vice-Pres. Brooklyn Museum, Eastern Park-
way.
Second annual exhibition held at Pratt Institute Art Gallery, Alarch 18
to April 2, 1921.
150 NEW YORK CITY
CAMERA CLUB
121 West 68th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
CENTURY ASSOCIATION
7 West 43rd Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Elihu Root President H. deF. Baldwin Treasurer
E. H. Blashfield 1st Vice-Pres. A. D. Noyes Secretary
Art Committee
Douglas Volk Kenneth Frazier Gifford Beal
Monthly exhibition of paintings by members.
CHALONER PRIZE FOUNDATION
Trustees
Charles A. Platt Lawton S. Parker William Rand
George F. Lewis, Clerk, Z7 Wall Street, Manhattan
R. George Smith, Sect. Concours Jury, National Academy of Design
175 West 109th Street
Monthly competitions in drawing, painting and composition, open to Amer-
ican art students under 30 years of age. American scholarship, consisting of
$400 and one year's tuition in an art school in the United States, awarded
for highest standard in monthly concours.
Fourth competition for Paris Prize, will be held in New York in May, 1923.
The prize consists of $900 a year for five years of study in Paris.
CITY CLUB OF NEW YORK
55 West 44th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
William H. Haskell, Chairman Art Committee
Monthly exhibitions,
CIVIC CLUB
14 West 12th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Gallery open to artists for exhibitions of two weeks' duration.
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
West 116th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
AVERY ARCHITECTURAL LIBRARY
William Bell Dinsmoor, Librarian
Open daily, except Sundays and holidays, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., and 7 to 10 p.m.;
except for a five weeks' closing period during August and September. The
standard library of the architectural profession in the United States.
Exhibitions 1920-1921 : Oct.— "A Country House Problem" by students of
the School of Architecture; Jan. — Original drawings for mural decorations
by Blashfield and Mowbray ; Feb. — Work of John Milton and Andrew Marvel ;
Work of Serlio; March — Designs for small house by Ernest Flagg; April —
Napoleon Centenary and the art of the Empire; June — Work of the Alumni
of the School of Architecture, 40th Anniversary ; July — Prints and Proc-
esses; Aug.-Sept. — Dante 600th Anniversary Exhibition.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
OF COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
Arthur Lobo President Edward F. Fanning Secretary
Joseph H. Clark Treasurer 522 Fifth Avenue, Borough of
Manhattan
Draftsmen's and Architect's Exchange maintained. Medal for "Excellence
in Design" awarded annually in the School of Architecture.
NEW YORK CITY 151
Columbia University — Continued
INSTITUTE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
Columbia University
James C. Egbert Milton J. Davies
Director of Extension Teaching Assistant in charge Institute
Numerous lectures on art topics. Annual dues, $12.50.
PULITZER ART SCHOLARSHIP
Annual scholarship of $1,500 for the art student in America who shall be
certified as the most promising and deserving by the National Academy of
Design.
FINE ARTS FEDERATION OF NEW YORK
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Arnold W. Brunner President Wm. Laurel Harris Secretary
Charles Dana Gibson. . .Vice-Pres. 120 West 59th Street, Borough of
Albert S. Bard Treasurer Manhattan, New York
The object is to secure united action by the art societies of New York in all
matters affecting their common interests.
GROLIER CLUB
47 East 60th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Henry W. Kent President Robert J affray Treasurer
Walter Gillis, Secretary
A club of bibliophiles. Frequent exhibitions open free to the public.
GUILD OF AMERICAN PAINTERS
Executive Council
William B. Starkweather Walter Farndon Treasurer
Arthur R. Freedlander
George Pearse Ennis, Secretary
58 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Exhibition, December, 1920, at Babcock Gallery, New York City. Traveling
exhibit shown in Baltimore, Providence, Elmira, Indianapolis, Chicago, Mus-
kegon, Grand Rapids, Minneapolis, and St. Paul.
GUILD OF BOOKWORKERS
Mrs. Helen Haskell Noyes, Secretary-Treasurer
77 Irving Place, Borough of Manhattan, New York
The membership is divided into professionals and amateurs, and includes il-
luminators, engrossers, hand-press printers, bookbinders, designers of book-
plates and designers of type. A year book is published with classified list of
members. Annual exhibition held April 5 to April 9, 1921 at the Grolier Club.
GUILD OF FREE LANCE ARTISTS
OF THE AUTHORS, ARTISTS AND DRAMATISTS OF AMERICA
22 East 17th treet. Borough of Manhattan, New York
C. B. Falls President F. G. Cooper Sec.-Treas.
C. E. Chambers Vice-Pres. Eric Schuler Exec. Sec.
LuiSE M. SiLLCox, Managing Secretary
Permanent exhibition 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily; Saturday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
152 NEW YORK CITY
JUNIOR ART PATRONS OF AMERICA
22 West 49th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Hon. Warpen G. Harding Alaric Simpson Sec.-Treas.
Hon. President Mrs. Albert Sterner Director
Organized 1921. Annual dues $25 ; each member to make purchase of
works by American artists for which this $25 stands as a credit. Retrospective
exhibition of paintings, May, 1921, at Fine Arts Building.
.^KERAMIC SOCIETY OF GREATER NEW YORK
Mrs. Nina Hatfield President Miss C. P. Nelson Secretary
Alice M. Hurd Vice-Pres. 32 Elk Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y.
Mrs. E. E. Smith Treasurer
LEAGUE OF NEW YORK ARTISTS
119 East 19th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Howard Giles, Chairman
35 West 14th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Robert W. Vonnoh, Chairman Art Committee
Organized 1921. Artists' co-operative society. Annual dues $10.
LES ANCIENS DE L'ACADEMIE JULIAN
Nelson N. Bickford Hon. Pres. Leo Mielziner Secretary
J. William Fosdick President 52 W. 12th St., Bor. of Man., N. Y.
LONG ISLAND PAINTERS
Benjamin Eggleston, Chairman Art Committee
164 East 22nd St., Borough of Brooklyn, New York
Occasional exhibitions at Plymouth Church Institute, Brooklyn.
LOTOS CLUB
110 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
William A. Clark, Chairman Art Committee
Exhibitions held during the season, opening the third Saturday of each
month; ladies' day, following Monday and Tuesday.
MacDQWELL CLUB
108 West 55th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Ernest Peixotto President Joseph G. Deane Treasurer
Caroline B. Dow, Secretary
Galleries open, free, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., except on Mondays and Tuesdays.
•^<MUNICIPAL ART SOCIETY OF NEW YORK
National Arts Club Studio Building, 119 East 19th Street, Borough of
Manhattan, New York
Joseph Howland Hunt. . .President Mrs. H. B. Keen Secretary
Carl F. Pilat 1st Vice-Pres. 135 West 56th Street, Borough of
George B. de Gersdorff Treasurer Manhattan
For foundation and history see Vol. XI, p. 235.
Permanent exhibition of civic art installed in Lorillard Mansion, Bronx
Park. Annual prizes of $50 and %2S awarded in the Beaux-Arts Institute of
Design Architectural competitions ; bronze trophy and medals awarded twice
a year through competitions in the drawing department of the City High
Schools.
NEW YORK CITY 153
.^MURAL PAINTERS
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
J. Monroe Hewlett President Ezra Winter Secretary
Charles R. Lamb 1st Vice-Pres. 58 West 57th Street, Borough of
Charles L. Hinton Treasurer Manhattan
Course of atelier instruction maintained in conjunction with the Beaux-
Arts Institute of Design and the National Sculpture Society. Lantern slides
and a lecture by Edwin H. Blashfield and also photographs of mural deco-
rations owned by the Society were circulated through The American Federa-
tion of Arts.
MUSEUM OF FRENCH ART
ART SECTION OF FRENCH INSTITUTE IN THE UNITED STATES
599 Fifth Avenue, Borough of Manhattan, New York
McDougall Hawkes President William R. Britton Treasurer
Thomas Hastings, Secretary-General
Reading room and exhibition gallery open free, daily, 2 to 6 p.m. Reference
library of French art, science and literature ; current periodicals, scrap books
of use to architects and designers; collections of engravings, coins, etc. Makes
a specialty of documents on costume design. Courses in costume design.
Lectures in French Tuesdays, 4 p.m., Thursdays 8 p.m., Saturdays 11 a.m.,
music, Sundays, 3 :30 p.m.
NATIONAL ACADEMY ASSOCIATION
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Harry W. Watrous President Bert Hanson Secretary
Donn Barber Treasurer 42 Broadway, Manhattan
Objects : To develop and encourage the study of fine arts, to aid artists
and associations of artists, to disseminate the knowledge and to stimulate an
interest in the fine arts ; to erect a building or buildings provided with galleries,
exhibition spaces, lecture rooms, and accommodations for artists and associ-
ations of artists devoted to work in the various departments of the fine arts.
►^.NATIONAL ACADEMY OF DESIGN
175 West 109th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Edwin H. Blashfield President Charles C. Curran Cor-.Sec.
Harry W. Watrous Vice-Pres. 39 West 67th St., Borough of Man-
Francis C, Jones Treasurer hattan
Douglas Volk Rec.-Sec.
For foundation and chronological history see Vol. XI, p. 239; membership
1826 to 1913 see Vol. X, p. 393.
Two exhibitions each season at the American Fine Arts Building, 215 West
57th Street; open daily 10'a.m to 6 p.m.; Sundays, 1:30 to 6 p.m. Admission
50 cents (including catalogue) except Mondays, when it is free, day and
evening.
School (see school section) and gallery of portraits of artists and other
works at the 109th Street building.
No winter, 1920, exhibition on account of fire in American Fine Arts
Building. Mar. 5 to Apr. 3, 1921 — Ninety-sixth annual exhibition : 475 ex-
hibits. Thomas B. Clarke prize to Leon Kroll ; Hallgarten prizes to Ross E.
Moffet, Felicie Waldo Howell and Wm. Auerbach-Levy ; Carnegie prize to
John F. Folinsbee; Shaw Memorial prize to Katherine S. Lawson; Isidor
medal to Howard E. Smith ; Saltus medal to Charles H. Davis ; Barnett prize
to Malvina Hoffman; Maynard prize to R. Sloan Bredin; Altman landscape
prizes to Ernest Lawson and Robert Spencer; Altman figure prizes to Walter
Ufer and Helen M. Turner; Watrous gold medal to Bessie Potter Vonnoh.
154 NEW YORK CITY
^NATIONAL ARTS CLUB
14 and 15 Gramercy Park and 119 East 19th Street, Borough of Manhattan
John G. Agar President John R. Gregg Treasurer
John Clyde Oswald^ Secretary
Club house maintained; galleries with monthly exhibitions; restaurant;
studio apartments. The galleries are open to the public, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Exhibitions
Nov. 1920 — Books of the year.
Dec. — Work of Club members.
Jan., 1921 — ^Members' annual prize exhibit.
Feb. — American Water Color Society.
Mar. — Art Directors' Club exhibit of drawings and paintings used in adver-
tising. i_l
Apr. — Old prints, under auspices of American Institute of Graphic Arts.
May-Oct. — Pictures from Club's permanent collection.
^NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF PORTRAIT PAINTERS
Irving R. Wiles Chairman DeWitt M. Lockman. . Vice-Char'm
Earl Stetson Crawford^ Secretary and Treasurer
4 West 40th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Exhibition May 2 to May 16, 1921, at Knoedler Galleries.
HhNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF
WOMEN PAINTERS AND SCULPTORS
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Mrs. H. Van B. Magonigle. . . .Pres. Elizabeth Hardenbergh . . . Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. Elizabeth S. Theobald Kate Mann Franklin. .. .Cor.-Sec.
1st Vice-Pres. Josephine W. Barnard. . .Asst. Sec.
Olive P. Black Treasurer
Exhibitions
Jan. 20 to Feb. 1, 1921 — Small pictures and sketches in Architectural League
room, American Fine Arts Building.
Feb. 23 to Mar. 5. — Thirtieth annual exhibition, Anderson Galleries. National
Arts Club prize to Harriet W. Frishmuth ; honorable mention to Camelia
Whitehurst for "Getting Ready" ; to Elsie Dodge Pattee for a miniature,
"The Builder" ; to Edith Barretto Parsons for sculpture, "Founatin Sketch."
^NATIONAL SCULPTURE SOCIETY
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Robert Aitken President I. Wyman Drum mond. .. .Treasurer
Joseph Rowland Hunt. . 1st V.-Pres. Charles L. Hinton Secretary
Free course for the study of decorative sculpture given in co-operation with
the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design (see school section). Photographs of
sculpture and a lecture belonging to the Society were circulated through The
American Federation of Arts.
.^NEEDLE AND BOBBIN CLUB
Gertrude Whiting President Mrs. S. S. Wheeler Treasurer
Frances Morris 1st Vice-Pres. Mary Parsons Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. W. T. Van Alstyne, Cor.-Sec,
1 West 72d St., Borough of Manhattan
Founded 1920 with the co-operation of People's Institute, Guild of Needle
and Bobbin Crafts to encourage women of foreign birth to continue their
native crafts. Published "Antique Laces of American Collectors" and "Club
Bulletin." Frequent meetings, exhibitions and sales.
NEW YORK CITY 155
NEW SOCIETY OF ARTISTS
Gari Melchers Chairman Jerome Myers Secretary
GiFFORD Beal Vice-Chair. 145 East 58th Street, Borough of
John Flanagan Treasurer Manhattan, New York
Exhibition at the Wildenstein Gallery, Nov. 8 to Nov. 27, 1920.
.^NEW YORK CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Charles Butler President Julian Clarence Levi Treasurer
John W. Cross Vice-Pres. Richmond H. Shreve Secretary
LeBrun Traveling Scholarship gives $1,000 for six months' travel in Europe
to any architect or draughtsman, a citizen of the United States, not under 23
nor over 30 years of age, recommended by a member and successful in the
competition. It is awarded every second year.
NEW YORK CHAPTER
AMERICAN SOCIETY OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS
H. A. Caparn President A. F. Brinckerhoff Vice-Pres.
Richard Schermerhorn, Jr., Secretary-Treasurer
363 Lexington Avenue, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Monthly meetings with discussions relative to the profession.
NEW YORK CHAPTER
MASSACHUSETTS NORMAL ART SCHOOL ALUMNI
Frank L. Allen President Florence L. Coding Secretary
Alice G. Locke 1st Vice-Pres. 302^^ Clermont Ave., Borough of
Della p. Mussey Treasurer Brooklyn, New York
.^NEW YORK SOCIETY OF CRAFTSMEN
Art Center, 65-67 East 56th St., Borough of Manhattan, New York
Charles E. Pellew President Charles B. Upjohn. .Vice-President
Jane Hoagland, Sec.-Treas., 206 Quincy St., Borough of Brooklyn
Monthly meetings at museums.
NEW YORK SOCIETY OF KERAMIC ARTS
Albert W. Heckman President Anna E. Fitch Cor.-Sec.
Maud M. Mason 1st Vice-Pres. 196 Berkeley Place, Borough of
Mrs, a. F. Sherman Treasurer Brooklyn, New York
G. Marie LePrince Rec.-Sec.
Exhibit and lecture three times a year.
NEW YORK SOCIETY OF PAINTERS
Colin Campbell Cooper. . .President Maria Strean Rec.-Sec.
CuLLEN Yates Treasurer 939 Eighth Avenue, Bor. of Man-
Alethea H. Platt Cor.-Sec. hattan
Exhibitions: Jan. 14 to Feb. 6, 1921, in Academy Room, 215 West 57th
Street; June 6 to Aug. 3, 1921, at Hotel Majestic.
156 NEW YORK CITY
NEW YORK SOCIETY LIBRARY
109 University Place, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Frank B. Bigelow, Librarian
Open, free, 9 a.m. to 5 :30 p.m.; daily, except Sunday ; Saturdays, till 12 dur-
ing the summer. John C. Green alcove, established and endowed in 1880, by
Mrs. Sarah H. Green, contains costly illustrated reference works on painting,
costume, decoration and ornament. Shareholders may borrow; study facilities
are provided for students, schools and clubs.
^NEW YORK WATER COLOR CLUB
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Henry B. Snell President Alphaeus P. Cole Secretary
Mrs. E. N. Vanderpoel. .Vice-Pres, 33 West 67th St., Borough of Man-
Kenneth G. How Treasurer hattan
Thirty-first annual exhibition Jan. 15 to Feb. 6, 1921, at American Fine Arts
Building; Hudnut prize to Anna Fisher for a still life.
PAINTER-GRAVERS OF AMERICA
Albert Sterner Chairman Leo Mielziner Sec.-Treas.
1 Lexington Ave., Bor. of Man. 79 West 12th St., Bor. of Man.
Exhibitions in May, 1921, at Brown-Robertson Gallery.
PEN AND BRUSH
134 East 19th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Ida M. Tarbell President Mrs. Marguerite Y. Earned
Susan Ricker Knox Vice-Pres. Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. M. E. Martin Treasurer Louise Wallace Hackney. .Cor.-Sec.
Reinette Lovewell Rec.-Sec. Mrs. W. S. Perry, ...Art Chairman
Monthly exhibitions of painting and crafts by members.
PEOPLE'S ART GUILD
918 Cauldwell Avenue, Borough of Bronx, New York
Organized 1915. Conducts art classes, study groups, exhibitions and work-
rooms in schools, settlements and studios. Annual dues, $1 and up.
SALMAGUNDI CLUB
47 Fifth Avenue, Borough of Manhattan, New York
J. Massey Rhind President Francis G. Wickware Rec.-Sec.
R. F. Kilpatrick Treasurer Walter Neumuller Cor.-Sec.
Frank DeHaven, Chairman Art Committee
Members' Exhibition
Dec. 4 to Dec. 18, 1920^ — Water colors, illustrations and etchings. Shaw prizes
($100 each) to Harry E. Townsend and Frederick K. Detwiller; Isidor
prize ($100) to John E. Costigan.
Jan., 1921 — Paintings by past presidents of the Club.
Feb. 2 to Feb. 11— Annual auction sale of small pictures. Prizes ($200, $100
and $100) to R. Sloan Bredin, Hobart Nichols, and Frederick J. Waugh.
Mar. 5 to Mar. 19 — Annual oil exhibition. Shaw purchase ($1,000) by Ed-
mund W. Greacen; Members' purchase ($1,000) by Robert Spencer;
Isidor prize ($100) by Cullen Yates.
NEW YORK CITY 157
Salmagundi Club — Continued
Mar. 21 to Apr. 2 — Work by Albert, Bower, Giles, Victor Higgins, Robert
Vonnoh, Ufer.
Apr. 9 to Apr. 23 — Annual exhibition of Thumb-Box Sketches. Turnbull
prize ($100) for group to George Elmer Browne; Vezin purchase prize
($200) to Murray P. Bewley; Porter prize ($50) to Frederick J. Mul-
haupt.
►fiSCHOOL ART LEAGUE OF NEW YORK
599 Fifth Avenue, Borough of Manhattan, New York
James P. Haney, 1st Vice-President and Chairman Executive Committee
Otto H. Kahn Treasurer Florence N. Levy Secretary
Fosters the interests of art education in the public schools of New York.
Industrial art scholarships (24 in 1921) to graduates of the City High Schools;
a medal awarded in each class, each term, in each of the 27 high schools ; a
medal for fine craftsmanship is given each term in each of the 290 elemen-
tary school workshops. Lectures at Metropolitan Museum, Brooklyn Museum
and current exhibitions in American Fine Arts Building, with attendance of
over 20,000 during 1920-21.
SCHOOL CRAFTS CLUB OF NEW YORK
Martin Corcoran President Frederick C. Arnold Secretary
Philip M. Wagner Vice-Pres. 907 Faile Street, the Bronx, New
Edwin F. Judd Treasurer York
SOCIETY OF AMERICAN ANTIQUARIANS
421 East 61st St., Borough of Manhattan, New York
Jane Teller President M. Clyde Crosby Sec.-Treas.
Object is to preserve the objects used and made by early American craftsmen
and to try to suppress the manufacture and sale of fake antiques.
SOCIETY OF AMERICAN ARTISTS
215 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Edwin H. Blashfield President Charles C. Curran Secretary
For history see Vol. /; p. 288.
Merged into the National Academy of Design in 1906.
►J-SOCIETE DES ARCHITECTS DIPLOMES PAR LE
GOUVERNEMENT FRANCAIS
John M. Howells President Edwin H. Denby Secretary
Laurence F. Peck Vice-Pres. 333 Fourth Ave., Borough of Man-
Chester H. Aldrich Treasurer hatfan
Yearly prize, consisting of medal and $50 ; also awards medals for meritorious
work in architectural competitions at universities.
SOCIETY OF ANIMAL PAINTERS AND SCULPTORS
Henry R. Poore, Secretary, 45 Ridge St., Orange, N. J.
Exhibition March 1 to March 21, 1921 at Macbeth Gallery.
158 NEW YORK CITY
SOCIETY OF AMERICAN FAKIRS
11 East 44th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
A, F. Bradley, Jr President John P. Davekn Treasurer
George D. Dannenberg. . Vice-Pres, Thomas F. Morris Secretary
SOCIETY OF BEAUX-ARTS ARCHITECTS
126 East 75th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
James Gamble Rogers President James W. O'Connor Secretary
Joseph Rowland Hunt. .Vice-Pres. 162 East 37th Street, Borough of
Lloyd Warren Treasurer Manhattan
Maintains the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design (see school section).
Paris prize open to all citizens of the United States under 27 years, giving
the winner the privilege of the "First Class" in architecture at the Ecole des
Beaux-Arts in Paris, and a yearly stipend of $1,000 during his two and one-
half years' stay abroad; the prize was awarded in 1921 to Fred Morgan.
SOCIETY OF ICONOPHILES
Richard H. Lawrence .... President Harris D. Colt Sec.-Treas.
30 Broad St., Bor. of Man., N. Y.
Publishes engraved views and portraits relating to the city of New York.
HhSOCIETY OF ILLUSTRATORS
Art Center, 65 East 56th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Charles Dana Gibson. . .Hon. Pres. Harry L. Sparks Treasurer
Edward Penfield President F. De Sales Casey Rec.-Sec.
Orson Lowell Vice-Pres.
Ray Greenleaf, Cor. -Sec, 50 Union Square, Borough of Manhattan
School of Illustration for disabled soldiers maintained at 370 Seventh Avenue.
Work of members circulated by The American Federation of Arts.
SOCIETY OF INDEPENDENT ARTISTS
Room 601, 1947 Broadway, Borough of Manhattan, New York
John J. Sloan President George F. Of Treasurer
Margaret Zorach Vice-Pres. A. S. Baylinson Secretary
Exhibitions conducted on the principle of "no jury and no prizes." Fifth
annual exhibition held Feb. 26 to Mar. 24, 1921 at Waldorf-Astoria; group of
paintings selected from this exhibit shown in May at Anderson Galleries.
SOCIETY OF MEN WHO PAINT THE FAR WEST
Executive Committee
Elliott Daingerfield Ben Foster
De Witt Parshall, Secretary and Treasurer
47 East 74th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Inactive.
STUDIO CLUB OF NEW YORK
35-37 East 62d Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Mrs. Stephen Baker Chairman Mrs. Theodore F. Savage Treas.
Mrs. William Payson. . .Vice-Chm. Mrs. John Rousmaniere. .Secretary
Mrs. Sheila F. Allen, Director
A resident centre for about 150 women students and professionals in the
various arts. Social meetings, lectures, vesper services, recitals and concerts.
NEW YORK CITY— NEW YORK STATE 159
NEW YORK CITY
THREE ARTS CLUB
340 West 85th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Mrs. John Henry Hammond. .Pres. Mrs. Clinton Gilbert, Jr Treas.
Mrs. Alfred Martin Vice-Pres. Mrs. Russell Hoadley Secretary
Anna Seaborn, Director
A home for students of music, drama and the visual arts, accommodating
about 100 girls. There are the advantages of club life with library and a
"dramatic wardrobe" and registry bureau. Room and board averages $10.50
a week.
UNION LEAGUE CLUB
1 East 39th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Alexander C. Humphreys, Chairman Art Committee
Monthly exhibitions during the season ; usually second Thursday, with ladies'
days the following Friday and Saturday.
WHITNEY STUDIO
8 West 8th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, the sculptor, has exhibitions in her studio
which are open, free, daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sundays 3 to 6 p.m.
WHITNEY STUDIO CLUB
147 West 4th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York
A social centre for the artists of Greenwich Village, with exhibition gal-
leries, reading and writing rooms, library, billiards.
CATHARINE LORILLARD WOLFE ART CLUB
Grace House, 802 Broadway, Borough of Manhattan
Everetta Kernochan President Mrs. Royal Whitman Treasurer
Mary N. Hoffman Vice-Pres, Mrs. Lawrence J. Mead. .Secretary
Mrs. L. J. Mead, Chairman Exhibition Committee
980 Madison Ave., Borough of Manhattan
Open daily and Sunday 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.; tea served every afternoon.
Monthly exhibitions from November to May of work by members.
NEW YORK STATE
NEW YORK STATE TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION
FINE, INDUSTRIAL, AND HOUSEHOLD SECTIONS
Francis H. Wing, President
Telephone Bldg., Buffalo, N. Y,
Fine Arts Department
H. W. Jacobs
Department of Education
Industrial Arts Department
W. H. Small
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Household Arts Department
Marion Van Liew, Chairman
State Department of Education, Albany, N. Y.
Annual meeting in November. Proceedings of conventions published in
Journal of the New York State Teachers' Association.
160 NEW YORK STATE
ALBANY
UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Educational Building, Albany, N. Y.
Frank B. Gilbert, Acting President.
Pliny T. Sexton, Chancellor,
Lewis A. Wilson, Director, Division of Agricultural and Industrial Education.
Leon L. Winslow, Specialist in Drawing and Industrial Training.
Alfred W. Abrams, Chief, Division of Visual Instruction.
William R. Watson, Chief, Division of Educational Extension.
See Vol. XI, p. 268, Vol XIV, p. 216, and Vol XIII, p. 193.
ALBANY INSTITUTE AND HISTORICAL AND ART SOCIETY
125 Washington Avenue, Albany, N. Y.
John M. Clarke President Led yard Cogswell, Jr Treasurer
D. E. AiNSWORTH 1st Vice-Pres. Henry H. Kohn Secretary
Gallery open daily 9 to 11 a.m. and 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday after-
noons free, other times 25 cents. Over 150 paintings.
Organized 1791 ; incorporated 1793 as the Society for the Promotion of Use-
ful Arts ; present title, incorporated 1900, combines six corporations, all educa-
tional ; building opened 1908. Lectures and exhibitions.
BINGHAMTON
binghamton public library
William F. Seward, Librarian
Gallery open 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Founded 1904. Collection of old portraits, Indian relics, etc. Erequent ex-
hibitions ; occasional lectures on art.
BINGHAMTON SOCIETY OF ARTS AND CRAFTS
Binghamton Public Library
Mrs. G. W. Topliff President F. M. Bowers Secretary
Charles H. Conrad .... 1st Vice-Pres. Mary Williams Treasurer
Mrs. Mary K. Grace.. 2d Vice-Pres.
Organized 1921. Lectures and exhibitions given. A sketch club has been
formed.
BUFFALO
ARTS CLUB OF BUFFALO
1020 Lafayette Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
Arthur Kowalski President Arthur O. Schilling Treasurer
Clement Beuchat. . .1st Vice-Pres. Harold Mann Secretary
W. J. Schwannekamp. .2nd V.-Pres.
Organized 1915 ; incorporated 1917.
Lectures given three evenings a week, also life and costume study classes;
out-of-door sketching; musical entertainments Saturday evenings. Regular
Christmas, Spring and commercial art exhibitions.
►^BUFFALO CHAPTER AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Charles S. Wood President Harry F. Hudson Treasurer
Paul F. Mann Vice-Pres. Louis Greenstein Secretary
1334 Prudential Bldg., Buffalo
Organized 1890.
NEW YORK STATE 161
BUFFALO
BUFFALO SCHOOL ARTS ASSOCIATION
H. W. Jacobs President Helen Horton Treasurer
Mrs. C. B. S. Quinton . . . Vice-Pres. Alice Roth Secretary-
Organized 1911. The object of the Association is to advance art education in
the pubhc schools by means of lectures and exhibitions, in co-operation with
the Fine Arts Academy and the Albright Art School.
BUFFALO SOCIETY OF ARTISTS
Albright Art Gallery, Buffalo
Bernard V. Carpenter President John Rummell Treasurer
Evelyn Rumsey Vice-Pres. Mrs. C. K. Horton Secretary
Mrs. Robert Fulton, Recording Secretary
Organized 1891. Exhibitions are held.
^GUILD OF ALLIED ARTS
John F. Graham President Mrs. E. A. Sharp Treasurer
George Gary 1st Vice-Pres. Priscilla Pierce Secretary
Elise L. Bradford 2nd Vice-Pres. 269 Summer St., Buffalo
Organized 1911. Exhibitions are held and lectures given.
GROSVENOR LIBRARY
Augustus H. Shearer, Librarian
Founded 1859. Open 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. About 8,000 volumes on art and
architecture; foreign postal card collection, mounted; 1,000 art photographs;
Edward Michel collection of war posters. Exhibitions are held.
JAMESTOWN
JAMES PRENDERGAST LIBRARY ASSOCIATION
Jamestown
Lucia T. Henderson, Librarian
Gallery open daily, except Sunday, 10 a.m. to 8.30 p.m. ; Saturdays, to 9 p.m.
Contains modern French, American. German and Italian paintings bequeathed
by Mary Norton Prendergast. About 1,500 books on the arts.
NANUET
NANUET PAINTERS AND SCULPTORS
Nanuet, Rockland Co., N. Y.
William Howard Donahue, Director
Organized 1920. Composed of a group of artists working in Rockland Co.,
N. Y., and vicinity. Holds exhibitions and sends out traveling exhibits.
NEW ROCHELLE
NEW ROCHELLE ART ASSOCIATION
F. D. Marsh President E. L. Hanson Treasurer
Orson Lowell 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. Elizabeth Ayer Secretary
1 Slocum St., New Rochelle
Organized 1919. Exhibitions are held at the Public Library.
NEW ROCHELLE PUBLIC LIBRARY
Main Street, New Rochelle
Mary E. Huntington, Librarian
Founded 1893. Open 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., and in the evenings during exhibitions.
Occasional exhibitions are held.
162 NEW YORK STATE
ROCHESTER
PICTURE PAINTERS' CLUB
Seth C. Jones, President and Chairman, 435 East Main St., Rochester
Organized 1900. Exhibitions held with Rochester Art Club.
ROCHESTER ART CLUB
Ladson Butler President A. B. Chamberlain Treasurer
Frank Von der LANCKEN.Vice-Pres. A. A. Maurer Secretary
341 Avenue B, Rochester
Organized 1875 ; incorporated 1882. Sketching trips summer and fall ; annual
exhibition held.
►^ROCHESTER INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION ASSOCIATION
FINE ARTS DEPARTMENT
309 Powers Block, Rochester
George L. Herdle, Chairman
See also Vol XIV, p. 222.
Gallery erected 1912. Annual exposition in September.
ROCHESTER SOCIETY OF ARCHITECTS
Charles C. Evans President Otto Block Treasurer
W. G. Kaelber Vice-President J. W. Vickery Secretary
125 Sibley Block, Rochester
Organized 1919.
SCHOOL OF FINE AND APPLIED ART
Bevier Building, Rochester
Clifford M. Ulp, Director
Institute chartered 1830, School of Art founded 1903, building dedicated 1913.
A Technical Art Museum primarily for students, but open to the public ; ob-
jects of art and original designs are purchased. The school co-operates with
the Memorial Art Gallery, the Library of the University of Rochester and
the Reynolds Library. Maintains evening and day schools, including School
of Fine and Applied Arts (see school section). Monthly exhibitions.
UTICA
UTICA PUBLIC LIBRARY
C. M. Underhill, Librarian
Gallery open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. A collection of books is maintained, and inex-
pensive pictures are mounted and circulated.
WATERTOWN
ROSWELL p. FLOWER MEMORIAL LIBRARY
Washington Street, Watertown
Samuel A. Hayt, Librarian
See also Vol. XIV, p. 226.
Open 9 A.M. to 9 p.m. daily. Founded 1905. Library contains several paint-
ings by contemporary American artists, acquired through competitive exhibi-
tions held under the auspices of the Municipal Improvement League; also
owns several pieces of statuary. About 1,000 books on art.
u
!2; ti
< ON
NEW YORK— OHIO 163
YONKERS
PHILIPSE MANOR HALL
Warburton Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y.
S. H. Thayer, Chairman of Committee in Charge
18 South Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y.
For data see Vol. XI, p. 280, and Vol. XVII, p. 197.
Open free, daily, 9 a.m. to 12 m., and 2 to 5 p.m.; Sundays, 2 to 6 p.m.
PhiHpse Manor House, erected about 1682, was deeded to the State of New
York by the City of Yonkers, July 1, 1908, and is in charge of the American
Scenic and Historic Preservation Society.
YONKERS ART ASSOCIATION
S. T. Hubbard President Wells M. Sawyer Treasurer
Isidore Konti 1st Vice-President James Ross Secretary
Charles Vezin 2d Vice-President 124 Morris St., Yonkers
Organized 1915. Its purpose is to develop a taste for art and to aid the
Municipal Art Commission in beautifying Yonkers. Exhibitions are held.
NORTH CAROLINA
NORTH CAROLINA CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
W. C. NoRTHRUP President Erle G. Stillwell. . . .Sec-Treasurer
R. S. Smith Vice-President Hendersonville
Organized 1913.
NORTH DAKOTA
FARGO
►J<FINE ARTS CLUB
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. Kent Darrow President Mrs. Harold Wilson. Vice-President
Mrs. a. a. Lorshbough, Secretary-Treasurer
Organized 1917.
OHIO
OHIO STATE ASSOCIATION OF ARCHITECTS
Harry J. Williams President G. W. Drach Vice-President
C. St. J. Chubb, Secretary-Treasurer
Ohio State University, Columbus
Organized 1915. Association is comprised of chapters of the American In-
stitute of Architects in Cincinnati, Cleveland, Dayton, Columbus and Toledo.
CINCINNATI
CINCINNATI ARCHITECTURAL CLUB
Arian Building, 4th and Sycamore Streets, Cincinnati
Charles F. Cellarins President W. B. Ward Treasurer
Lawrence Lefkin, Secretary
Care Garber & Woodward, Union Central Bldg., Cincinnati
Organized 1912. ,
164 OHIO
CINCINNATI
CINCINNATI ART CLUB
Third and Plum Streets, Cincinnati
George Debereiner President William Traxel Treasurer
Martin G. Dumler. . .Vice-President Daniel Cook Secretary
Organized 1892. A life class is maintained which meets three evenings a
week. Occasional exhibitions are held.
CINCINNATI CHAPTER AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
GusTAVE W, Drach President J. G. Steinkamp Secretary
A. O. Elzner Vice-President Mercantile Library Bldg, Cincinnati
L. W. Fahnestock Treasurer
Organized 1870.
GRAFTERS COMPANY
Cincinnati Museum, Eden Park, Cincinnati
Murray Seasongood President Mrs. Herbert G. French... 3d V.-P.
Elizabeth Kellogg 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. William Biles Treasurer
Mrs. Ida H. Halloway. . .2d Vice-P. Helen Sage Secretary
Organized 1911. Lectures and occasional exhibitions.
MacDOWELL SOCIETY OF CINCINNATI
Ernest Bruce Haswell President A. O. Elzner Treasurer
Mary MacMillan, Cor. Sec, 1915 Bigelow St., Mt. Auburn, Cincinnati
Organized 1913. Small exhibitions at each meeting; program consists of
original work by members — music, plays, poetry, etc. (No report 1921.)
MUNICIPAL ART SOCIETY OF CINCINNATI
Care of the Rookwood Pottery Company, Cincinnati
John Dee Wareham President Harry M. Levy Treasurer
Lucien Wulsin, Secretary
Organized 1894. The work of the Society includes the influencing of muni-
cipal art through advice and guidance in the decoration of schools and other
public buildings ; appropriate naming of streets ; proper design and location
of public buildings and monuments.
THREE ARTS CLUB
2334 Ashland Ave., Walnut Hills, Cincinnati
Mrs. Harris Hancock President Mrs. Robert Resar Treasurer
Mrs. a. H. Merrill 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. J. C. Pogue Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. E. M. Galbraith 2d Vice-P.
Mrs. Dawson J. Blackmore, Cor. Sec, Elmhurst Place, East Walnut Hills,
Cincinnati
Organized 1911. The club is for young women students of music, painting,
the drama and kindred arts. It looks after the housing of non-resident students
and accommodates 16 girls at the club house. The house is self-supporting, the
rate for room and board being $6 to $8 a week. Bureau for obtaining engage-
ments for drama, art and music students; investigates boarding houses. Lec-
tures given.
.^WOMAN'S ART CLUB OF CINCINNATI
Emma Mendenhall President Henrietta Wilson. . .Vice-President
Mrs. Grace Cotton Cone, Treas. and Cor. Sec.
194 East McMillan St., Mt. Auburn, Cincinnati
Organized 1892. Exhibitions held.
OHIO 165
CLEVELAND
CITY PLANNING COMMISSION OF CLEVELAND
City Hall, Cleveland
Morris A. Black Vice-President
Organized 1916. Composed of six members of the Board of Control of
Cleveland, ex-officio, and five citizen members. Has prepared comprehensive
thoroughfare, zoning and building group plans.
CLEVELAND ART ASSOCIATION
Cleveland School of Art, Magnolia Drive
Mrs. Harry L. Vail President Dorothy Williams Secretary
Mrs. Stevenson Burke. . ..Vice-Pres. 2010 East 46th St., Cleveland
Imogens T. Fisher Treasurer
Organized 1915. Arts and crafts gallery conducted. Lectures and exhi-
bitions.
CLEVELAND CHAPTER AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
F. R. Walker President A. E. Skeel Secretary
C. W. Hopkinson Vice-President 4500 Euclid Ave., Cleveland
W. W. Sabin Treasurer
Organized 1890.
^CLEVELAND SCHOOL OF ART
11441 Juniper Road, Cleveland
Mrs. Stephenson Burke. . .President Herbert R. Drury Treasurer
J. Homer Wade. . .1st Vice-President Whiting Williams Secretary
C. F. Brush 2d Vice-President Henry Turner Bailey Director
Georgia Leighton Norton, Acting Secretary and Associate Director
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 290.
Gallery open, free, week days 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Monday and Thursday
evenings, 7 to 9; Sundays, 2 to 6 p.m.
Founded 1882 ; building erected 1905. Exhibitions held and lectures given.
(For instruction, see school section.)
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION CLEVELAND SCHOOL OF ART
Juniper Road, Cleveland
C. E. HoRTON, President, 3044 Corydon Road, Euclid Heights, Cleveland
CLEVELAND SOCIETY OF ARTISTS
4216 Prospect Avenue, Cleveland
Louis Rorimer President Charles M. Lines Secretary
W. H. KiNNicuTT Vice-President' 1827 Cadwell Ave., Cleveland
W. L. Oakes Treasurer
Organized 1913. Consists of painters, sculptors, musicians, architects,
writers and connoisseurs. Collection of members' paintings, etchings and
sculpture kept on exhibition and sale. Lectures given by members. Life class
maintained which meets weekly.
PORTRAIT ARTISTS CLUB OF CLEVELAND
746 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland
E. A. McCaleb President M. H. World Treasurer
C. L. Benn Vice-President P. F. Carmody Secretary
1911 West 50th St., Cleveland
Organized 1912. Monthly private exhibitions. Annual exhibitions in July
and December; prizes awarded.
166 OHIO
CLEVELAND
PRINT CLUB
Museum of Art, Cleveland
Charles T. Brooks President R. M. Coe Secretary
Leonard C. Hanna, Jr.. . .Vice-Pres. Care Cleveland City Forge and
S. P. Halle Treasurer Iron Co.
Organized 1920. Members lend prints for exhibition. Many prints given
to the Print Department of the Cleveland Museum.
WOMAN'S ART CLUB OF CLEVELAND
1272 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland
Nina V. Waldeck President Katherine Chandler Treasurer
Mrs. Thomas Robinson. ..Vice-Pres. Mrs. Stella J. Rausch Secretary
9412 Hough Ave., Cleveland
Organized 1912. Permanent club studio and salesroom with continuous
exhibition.
COLUMBUS
ARCHITECTURAL CLUB OF THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
Brown Hall, Ohio State University, Columbus
Galen F. Oman President Mary L. Church Secretary
G. H. BuLFORD, Jr Vice-Pres. Brink Haven, Ohio
Katherine M. Babbitt Treasurer
Organized 1906. Lectures and discussions of matters pertaining to archi-
tecture. Monthly exhibitions of competitive design problems.
COLUMBUS ART ASSOCIATION
492 East Broad Street, Columbus
Mrs. H. B. Arnold President Mrs. Henry C. Werner Treasurer
Mrs. Karl Webber 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. F. Ewing Martin Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. Alfred WiLLS0N..2d Vice-Pres. Mrs. William Warner Cor. -Sec.
The Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts and the Art Association work in co-
operation. They maintain an art school, founded in 1879 (see school section) ;
give a series of lectures in the Knights of Columbus Hall, and hold exhibitions
in the Public (Carnegie) Library.
COLUMBUS ART LEAGUE
198 South Third Street, Columbus
Charles F. Kelley President Mark Russell 2nd Vice-Pres.
Josephine Clippart 1st Vice-Pres. Clara Blesch Sec.-Treas.
Organized 1909 as Art Students' League. Lectures and exhibitions are given.
►^COLUMBUS GALLERY OF FINE ARTS
492 East Broad Street, Columbus
Frederick W. Schumacher Pres. Edwin R. Sharp,
Rutherford H. Platt Secretary Vice-President and Treasurer
Founded 1878. Art school maintained, lecture course and exhibitions. Co-
operates with Columbus Art Association.
COLUMBUS CHAPTER AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Orlando Miller President Charles L, Inscho Sec.-Treas.
1209 Brunson Bldg., Columbus
Organized 1913. Lectures are given.
OHIO 167
COLUMBUS
COLUMBUS PUBLIC LIBRARY
State and Grant Avenues, Columbus
John J. Pugh, Librarian and Secretary
Thomas S. Brooks, Chairman Art Committee
Art exhibit gallery is open free, daily, November to May, from 8.30 a.m.
to 8.30 P.M.; Sundays, 2 to 5 p.m.
Building opened 1907. There is an exhibition room 60 by 40 feet, with con-
tinuous exhibitions frequently changed. Lectures are given about once a week
during special exhibitions and on alternate days after school hours to the
pupils of the schools assembled by grades.
PEN AND PENCIL CLUB
118^ North Third Street, Columbus
George Arthur Whisner. .President Fred L. Collins Sec. -Treasurer
Charles Irwin Brobeck Vice-P. 66 Douglas St., Columbus
Organized 1897 ; incorporated 1904.
Club rooms with meetings every Tuesday evening. Regular sketch classes ;
summer sketching trips ; competitions. Occasional exhibitions.
DAYTON
DAYTON CHAPTER AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Louis Lott Prsident Harry Williams Secretary
George Hermann Vice-President 904 Mutual Home Bldg., Dayton
R. E. Gebhart Treasurer
Organized 1900.
OBERLIN
^POBERLIN ART ASSOCIATION
French Hall, Oberlin College
Clarence Ward President R. H. Stetson Vice-President
Julia G. Severance, Secretary-Treasurer
Organized 1912. Exhibitions and lectures given.
TOLEDO
TOLEDO CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Harry W. Wachter President Bernard Becker Treasurer
Lawrence S. Bellman Vice-Pres. Charles Langdon Secretary
Nicholas Bldg., Toledo
Organized 1914.
ARTKLAN
401 Meredith Building, Jefferson and Michigan Sts., Toledo
Carlos Ebert President Frank Sottek Sec-Treasurer
H.J. Schuler Vice-President E. W Spring. ...Recording-Secretary
Organized 1913. The Society was founded by commercial artists engaged
in the photo-engraving houses of Toledo. Three meetings a week; etching and
printing; costume pose; life class; Saturday afternoon and Sunday sketching
class, out-of-doors in season. Monthly exhibitions except in summer.
ATHENA SOCIETY
Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo
Louise Kitchen President Flora Carpenter Treasurer
Elizabeth Caine, Secretary, Maplewood Ave., Toledo
Organized 1903. Lectures and exhibitions of the work of members are held
in the Club rooms at the Museum. (No report 1921.)
168 OHIO— OKLAHOMA— OREGON
TOLEDO
TOLEDO FEDERATION OF ART SOCIETIES
Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo
Mrs. Kate B. Lamb President George B. Colton Vice-President
Frank Sottek, Secretary-Treasurer
Organized, 1917, to encourage local art in Toledo. The Federation consists
of the Artklan, Athena Society and the Toledo Tile Club. Holds annual exhi-
bition at the Toledo Museum.
TOLEDO TILE CLUB
Bank of Commerce Building, Toledo
R. B. Crane President A. B. Tillinghast Sec-Treasurer
Organized 1898. Drawing from life every Tuesday evening from October
to May.
OKLAHOMA
ENID FINE ARTS CLUB
Mrs. R. a. Griffith President Mrs. D. E. Johnstone Treasurer
Mrs. H. C. Simons Vice-Pres. Mrs. R. L. Sanford Secretary
Organized 1911. Exhibitions are held.
MUSKOGEE
^.MUSKOGEE ART ASSOCIATION
Mrs. W. M. Brison President Mrs. Otis Cureton Treasurer
Mrs. J. G. Allen Vice-President Mrs. C. K. Catlin Secretary
921 Freemont Ave., Muskogee
Organized 1910.
NORMAN
•i-LES BEAUX ARTS
University of Oklahoma, Norman
Oscar B. Jacobson President Edith Mahier Secretary
Estelle Manon Vice-President
Organized 1915. Holds annual exhibition.
OKLAHOMA CITY
ASSOCIATION OF OKLAHOMA ARTISTS
Oscar B. Jacobson President Mrs. J. W. Shartel Treasurer
Mrs. E. J. MoLLER. .. .Vice-President Frederick Becker Secretary
511 East 7th St., Oklahoma City
4-OKLAHOMA ART LEAGUE
Carnegie Library, Oklahoma City
Mrs. John Shartel President Mrs. Charles Hoops Treasurer
Mrs. Byron D. Shear, Cor.-Sec.
Organized 1910. The permanent collection consists of 11 pictures. (No
report 1921.)
OREGON
OREGON CHAPTER AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
619 Railway Exchange Building, Portland
W. G. PuRCELL President O. R. Bean Treasurer
J. V. Bennes Vice-President George M. Post Secretary
Organized 1911. Prize of $25 annually to the Architectural School of the
University of Oregon at Eugene.
OREGON— PENNSYLVANIA 169
PORTLAND
ARTS AND CRAFTS SOCIETY OF PORTLAND
618 Irving Street, Portland
Mrs. Lee Hoffman President Mrs. M. A. M. Ashley. . . .Treasurer
Mks. C. H. Carey Vice-Pres. M. L. Linthicum Secretary
634 Lovejoy St., Portland
Organized 1907. A permanent salesroom is maintained. Three scholarships
given in classes of Portland Art Association ; prizes awarded in design classes.
Exhibitions held.
LIBRARY ASSOCIATION
Tenth and Yamhill Streets, Portland
Eleanor Statter^ Head of Art Library
Has 2,300 volumes dealing exclusively w^ith art. The picture collection con-
tains 5,500 mounted plates and 30,000 unmounted pictures. Exhibitions are
held.
PENNSYLVANIA
DELAWARE COUNTY ART AND MANUAL TRAINING
ASSOCIATES
Florence M. Clegg President Helen E. Taylor Sec. -Treasurer
Edward W. Frost Vice-President Lansdowne
Organized 1914. Local exhibits at close of term in all districts and large one
at County Institute at Media in November. (No report 1921.)
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA
Harrisburg
C. Valentine Kirby, State Director of Art
For activities of Division see Vol. XI, p. 303.
STATE FEDERATION OF PENNSYLVANIA WOAIEN
Mrs. a. Duncan Yocum, Chairman Art Committee
Ridley Park, Pa.
Movement to establish an art commission for Pennsylvania ; for city plan-
ning, and for suitable war memorials.
CHESTER
ALFRED O. DESHONG MEMORIAL ART GALLERY
11th and Edgemont Avenue, Chester
Trustees
Clarence Deshong W. B. Broomall J. A. G. Campbell
For foundation see Vol. XI, p. 302.
Open free on Wednesdays and Saturdays, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m., and 7 p.m. to
9 P.M.; Sundays and holidays, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Dedicated 1916. The collection consists of the donor's painting and other
works of art, including vases, bijoutry and bric-a-brac. The building connects
with his dwelling, and the whole is devoted to the education, entertainment
and recreation of the public.
170 PENNSYLVANIA
DOYLESTOWN
BUCKS COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY
Doylestown
Henry C. Mercer President H. C. Mercer Curator
Warren S. Ely Librarian H. M. Mann Assistant Curator
Henry D. Paxson Vice-President B. F. Frackenthal. ..Sec-Treasurer
Organized 1880 ; incorporated 1885.
Large concrete building, costing approximately $100,000, presented to the
Society by Dr. Mercer in 1916. The Society owns a large collection of stove-
plates, fire-backs, pottery and other industries of colonial times.
ERIE
.^ART CLUB OF ERIE
Mrs. Louisa Card Catlin. . President Sarah Woodruff Treasurer
Mrs. W. L. Speece, Secretary, Box 328, Erie
' Organized 1898; incorporated 1900. The Public Library contains a gallery,
and a good start has been made for a permanent collection. (No report 1921.)
MEADVILLE
►I^MEADVILLE ART ASSOCIATION
Mrs. F. C. Southworth. . .President C. B. Coleman ... .2d Vice-President
Mrs. E. C. Whiting. . .1st Vice-Pres. T. J. Meek Secretary-Treasurer
650 Arch St., Meadville
Organized 1907 ; incorporated 1909. Exhibitions are held.
PHILADELPHIA
►^ALUMN^ OF THE PHILADELPHIA SCHOOL OF DESIGN
FOR WOMEN
Broad and Master Streets, Philadelphia
Florence D. Bradway President Florence Miller Treasurer
Arrah Lee Gaul Vice-President Clara V. Richardson Treasurer
Organized 1886. Annual reunion and exhibition.
^ART CLUB OF PHILADELPHIA
220 South Broad Street, Philadelphia
William B. Linn President William de Krafft Treasurer
Samuel W. Cooper, Secretary
Organized 1887. Club house with restaurant and galleries maintained. In-
come from Prize Fund devoted to medals awarded at special exhibition. Art
Fund used for purchase of works for permanent collection. Library contains
over 7,000 volumes. Exhibitions are held.
ART JURY
Room 121, City Hall, Philadelphia
Joseph E. Widener President John Wanamaker. . .Vice-President
Andrew Wright Crawford, Secretary
For details sec Vol. XI, p. 305, and Vol. XVII, p. 206.
Created by act of legislature 1907, amended 1913, and consists of nine mem-
bers.
PENNSYLVANIA 171
PHILADELPHIA
.^ARTS AND CRAFTS GUILD OF PHILADELPHIA
235-237 South 11th Street, Philadelphia
Gilbert McIlvaine President Martha K. Schick Treasurer
HuGER Elliott 1st Vice-Pres. Margaret A. Neal Secretary
Elma H. Schick 2d Vice-Pres. Huger Elliott .... Chairman of Jury
Organized 1905; incorporated 1911. Permanent exhibition in the salesrooms,
augmented by special exhibitions.
ASSOCIATED ARTISTS OF PHILADELPHIA
1630 Sansom Street, Philadelphia
W. A. Fox President J. B. Mackenzie Sec. -Treasurer
Organized 1914.
►I<CITY PARKS ASSOCIATION
Eli Kirk Price President John Cadwalader, Jr Treasurer
Andrew Wright Crawford, Recording Secretary
701 Stephen Girard Building, Philadelphia
Organized 1888.
DREXEL INSTITUTE OF ART, SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY
Chestnut and Thirty-second Streets, Philadelphia
MUSEUM
Open, free, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily, except Sunday and holidays.
The collections of the Museum include examples in every department of
industrial art. The decorative arts of Egypt, India, China, Japan, and Europe
are well represented. Special gifts include the collection of Egyptian antiqui-
ties, hand-printed cottons of India, European textiles, carved ivories, Sevres
white and gold ware, and others.
PICTURE GALLERY
The Picture Gallery, in East Hall, is open, free, to the public, as well as to
the students of the Institute, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. It contains the John D.
Lankenau collection and the Anthony J. Drexel collection of paintings.
LIBRARY
The Library contains 2,000 volumes on the fine and decorative arts ; about
2,000 mounted photographs; series of etchings of ancient Paris; photographs
of old London ; Japanese water color prints ; about 3,000 lantern slides.
.^FAIRMOUNT PARK ART ASSOCIATION
320 South Broad Street, Philadelphia
Charles J. Cohen President W. Hinckle Smith Treasurer
Roland L. Taylor, Secretary, Morris Building, Philadelphia
For works of art presented see Vol. Ill, p. 172, mid Vol. XI, p. 307.
Organized 1871; incorporated 1872; charter amended 1906; Park Branch
established 1871 ; City Branch established
FREE LIBRARY OF PHILADELPHIA
Thirteenth and Locust Streets, Philadelphia
John Ashhurst, Librarian
Open daily from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m., excepting Sundays and legal holidays.
Art Department organized 1899. Has a miscellaneous collection of 30,000
volumes, about one-half being works on art, architecture, decoration and allied
subjects.
172 PENNSYLVANIA
PHILADELPHIA
HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF PENNSYLVANIA
1300 Locust Street, Philadelphia
Hampton L. Carson President Ernest Spofford — Acting Librarian
Francis H. Williams Treasurer R. Sturgis Ingersoll Rec.-Sec.
Gregory B. Keen Curator John Bach McMaster Cor.-Sec.
For list of portraits see Vol. XI, p. 309.
Organized 1824. Open, free, daily 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Permanent collection of
portraits; valuable collection of books, autograph letters, etc.
NUMISMATIC AND ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY OF PHILADELPHIA
1300 Locust Street, Philadelphia
David Milne President Ernest Spofford Rec. -Secretary
John F. Lewis 1st Vice-President Webster King Wetherill Treas.
Organized 1857.
►^FELLOWSHIP OF THE PENNSYLVANIA
ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS
Broad and Cherry Streets, Philadelphia
Mary Butler President Frank Reed Whiteside. . ..Treasurer
H. H. Brecf.enridge. . . 1st Vice-Pres. Elinor Earle Secretary
Blanche Dillaye 2d Vice-Pres. S. Gertrude Schell Asst. Sec.
Organized 1897. A picture purchase fund, established in 1912, enables The
Fellowship to place pictures in the public schools and libraries of Philadelphia.
Exhibitions in public and private schools ; lectures given,
ASSOCIATE COMMITTEE OF WOMEN TO THE BOARD OF
TRUSTEES OF THE PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUM
AND SCHOOL OF INDUSTRIAL ART
320 South Broad Street, Philadelphia
Mrs. Rudolph Blankenburg. .Pres. Countess of Santa Eulalia
Treasurer
Mrs. Henry S. Grove, Secretary, 258 Tulpehocken St., Germantown
Organized 1883. Maintains Students' League House at 1309 South Broad
Street for resident students ; awards scholarships and prizes in Industrial
Art School.
►^ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUM
AND SCHOOL OF INDUSTRIAL ART
320 South Broad Street, Philadelphia
Charles T. Scott President Miss O. P. Bachman Treasurer
John Ray Sinnock, Secretary, 6241 Webster Street, Philadelphia
Founded 1902. Traveling exhibitions of school work arranged. Library ;
Saturday afternoon sketch class; large collection of costumes. Collection of
photographs, furniture, pottery and bronze. Employment bureau and loan
fund maintained.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE PHILADELPHIA
TEXTILE SCHOOL OF THE PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUM
AND SCHOOL OF INDUSTRIAL ART
Bradley C. Algeo President Willis Fleisher Treasurer
William J. Maurer, Secretary, 320 South Broad Street, Philadelphia
Organized 1902. Occasional technical publications. Students' loan fund
maintained. Lectures are held throughout the year.
PENNSYLVANIA 173
PHILADELPHIA
>^PENNSYLVANIA SOCIETY OF MINIATURE PAINTERS
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Broad and Cherry Streets.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Mrs. Emily Drayton Taylor. .Pres. Mrs. Rebecca B. Peale Patterson,
Harry L. Johnson Vice-Pres. Treasurer
A Margaretta Archambault, Secretary
1710 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia
Mrs. Berta Carew, Chairman Executive Committee
Organized 1901. Annual exhibitions held at the Pennsylvania Academy of
Fine Arts,
^^PHILADELPHIA ART ALLIANCE
Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia
John F. Braun President H. G. Lloyd Treasurer
HuGER Eijliott 1st Vicc-Pres. Clara R. Mason Executive Sec.
E. J. Lavino 2nd Vice-Pres. 1823 Walnut St., Philadelphia
Organized 1915.
Owns building with exhibition rooms, studios and restaurant. Numerous
lectures, exhibitions and receptions.
^-PHILADELPHIA CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
George I. Lovatt President W. P. Barney Treasurer
E. H. Fetterolf 1st Vice-Pres. Paul A. Davis, III Secretary
H. B. Register 2nd Vice-Pres. 1713 Sansom St., Philadelphia
Founded 1869; incorporated 1872.
PHILADELPHIA FOUNTAIN SOCIETY
1508 Walnut Street, Philadelphia
Charles J. Cohen President J. M. Sleeve Treasurer
John Story Jenks 1st Vice-Pres. C. W. Bailey Secretary
Henry Tatnall 2nd Vice-Pres. 1508 Walnut St., Philadelphia
Organized 1920.
^-PHILADELPHIA SKETCH CLUB
235 South Camac Street, Philadelphia
Herbert Pullinger President F. R. Whiteside Treasurer
Frank F. English Vice-Pres. Sidney C. Lomas Secretary
Organized 1860. Numerous exhibitions.
PHILADELPHIA SOCIETY OF ARTS AND LETTERS
Howard S. Anders President W. W. Thomson Treasurer
Henry T. Spangler. . .1st Vice-Pres. Henry C. Diller Secretary
Ida Mae Pecht 2nd Vice-Pres. 409 West Stafford St., German-
town, Philadelphia
Organized 1907. The object of the Society is to encourage original work
in arts and letters by affording opportunities for performance, exhibition c\
criticism at public meetings of the Society.
174 PENNSYLVANIA
PHILADELPHIA
.^PHILADELPHIA WATER COLOR CLUB
George Walter Dawson . . President Thornton Oakley Secretary
Blanche Dillaye Vice-Pres. 905 Clinton Street, Philadelphia
J. Frank Copeland Treasurer
Organized 1900. The annual exhibition is held in November and December
at the Pennsylvania Academy (see Academy exhibitions).
Prizes offered are the Beck prize of $100, and the Philadelphia Water Color
Club prize of $200. A traveling exhibition is maintained of the work of
members, which is managed by the Club or by the American Federation of
Arts. The Club is affiliated with the Philadelphia Art Alliance.
•^PLASTIC CLUB .
247 South Camac Street, Philadelphia
Mrs. S. Stauffer Oliver. .President Clara V. M. Richardson. .Rec. Sec.
Mrs. Alice B. Stephens. 1st V.-Pres. Emma J. Lawrence Cor, Sec.
Althea J. Carnell Treasurer 1954 Bridge St., Frankfort, Phila.
Organized 1897; incorporated 1903. A woman's club with tea room; rooms
rented to other organizations. Exhibitions are held.
.^PRINT CLUB
219 S. 17th Street, Philadelphia
Mrs. J. Y. Brinton President Mrs. Gideon Boericke. .. .Treasurer
Mrs. Robert von Moschzisker Mrs. W. B. Linn Secretary
1st Vice-Pres. Clara T. Chase. .. .Exec. -Secretary
Mrs. John S. Newbold. .2nd V.-Pres.
Organized 1914, by Mrs. Alice McF. Brinton for purpose of making acces-
sible the work of the most distinguished living American etchers and engravers.
Entertainments, lectures and demonstrations of practical work given. Library
of art, literature and periodicals maintained.
*hT SQUARE CLUB
204 South Quince Street, Philadelphia
Nicola D'Ascenzo President Ellery K. Taylor Secretary
H. L. Duhring, Jr Vice-Pres. John Craig Janney. .. .Acting Sec.
W. J. H. Hough Treasurer 412 Otis Bldg., Philadelphia
Organized 1880; incorporated 1897. Atelier maintained in co-operation with
the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design. Occasional exhibitions.
wilstach gallery
Memorial Hall, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia
Joseph E. Widener Chairman Langdon Warner Director
Committee on Wilstach Bequest
For further data sec Vol. XVII, p. 212.
Open, free, daily; Sundays, 1 to 6 p.m.; Mondays, 12 m. to 5 p.m.; during
the winter it closes one-half hour before sunset. Gallery opened 1893.
PITTSBURGH
ART COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF PITTSBURGH
John W. Beatty President John T. Comes Architect
Art Director, Carnegie Inst. W. L. Mellon
C. D. Armstrong Vice-President N. F. Brown
Benno Janssen Secretary Herman A. MacNeil Sculptor
E. V. Babcock William Boyd Architect
PENNSYLVANIA 175
PITTSBURGH
Pittsburgh Art Commission — Contitiucd
George M. P. Baird, Executive Secretary
522 City-County Building, Pittsburgh
Organized 1911. Appointed by the Mayor, who with the Director of Public
Works is ex-officio member. Passes upon works of art for the city, furnishes
illustrated lectures for schools and civic organizations, etc.
^ART SOCIETY OF PITTSBURGH
313 Sixth Avenue, Pittsburgh
P. G. Eaton President F. M. Wilmot Treasurer
C. E. Dickson Vice-President Walter Boswell Secretary
Mrs. George H. Wilson, Manager
Organized 1873.
Exhibitions ; concerts and lectures are held in the galleries of Carnegie
Institute and are free to the public. The Society is represented on the Art
Commission of Pittsburgh.
ASSOCIATED ARTISTS OF PITTSBURGH
714 Penn Building, Pittsburgh
James Bonar President G. Hennis 2nd Vice-Pres.
Will J. Hyett 1st Vice-Pres. Alexander H. Lappe Sec.-Treas.
Organized 1910. Exhibitions are held at Carnegie Institute (see Institute
list).
^BEAUX ARTS SALON
John L. Porter Vice-President Mrs. Roy A. Hunt Sec.-Treas.
5050 Amberson Place, Pittsburgh
Organized 1915.
ONE HUNDRED FRIENDS OF PITTSBURGH ART
J. D. Hailman Chairman John L. Porter Sec.-Treas.
Edward Duff Balken. . . . Vice-Chm. 421 Wood St., Pittsburgh
Organized 1916. Encourages local art by the purchase of paintings by local
artists, which are presented to the public schools.
PITTSBURGH ARCHITECTURAL CLUB
P. O. Box 816, Pittsburgh
W. H. King, Jr President W. H. Harrold Treasurer
L. A. McMuLLEN Vice-Pres. David Roland Secretary
Organized 1897; incorporated 1901. Publish 8-page monthly periodical, "The
Charette."
PITTSBURGH CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
536 City-County Bldg., Pittsburgh
S. F. Heckert, Sr President Louis Stevens Treasurer
J. T. Comes Vice-Pres. Stanley L. Roush Secretary
Organized 1891 as the Western Pennsylvania Chapter of the American
Institute of Architects, name changed 1896.
Gives yearly scholarship for student of architecture at night school of
Carnegie Institute of Technology.
176 PENNSYLVANIA— RHODE ISLAND
PITTSBURGH
TEACHERS' ART CLUB
Fulton Building, Pittsburgh
Ella Hazelwood President Grace Jones Treasurer
Elmer Stephan 1st Vice-Pres. Marrian Parker Secretary
Frances McCreery 2nd V.-Pres. 153 South Fairmont St., Pittsburgh
Organized 1902. Federated. Pennsylvania Federation of Women's Clubs,
1904; also federated with the Civic Club. The purpose of the Club is to pro-
mote the interests of the arts taught in the public schools. Lectures given.
WILLIAMSPORT
JAMES V. BROWN LIBRARY
Williamsport
O. R. Howard Thomson, Librarian and Director
Rev. Charles N. Tyndell, Chairman Art Committee
Founded 1904. Permanent collection includes canvases by Kensett, Cropsey,
Brownscombe, Craig, J. G. Brown ("Stump Speech"), Leon Moran and
Shirlaw.
^PUBLIC SCHOOL ART LEAGUE
Rena Frankeberger President Lulu M. Yount Secretary
Roland T. MacLaren Vice-Pres. 937 High Street, Williamsport
Genevieve L. Bubb Treasurer
Organized 1918. Lectures and demonstrations.
YORK
YORK ART CLUB
Cassatt Building, Centre Square, York
Reinhardt Dempwolf President Albert Boshart Vice-Pres.
Mary Leifer, Secretary-Treasurer
Founded 1905. Classes meet two evenings each week.
RHODE ISLAND
RHODE ISLAND ASSOCIATION OF TEACHERS OF DRAWING
AND MANUAL ARTS
Antonio Cirino President Alice Collins Sec.-Treas.
Marie Stillman Vice-Pres. Supervisor of Drawing, Cumber-
land
For further information see Vol. XVII, p. 214.
Organized 1908. Lectures are held and exhibitions given.
.^RHODE ISLAND CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
F. Ellis Jackson President Gorham Henshaw Treasurer
JoHN^ H. Cady Vice-Pres. Norman M. Isham Secretary
915 Turk's Head Bldg., Providence
Organized 1875.
NEWPORT
^ART association of NEWPORT
76 Bellevue Avenue, Newport
Harrison S. Morris President Walter C. Cabell Treasurer
Edwin Wiley Vice-Pres. Mrs. Maud Howe Elliott Sec'y
Rhode Island Ave., Newport
Organized 1912; incorporated 1913. The school has classes in winter (see
school reports). Lectures and informal talks are given throughout the winter.
Numerous exhibitions.
RHODE ISLAND 177
NEWPORT
REDWOOD LIBRARY AND ATHEN.^UM
Newport
George L. Hinckley, Librarian
For foundation see Art Annual, Vol. I, p. 319.
Founded 1747. Open, daily, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., except Sundays and holidays.
Collection of books, pictures, statues. Paintings by Charles B. King and
belonging to him, numbering 212, were bequeathed to the institution in 1862.
There are also portraits by Sully, Stuart and other early American painters.
Exhibitions are held.
PROVIDENCE
HANDICRAFT CLUB
227 Benefit Street, Providence
Mrs. T. Harris Shipman. .President Mrs. John A. Cross Treasurer
Mrs. H. H. Goss 1st Vice-Pres. Elizabeth T. Brown Secretary
Mrs. C. p. Knight.. 2nd Vice-Pres. 91 Keene St., Providence
Organized 1905. The Club occupies an old Colonial homestead set in an old
garden. Some of the upper rooms are used as work-shops by the craftsmen
members. Meetings, sales, talks, teas and exhibitions.
.^PROVIDENCE ART CLUB
11 Thomas Street, Providence
Sydney R. Burleigh President James A. Kinghorn Treasurer
George F. Hall Vice-President George L, Cooke Secretary
Club house open daily, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday and Saturday evenings.
Incorporated 1880. Saturday evening life classes held. Exhibitions are held.
PROVIDENCE WATER COLOR CLUB
Percy F. Albee President Stowell B. Sherman Treasurer
W. H. Drury Vice-Pres. Stacy Tolman Secretary
7 Thomas St., Providence
Organized 1896. Exhibitions are held.
PROVIDENCE ATHEN^UM
Benefit and College Streets, Providence
William L. Hodgman President Edward A. Stockwell Treasurer
G. Alder Blumer 1st Vice-Pres. Henry A. DuVillard Secretary
Mrs. Daniel Beck with, 2nd V.-Pres. Grace F. Leonard Librarian
For further data see Vol. XV, p. 224.
Open daily, except Sundays and legal holidays, from July 1 to Labor Day,
8.30 A.M. to 6.30 P.M. ; balance of the year. 8.30 to 9 p.m.
The Providence Library, established 1753, and the Providence Athenaeum,
established 1831, were united and chartered in 1836. The building was opened
in 1838.
The Athenaeum owns a few valuable portraits and miniatures, its chief
treasure being "The Hours," by Edward Malbone (fully described in Vol I
p. 370.)
RHODE ISLAND SCHOOL OF DESIGN ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
11 Waterman Street, Providence
W. E. Brigham President Molly Nye Gamonons Treasurer
Hugo O, E. Carlborg Vice-Pres. Alice Collins Secretary
Traveling scholarships are given to graduates of the Rhode Island School of
Design.
178 SOUTH CAROLINA—SOUTH DAKOTA— TENNESSEE
SOUTH CAROLINA
SOUTH CAROLINA CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Nat Gaillard Walker President H. Olin Jones Sec.-Treas.
J. Herbert Johnson Vice-Pres. Greenville
CHARLESTON
.^CAROLINA ART ASSOCIATION
Meeting Street, Charleston
John F. Ficken President W.C.Miller Treasurer
Thomas BELLA Torre. .1st Vice-Pres. T. R. Waring Secretary
Open week days, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sundays, 4 to 7 p.m. Permanent and
special exhibitions of paintings. Sketch club.
Incorporated 1858; building erected 1904. Annual meeting in March; quar-
terly meetings in June, September and December.
CAROLINA ARTS AND CRAFTS
Gibbes Art Building, Charleston
Mrs. F. M. La Bruce President Jean A. Robinson Vice-President
Bessie P. Ravenel, Secretary-Treasurer
Occasional exhibitions are held. (No report 1921.)
COLUMBIA
^COLUMBIA ART ASSOCIATION
803 Sumter Street, Columbia
T. I. Weston President Harold Tatum Sec.-Treas.
Mrs. J. H. Fowles Vice-Pres.
Organized 1916. Exhibitions are held.
SOUTH DAKOTA
SIOUX FALLS
4-SIOUX FALLS ART SOCIETY
Mary Hollister President Mary Perkins Secretary
1607 South Summit Avenue,
Sioux Falls
Organized 1914. (No report 1921.)
TENNESSEE
TENNESSEE CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Henry C. HiBBS President J, W. Holm an Sec.-Treas.
B. F. McAluRRY Vice-Pres. 701 Stahlman Bldg., Nashville
Organized 1919.
MEMPHIS
JUNIOR ART ASSOCIATION OF THE MEMPHIS ART
ASSOCIATION
707 Adams Ave., Memphis
Florence M. McIntyre, Chairman
The purpose of the Association is to encourage the love and study of art,
to encourage and visit the art gallery, and study special exhibits planned for
this work.
TENNESSEE 179
MEMPHIS
•^MEMPHIS ART ASSOCIATION
Mrs. Daniel Grant President Mrs. Philip Williams Treasurer
Mrs. Milton Hunt... 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. F. O. Gamble Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. Henry Haley. .2nd Vice-Pres. Florence McIntyre Secretary
707 Adams Ave., Memphis
Organized 1914; lectures given.
NASHVILLE
ART COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF NASHVILLE
Mrs. James C. Bradford. .Chairman Mrs. Robert Nichol Secretary
George W. Hale 1910 Ridley Ave., Nashville
E. H. Thompson
Organized 1918 by Act of Legislature. The Art Commission has charge
of all art matters pertaining to the city; holds exhibitions and gives courses of
lectures and recitals.
CENTENNIAL CLUB
128 Eighth Avenue, South Nashville
Mrs. Frank W. Ring, Chairman Art Committee
Organized 1909. This is a Women's Department Club with a Committee
on Art.
EAST NASHVILLE WOMAN'S CLUB
ART DEPA'RTMENT
Carnegie Library, Each Branch, Nashville
Mrs. Ida C. Noble, Chairman
Exhibitions and lectures are given. Conducts art study classes.
4-NASHVILLE art ASSOCIATION
Art Gallery, Carnegie Public Library, Nashville
Mrs. James C. Bradford. .President Mrs. R. O. Tucker Treasurer
W. R. Cole 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. R. W. Nichol Secretary
Mrs. J. E. Caldwell .. 2nd Vice-Pres. 1910 Ridley Ave., Nashville
Chartered 1910. Invested funds, $10,000. Permanent collection of paintings
and sculpture in gallery of Carnegie Library.
Monthly exhibitions, some with paid admission and others free ; in winter
at Carnegie Library and in summer at the Parthenon.
NASHVILLE CLUB OF DESIGNERS
Boscobel Street, East Nashville
Mrs. L. W. Hussey President Miss Will Petway Treasurer
Mrs. W. H. Sory Vice-Pres. Mrs. W. H. Perry Secretary
Members do original work, and hold sales exhibitions at Christmas, Easter
and at the Tennessee State Fair.
TENNESSEE STATE FAIR
►fiART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. Robert W. Nichol, Director
1910 Ridley Ave., Nashville, Tenn.
Annual exhibition of art at the Tennessee State Fair; prizes awarded. A
children's art department has also been formed.
180 TENNESSEE— TEXAS
NASHVILLE
TENNESSEE FEDERATION OF WOMEN'S CLUBS
,^ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. George A. Washington, Chairman
"Washington Hall," Cedar Hill
Has organized art department in every federated club and department of
school art in every county in Tennessee. Exhibitions are held.
PARK COMMISSION
R. M. Dudley Chairman R. T. Creighton
M. T. Bryan Vice-Chairman J. J. Loventhal
J. S. Lewis Secretary W. R. Cole
C. P. Connell Superintendent
Organized 1901. The Commission appropriates $2,500 each year _ for art
purposes. Gives concerts and moving pictures; encourages community sing-
ing and folk dancing in the play grounds.
TEXAS
TEXAS CHAPTER AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
D. F. CoBURN President A. C. Finn Treasurer
H. M. Green Vice-Pres. Roy E. Lane Secretary
Waco
Organized 1913.
AUSTIN
AUSTIN ART LEAGUE
Mrs. Charles Gardner President Mrs. J. S. Moss Sec.-Treas.
Miss E. L. Bascom Vice-Pres. 511 West 32nd St., Austin
Founded 1909. The beginning of a public collection is hung in the Uni-
versity of Texas Library.
DALLAS
^-DALLAS ART ASSOCIATION
Art Gallery, Fair Park, Dallas, Texas
Mrs.jGeorge K. Meyer. .. .President Ruth de Capree Secretary
Mrs. R. B. Stickler Treasurer 1010 South Akard Street, Dallas
Mrs. Osce Goodwin Cor.-Sec.
Gallery open, free, Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays, 2 to 5 p.m. Perma-
nent collection of 49 pictures by contemporary American painters.
Four exhibitions are held each year. Junior League organized ; monthly
lectures in the gallery. (No report 1921.)
DALLAS WOMAN'S FORUM
806 South Akard Street, Dallas
ART DEPARTMENT
Mrs. Y. B. Dowell President Marguerite Middlebrook. .. Secretary
Mrs. J. E. Lenington Vice-Pres. Mrs. George Coon Asst. Sec.
Vivian L. Anspaugh, Leader
Organized 1908. In 1920 received the E. C. Frank Memorial Collection of
paintings and art objects. Exhibitions held.
FORT WORTH
PAINTERS' CLUB
S. P. Zeigler President Mrs. Harry Mummert Secretary
1308 South Adams St., Ft. Worth
TEXAS— UTAH 181
GALVESTON
^GALVESTON ART LEAGUE
A. T. Webster President Mrs. F. T. Rennie Treasurer
Mrs. R. L. Tschumy, Secretary, 923 Sixth Street, Galveston
Organized 1914. (No report 1921.)
HOUSTON
4-HOUSTON ART LEAGUE
3015 Main Street, Houston
Mrs. H. B. Fall President Mrs. Luke C. Bradley. . .Treasurer
Mrs. a. C. Ford 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. J. W. Lockett Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. a. L. Cleveland, 2nd V.-Pres. Mrs. O. L. Norsworthy. . . .Cor-Sec.
Organized 1900. Invested fund, $15.0CO. Junior Art League formed among
school children ; story hour and library in Home for Young Children ; free art
lectures. Land given by citizens for site for new Museum.
SAN ANTONIO
.^SAN ANTONIO ART LEAGUE
Carnegie Library, San Antonio
Mrs. H. p. Drought President Mrs. A. H. Worden Treasurer
Mrs. E. C. Branch.. 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs. James B. Cunningham. . .Sec.
Mrs. a. Wagner 2nd Vice-Pres. 1836 N. Flores St., San Antonio
Organized 1913. Exhibitions held.
WACO
WACO ART LEAGUE
Kate Edmond President Mrs. W. T. Abernathv .. .Treasurer
Mrs. I. A. Goldstein Vice-Pres. Mrs. A. J. Hall Secretary
Mrs. H. C. Lindsey, Corresponding-Secretary, 1301 Columbus Street, Waco
Organized 1900. Lectures given and occasional exhibitions held.
UTAH
PROVO
ART SERVICE CLUB
Brigham Young University, Provo
Arch C. West President Mary Harris Treasurer
Maurice Olson Vice-President La Vern Page Secretary
Organized for the benefit of students having special talent in any particular
phase of fine and applied art. Exhibitions and lectures given.
SALT LAKE CITY
ASSOCIATED CRAFTSMEN
322 University Avenue, Salt Lake City
Mabel Frazer President F. J. Russon Treasurer
E. W. Gesswein, Secretary
FINE ARTS SOCIETY OF UTAH
Evelyn D. Mayer President Mrs. Ernest Bumberger. ..Treasurer
F. C. Richmond Vice-President Mrs. Solomon Siegei Secretary
The Bransford, Salt' Lake City
Organized 1920. , i
182 UTAH— VIRGINIA
SALT LAKE CITY
INDUSTRIAL ARTS CLUB
Sara Young President Olivia Waters Secretary
Organized 1919. Lectures are given.
UTAH ART INSTITUTE
State Capitol, Salt Lake City
J, Leo Fairbanks President Taylor Woolley Vice-President
W. M. McCoNAHY, Secretary
For details see Vol XI, p. 341.
Created, 1899, by Act of Legislature. This was the first State Art Society.
It provides for the following: An art collection, known as the Alice Art
Collection ; an animal art exhibition of both the fine arts and the applied arts.
No exhibition held since 1916.
UTAH CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Leslie Hodgson President Taylor Woolley See. -Treasurer
Burton E. Morse Vice-President 715 Mclntyre Bldg., Salt Lake City
Organized 1910 as the Utah Association of Architects.
UTAH EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION
ART SECTION
O. D. Campbell President Mary Barton Secretary-Treasurer
675 East 2d South, Provo R. F. D. 1, Box 11, Logan
Lectures given. Circulate exhibition of public school art as aid in raising
the standards of art teaching in Utah.
CIVIC PLANNING COMMISSION
Room 103, City and County Building, Salt Lake City
C. Clarence Neslin Chairman J. Leo Fairbanks Secretary and
R. Kletting Vice-Chairman Chairman Art and Civic Center,
1228 Bryan Ave., Salt Lake City
Organized 1913. The commission is composed of seven members.
VIRGINIA
ART COMMISSION OF VIRGINIA
The Capitol, Richmond
FiSKE Kimball, Chairman, University of Virginia, Charlottesville
Westmoreland Davis, Governor of Virginia, Chairman ex-officio
E. V. Valentine Sculptor W. C. Taylor Architect
D. J. O'Connell, Bishop of Richmond
Established 1916, by Act of Assembly. Passes upon all works of art pur-
chased by or presented to the State.
VIRGINIA CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
FiSKE Kimball President Charles J. Calrow. . . Sec. -Treasurer
New Monroe Bldg., Norfolk
Organized 1914.
VIRGINIA— WASHINGTON 183
LYNCHBURG
.^WOMAN'S CLUB
ART CIRCLE
Georgia Morgan, Chairman, 700 Church Street, Lynchburg
Organized 1903. Lectures given. Occasional exhibitions. (No report 1921.)
NORFOLK
►^NORFOLK SOCIETY OF ARTS
Mowbray Arch and Fairfax Avenues, Norfolk
Mrs. Junius R. Wilcox. ...President Mrs. Max Pincus Treasurer
Mrs. William Sloane Vice-Pres. Mrs. Finlay F. Ferguson. .Cor.-Sec.
Westover Ave., Norfolk
Organized 1905. Lectures each week. Exhibitions are held.
RICHMOND
^VIRGINIA LEAGUE OF FINE ARTS AND HANDICRAFTS
519 East Franklin Street, Richmond
Adele Clark Director Helen L. Lorraine Treasurer
Nora Houston Assistant-Director Charles F. Gillette. .Rec.-Secretary
Helen Stockdell, Corresponding-Secretary
Organized 1919. Lectures given. Classes held (see school section). Exhi-
bitions are held.
WASHINGTON
WASHINGTON STATE CHAPTER
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Charles H. Alden President Carl Siebrand Treasurer
David J. Meyers 1st Vice-l'res. Harold O. Sexsmith Secretary
A.J.Russell 2d Vice-President Dept. of Architecture, University
of Washington, Seattle
Organized 1894. Exhibitions are held.
SEATTLE
SEATTLE ART CLUB
Hoge Building Annex, Seattle
Arthur Lingenbrink, Chairman Board of Directors
Organized 1917 as the Seattle Art Students' League. Exhibitions are held.
►^SEATTLE FINE ARTS SOCIETY
1213 Fourth Avenue, Seattle
Mrs. R. H. Parsons President H. O. Grondahl Treasurer
Charles H. Alden 1st Vice-Pres. Mrs'. Irene Ewing Davis. . .Secretary
Mrs. F. H. Parks 2d Vice-Pres. 25 West Roy St., Seattle
Organized 1907. Co-operates with the Art Department of the public schools
and all educational institutions, so that pupils visit all exhibitions. Lectures
and exhibitions given.
SEATTLE PUBLIC LIBRARY
Fourth Avenue and Madison Street, Seattle
JuDsoN T. Jennings Librarian Annie H. Calhoun, Head Fine Arts
Division
Art department opened 1907. There are 12,000 volumes ; 2,500 music scores,
including miniature orchestra scores ; 9,000 pictures for circulation, and a small
print collection, including 60 Japanese prints ; exhibitions are held.
184 WASHINGTON— WISCONSIN
TACOMA
TACOMA SOCIETY OF ARCHITECTS
1412 Puget Sound Bank Building, Tacoma
R. E. BoRHEK .President E. N. Dugan Vice-President
A. J. Russell, Secretary-Treasurer
Organized 1911.
TACOMA FINE ARTS ASSOCIATION
426 Broadway, Tacoma
George W. Bullard President Frank B. Cole Treasurer
Mrs. T. J. Handforth. . . .1st Vice-P. Paul T. Prentice Secretary
Mrs. a. D. E. Beek. . . .2d Vice-Pres.
Organized 1893. Occasional exhibitions.
WASHINGTON STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
City Hall, Tacoma
W. B. Blackwell President W. H. Dickson Treasurer
O. B. Sperlin Vice-President W. P. Bonney Secretary
Organized 1891. Annual meeting in January.
WISCONSIN
WISCONSIN CHAPTER AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS
Peter Brust President W. W. Judell Sec-Treasurer
A. C. Aschweiler Vice-President 445 Milwaukee St., Milwaukee
Organized 1911.
GREEN BAY
KELLOGG PUBLIC LIBRARY
Green Bay, Wis.
Deborah B. Martin, Librarian
Collection includes 22 paintings by Howard Pyle and 26 antique Oriental
rugs. There are 743 books on the fine and applied arts.
JANESVILLE
JANESVILLE ART LEAGUE
Mrs. C. a. Sanborn President Mrs. G. F. Ehrlinger Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. H. H. Faust. .. .Vice-President Charlotte A. Prichakd Cor. -Sec.
Mrs. J. P. Thorne Treasurer
Organized 1894; incorporated 1904. (No report 1921.)
LA CROSSE
ART ASSOCIATION OF LA CROSSE
D. O. Coate President Carl Race Treasurer
Mrs. C. K. Pettingill 1st Vice-P. Harriet E. Batchelder Secretary
Frances Sill 2d Vice-Pres. 315 South 5th St., La Crosse
Organized 1915. Exhibitions are held.
MADISON
.^MADISON ART ASSOCIATION
Mrs. a. B. Chapman President Robert Shaffer Vice-President
Mrs. Clara Fuller Taylor, Secretary-Treasurer
Organized 1900. Continuous exhibitions.
WISCONSIN— WYOMING— EUROPE 185
MADISON
STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF WISCONSIN
816 State Street, Madison
E. Ray Stevenson President Lucien S. Hanks Treasurer
Joseph Schafer, Secretary
Founded 1849; Museum organized 1908. Exhibitions held throughout the
year in connection with the Madison Art Association. Permanent collections
of coins and medals, furniture, paintings, prints, art objects. Occasional
lectures.
MILWAUKEE
MILWAUKEE ART COMMISSION
City Hall, Milwaukee
Alexander C. Eschweiler Pres.- George B. Raab Curator
Architect Loyal Durand President School
James Currie Vice-President Board
President Park Board Robert Wheeler. .President Museum
Alexander Mueller Painter Board
Peter Brust Secretary
Organized 1911; term of office, four years.
WISCONSIN PAINTERS AND SCULPTORS
Alexander Mueller President Elsa Ulbricht Treasurer
Francesco Spiccuzza Vice-Pres. Gu stave Moeller Secretary
757 36th St., Milwaukee
Organized 1913. Annual State Circuit and High School Circuit Exhibition.
Holds annual exhibition at the Milwaukee Art Institute.
TWO RIVERS
LADIES OF THE ROUND TABLE
Two Rivers
Mrs. William Ellis President Mrs. A. H. Lohman. .Vice-President
Mrs. H. C. Wilke, Secretary-Treasurer
Organized 1912.
WYOMING
CHEYENNE
►J*CHEYENNE ART ASSOCIATION
Mrs. a. S. Meyring President Mrs. Mark T. Cox Treasurer
Mrs. O. E. Garretson 1st Vice-P. Mrs. C. C. Warrington. .. .Rec.-Sec.
Mrs. E. H. Cook 2d Vice-Pres. Mrs. John Howard. . .Cor. -Secretary
122 West 26th St., Cheyenne
Organized 1905 as study club; reorganized 1919. Owns two pictures as
nucleus for collections.
EUROPE
FRANCE
AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION OF PARIS
4 Rue Joseph Bara, Paris
Rodman Wanamaker President H. Wallce Methven Sec.-Treas.
F. C. Frieseke, Chairman, Board of Governors
Organized 1911 for the "purpose of helping by all possible means, such as
conferences, exhibitions, pamphlets and gatherings, the artistic, literary, scien-
tific and musical studies of American students residing or passing through
France."
186 EUROPE
FRANCE
AMERICAN ART STUDENTS' CLUB
4 Rue de Chevreuse, Paris
Mrs. James Van Allen Shields, Directress
Founded 1891. The club is supported entirely by Mrs. Whitelaw Reid.
No report 1921.
AMERICAN STUDENTS' CLUB
4 Rue Joseph Bara, Paris
Rodman Wanamaker President H. Wallce Methven Sec.-Treas.
Frederick C. Frieseke, Chairman, Board of Governors
Affiliated with the American Art Association of Paris.
INTERNATIONAL CLUB FOR WOMEN STUDENTS
93 Boulevard St. Michel, Paris
Mme. Pannier, Chairman
Organized 1907 as the International Art Union ; reorganized 1919.
No report 1921.
PARIS SOCIETY OF AMERICAN PAINTERS
William T. Dannat President Walter McEv^en 1st' Vice-Pres.
Eugene La Chaise, Secretary, 39 Rue Joubert, Paris
Arranges for special group of American work at foreign exhibitions.
No report 1921.
ITALY
AMERICAN ACADEMY IN ROME
(See under National Societies, p. 91, and Schools, p. 224)
Art Schools
All enrollment figures are for 1920-21, including summer of 1921, unless
otherwise noted.
Only schools offering technical instructions are listed.
ALABAMA
AUBURN
Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Department of Architecture.
Frederick Biggin, professor in charge; four instructors. Department
founded 1907. Four-year course in architecture with degree of B.S.;
four-year course in architectural engineering, degree of B.S. ; two-
year special course in architecture for office draftsmen ; courses in
free-hand drawing, pen-and-ink rendering, charcoal drawing, water
colors, clay modeling, life class, history of architecture, painting and
sculpture for general students. Tuition free for residents of Alabama,
$36 for non-residents. Term of nine months. Fellowship of $225 a
year offered for post graduate work in architecture. Enrollment, 75.
BIRMINGHAM
Birmingham Atelier of the Y. M. C. A. Night School, 1607 Empire
Building.
E. H. Knight, patron. Architecture in co-operation with the Beaux-
Arts Institute of Design. Evening classes twice a week. Tuition, $25
for six months. Enrollment, 14.
CALIFORNIA
BERKELEY
California School of Arts and Crafts, 2119 Allston Way.
Frederick H. Meyer, director; 17 instructors. Founded 1907. Fine,
applied and normal arts. Tuition, day, $140; evening, $46; Saturday,
$24. Term of nine months. Enrollment, 333.
Summer. Fourteen instructors. Tuition, $25 for five weeks. Enroll-
ment, 155.
Also summer session at Piedmont, Calif., and King's River Canyon,
Calif.
University of California, Department of Architecture.
J. G. Howard, director ; six instructors. School founded 1913. Tuition
free to residents of California. Term of nine months. Enrollment,
190.
CARMEL-BY-THE-SEA
Carmel Summer School of Art.
M. De Neale Morgan, instructor. Founded 1914. Drawing and
painting (landscape and figure). Tuition, $30 for eight weeks. En-
rollment, 28.
. CLAREMONT
Pomona College, Art Department.
Mrs. H. T. Jenkins, head of art department; five instructors. Or-
ganized 1887. Drawing, painting, modeling and design. Tuition $150
for ten months. Enrollment, 90.
187
188 ART SCHOOLS
California — ( Continued).
FRESNO
Fresno State Teachers' College, Art Department.
Alexandra Bradshaw, head of department; three instructors. Founded
1911. Normal art; one year of art required; three and four-year
courses for special art students. Tuition, free. Term of nine months.
Enrollment, 400.
LOS ANGELES
Cannon's School of Art, 227 South Spring Street.
H. W. Cannon, director; two instructors. Founded 1909. Life
classes, cartoons, illustrations and posters, drawing and painting.
Tuition $13.50 a month for day classes; $7.50 a month for evening.
Open all year. Enrollment, 150.
Chouinard School of Art, 2606 West Eighth Street.
Nelbert Murphy Chouinard, director ; three instructors. Founded
1921. Drawing, painting, composition, commercial art, interior decor-
ation, design. Day classes, $150 for nine months, evening classes,
$30 for five months; Saturday classes for adults, twelve lessons,
$25 ; Saturday classes for children, twenty-four lessons, $35.
Los Angeles School for Illustration and Painting, 156 North Spring
Strtet.
J. Francis Smith, director; two instructors. Founded 1914. Draw-
ing, painting, magazine illustration and poster classes. Classes six
days a week; all year session. Tuition, $10 a month for morning or
afternoon classes ; $8 a month for evening classes. Enrollment, 300.
Otis Art Institute, of the Museum of History, Science and Art, 2401
Wilshire Boulevard.
C. P. Townsley, managing director; eight instructors. Founded 1918.
Drawing, painting, illustration, sculpture, commercial art, metal work
and jewelry, interior decoration, textile decoration, decorative design.
Day and evening classes. Tuition $80 for nine months. Enroll-
ment 300.
Southern Branch, University of California (formerly California State
Normal School) Department of Art, 855 North Vermont Avenue.
Nellie Huntington Gere, head of department ; ten instructors. De-
partment founded 1911. Three courses are given: I, courses for
teaching certificates; II, professional course with interior decorating;
III, commercial art. Tuition, free; studio fees average $4.50 for
38 weeks. Enrollment, 125.
University of Southern California, Department of Art, University
Avenue and 35th Street.
A. C. Weatherhead, head of department; five instructors. Drawing,
painting, design, crafts. Tuition, $200 for nine months^ Enroll-
ment 175.
MILLS
Mills College, Department of Fine and Applied Arts.
Eugen Neuhaus, director ; four instructors. Founded 1865. Draw-
ing, painting. Design, handicraft. Tuition, $200 for ten months.
Enrollment. 275.
ART SCHOOLS 189
California — (Continued) .
PASADENA
Stickney Memorial School of Art, Pasadena Music and Art Associa-
tion, Fair Oaks and Lincoln Avenues.
Lucille Lloyd, director ; four instructors. Founded 1914. Drawing,
painting, illustration, first two years of architecture. Also for chil-
dren. Tuition, $100 for eight months.
PIEDMONT
California School of Arts and Crafts.
(Division of the school at Berkeley.)
Frederick H. Meyer, director; one instructor. Founded 1907. Land-
scape painting. Tuition, $25 for six weeks. Enrollment, 15.
SAN DIEGO
San Diego Academy of Fine Arts, Balboa Park.
Eugene DeVol, director; seven instructors. Founded 1921. Painting,
drawing, stagecraft, pictorial photography. Tuition, $120 for nine
months. Enrollment, about 40.
SAN FRANCISCO
California School of Fine Arts of the San Francisco Art Association,
California and Mason Streets.
Lee F. Randolph, director ; ten instructors. Founded 1874. Affili-
ated College of the University of California 1893. Fine and applied
arts, normal art, commercial and industrial design. Saturday classes
for juveniles and others. Twelve scholarships in school and three
to pupils of high schools in California. Day and evening classes.
Tuition, $15 a month, or $110 for nine months. Enrollment, 70O.
Summer. Eight instructors. Founded 1874. Tuition, %37 for full
day, $25 for half day, for six weeks. Enrollment, 80._
San Francisco Architectural Club, 77 O'Farrell Street.
Architectural atelier in co-operation with the Beaux-Arts Institute
of Design.
No report 1921.
SANTA BARBARA
State Normal School of Manual Arts and Home Economics.
A. Irene Struthers, director art department ; four instructors in
design. Founded 1916. Industrial, normal, applied, domestic and
manual arts. Two terms of twenty weeks. Tuition free, except for
laboratory fees. Enrollment, 217.
Summer. Tuition of $10 for term of twelve weeks. Enrollment, 150.
No report 1921.
STANFORD UNIVERSITY
4*Leland Stanford Junior University, Division of Graphic Arts, De-
partment of Education.
A. B. Clark, head of division; three instructors. Department founded
1892. Drawing, design, handicraft, household art, commercial art and
normal art Tuition, $270 for term of nine months. Enrollment,
about 100.
190 ART SCHOOLS
COLORADO
BOULDER
University of Colorado, Art Department.
F. B, R. Hellems, head of department; three instructors. Founded
1917. Color and design ; house furnishing and decoration. Tuition,
$56 for resident, $101 for non-resident for term of nine months.
Enrollment 165.
COLORADO SPRINGS
Academy of Fine Arts, Perkins Hall, Colorado College, Colorado Springs.
Susan F. and Charlotte Leaming, directors ; three instructors.
Founded 1911; affiliated with College 1916. Painting and drawing,
design, illustration, commercial art, normal art. Tuition, $50 to $150
for nine months. Enrollment about 30.
•^Broadmoor Art Academy, West Dale Street.
Rolland L. Boutwell, director; seven instructors. Founded 1920.
Drawing, painting, design, interior decoration, and crafts work.
Tuition $300 for twelve months. Enrollment about 95.
DENVER '
Atelier Denver, 1459 Pennsylvania Street.
Two instructors. Founded 1919. Architecture in coperation with the
Beaux Arts Institute of Design. Tuition, $5 a month. Enrollment,
28.
Denver Academy of Art, 37 East 18th Avenue.
J. Campbell Cory, director; ten instructors. Founded 1920. Painting,
sculpture, design, illustration and commercial art. Day and evening
classes. Tuition, $7 to $25. Enrollment, about 500.
Student's School of Art, 1311 Pearl Street.
Henry Read, director. Founded 1895. Drawing, painting, illustra-
tion, design. Day and evening classes; open all year. Tuition, $4
to $8 a month. Enrollment 60.
GREELEY i i
Colorado State Teachers College, Department of Fine and Applied
Arts.
Grace M, Baker, head of department; three instructors. Founded
1889. Design, painting, construction, pottery. Tuition, $20 for nine
months to non-Colorado students. Enrollment, 300.
Summer. Four instructors. Tuition, $30 for ten weeks. Enrollment,
600. _ ,
GUNNISON
Colorado State Normal School, Art Department.
Mary Helen Hatch, head of department; three instructors. Founded
1911. Construction and applied design; public school training;
academic courses. Tuition, $15 for term of nine months.
Summer. Tuition, $25 for term of ten weeks. Enrollment 600.
CONNECTICUT
CANAAN
Clarence H. White School of Photography (winter, 460 West 144th
Street, New York City).
Clarence H. White, director; two instructors. Founded 1909.
Photography, design and art appreciation. Tuition, $100 for eight
weeks. Enrollment, 35.
No report 1921.
ART SCHOOLS 191
Connecticut — (Continued).
HARTFORD
Connecticut League of Art Students, 709 Main Street.
James Goodwin McManus, director; four instructors. Founded
Drawing, painting, perspective and anatomy. Evening classes only.
Tuition, ^36 for nine months. Enrollment, about 35.
Hartford Evening High School, Art Department, Broad Street.
James Goodwin McManus, director; two instructors. Founded 1902.
Antique, life. Evening classes only ; six months' course. Tuition free.
Enrollment, 50 to 60.
School of the Art Society of Hartford, 280 Collins Street.
Albertus E. Jones, head of department ; Five instructors. Established
1877. Drawing, painting, decorative and applied design, costume
illustration, modeling, juvenile. Day, evening and Saturday classes.
Tuition, $100 for all day course of seven months. Numerous scholar-
ships and prizes awarded. Enrollment, 110.
Summer. Landscape painting and sketching. Tuition, $18 for six
weeks. Enrollment, 10.
NEW HAVEN
Yale School of the Fine Arts, Yale University.
William Sergeant Kendall, director; George H. Langzettel, secre-
tary; fifteen instructors. Founded 1866; building erected 1864.
Drawing, painting, sculpture and architecture. Courses lead to de-
gree of Bachelor of the Fine Arts. Winchester Fellowship of $1,000
and English scholarship of $750 awarded each year for European
travel ; several scholarships in the school and prizes. Art Museum
and library in school building. Tuition, $90 for drawing, painting
and sculpture; $180 for architecture for eight months. Enrollment,
140.
NORWICH
Norwich Art School.
Mrs. Guy Warner Eastman, director ; four instructors. Established
1890. Drawing, design, pottery, metalry. Three scholarships in the
school ; one entitling to free tuition to the School of the Boston
Museum of Fine Arts. Tuition, $35 for eight months. Enrollment, 42.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
WASHINGTON
Corcoran School of Art, Corcoran Gallery, 17th Street and New York
Avenue.
Edmund C. Tarbell, principal ; five instructors. Founded 1875. Life,
antique, draped and still life, portrait, composition, perspective, water
color and anatomy. Tuition free, annual entrance fee, $10 for eight
months ; also evening courses. Enrollment, 250.
George Washington University. Department of Architecture.
William Miller Collier, president ; H. L. Hodgkins, dean ; five art
instructors. Department re-established 1912. Four-year course.
Tuition, $180 for eight months ; day and evening classes. Enroll-
ment, 58.
National School of Fine and Applied Art, Connecticut Avenue and M
Street, N. W.
Felix Mahony, director ; ten instructors. Founded, 1916. Painting,
academic drawing, composition, poster and costume design, interior
decoration, illustrative advertising, applied art. Tuition, $80 for eight
months. Day and evening classes. Enrollment, 226.
192 ART SCHOOLS
FLORIDA
ST. PETERSBURG
Florida Art School, Beach Drive and Second Avenue, North. •
J. Liberty Tadd, dirAtor. Painting, sculpture, arts and crafts.
GEORGIA
ATLANTA
Georgia School of Technology, Department of Architecture.
Francis Palmer Smith, professor; three instructors. Department
founded 1908. Four-year course leads to degree of B.S. in Arch.
Day and evening classes. Tuition, Georgia students, $25 ; others,
$100 for eight and one-half months. Special two-year course for
draughtsmen leads to certificate. Enrollment, 73.
Lewis C Gregg School of Drawing, Constitution Building.
Lewis C. Gregg, director; two instructors. Established 1915. Antique
and sketch from costume models, cartoon and newspaper illustration.
Tuition, $10 a month for four days a week. Enrollment, 45.
HAWAII
HONOLULU
University of Hawaii, Art Department.
Minnie E. Chipman, head of department, two instructors. Founded
1908. Drawing, design, interior decoration, ceramics. Tuition, free ;
term of nine months. Enrollment, 51.
ILLINOIS
CHAMPAIGN
University of Illinois. See Urbana.
CHICAGO
Applied Arts Summer School, 2210 South Park Avenue.
Florence H. Fitch (of Indianapolis), director; eight instructors,
EstabHshed 1908; incorporated 1912. Methods, mechanical drawing,
posters, home planning, costume designs, industrial and applied arts,
and art appreciation. Tuition, $20 for three weeks. Enrollment 200.
Armour Institute of Technology, Architectural Department.
Edmund S. Campbell, director ; eight instructors. Founded 1893.
Tuition, $200 for nine months. Enrollment, 87. Architecture in co-
operation with the Art Institute.
Art Institute of Chicago Art School, Grant Park, South Michigan
Avenue and Adams Street.
Robert B. Harshe, director ; forty-two instructors. Founded 1879
as continuation of a school established about 1866. W. M. R, French
Memorial scholarship of $1,000 awarded every two years; Bryan
Lathrop scholarship of $800; John Quincy Adams foreign traveling
scholarship of $700; Municipal Art League American traveling
scholarship of $125 ; Tuesday Art and Travel Club, five scholarships
of $100 each ; twelve free tuition scholarships. In 1921 two notable
prizes were oflrered by Chicago newspapers, the competition in each
case was conducted by the Art Institute of Chicago. The Chicago
Tribune offered $5,000 for the best mural design for decorating the
walls in the new Tribune Institute Building. The competition was
restricted to students of the Art Institute School. Also restricted to
students of the Art Institute is the Chicago Daily Nezvs' Prize of
ART SCHOOLS 193
Chicago — Art Institute School — (Continued).
$1,000 for the best design for a fountain to decorate the grounds of
the sanitarium for babies conducted by the Daily News on the small
island north of Lincoln Park. Special facilities for work in the Art
Institute Galleries and Ryerson Library ; lectures and concerts in
Fullerton Memorial Hall.
Seven departments : Academic drawing, painting, sculpture, illustra-
tion; decorative design; architecture; normal art; Saturday juvenile
class ; evening classe's. Tuition, day $198 for nine months ; evening,
$54 for nine months; Saturday juvenile, $24 for nine months. Total
enrollment, 4,267.
Summer. Twenty instructors. Tuition, $50 for ten weeks, five days
a week. Enrollment, 487.
Chicago Architectural Club, 40 South Clark Street.
William E. Parsons, patron. Architecture in co-operation with Beaux-
Arts Institute of Design. Enrollment, 50.
HhCniCAGo Academy of Fine Arts, 81 East Madison Street.
Carl N. Werntz, director ; thirty instructors. Founded 1900. Illus-
tration, design, cartoon, interior decoration, applied design, costume
design, normal art, handicraft. Tuition $200 for ten months. Day
and evening classes. Enrollment about 700.
Summer. Fourteen instructors. Tuition, $65 for ten weeks; day and
evening sessions. Enrollment, 200.
Industrial Art School, 700 Oakwood Blvd.
(Winter address — Fawcett School of Industrial Art, 55 Academy St.,
Newark, N. J.)
Hugo B. Froehlich and Bonnie E. Snow, directors ; five instructors.
Founded 1916. Normal course in industrial art ; special courses for
teachers. Tuition, $25 for five weeks. Enrollment about 100.
Lewis Institute, Madison and Robey Streets.
George N. Carman, director ; two instructors. Founded 1896. Draw-
ing, design. Day and evening classes. Tuition $15 for each course
of three months. Enrollment about 125.
University of Chicago, School of Education, Department of Art Edu-
cation. 58th Street and Kenwood Avenue.
William G. Whitford, professor in charge; nine instructors. Founded
1902. Drawing, painting, design, modeling, pottery, normal courses.
Tuition, $180 for nine months ; in session all year except September.
Enrollment, 400.
Summer. William G. Whitford, director ; ten instructors. Tuition,
$60 for twelve weeks. Enrollment, 400.
DECATUR
James Milliken University, School of Fine and Applied Arts.
Emma B. Robbins and Christine Spencer, directors; two instructors.
School founded 1900. Fine and Applied Arts, art history, normal art,
pottery and metal work. Four years leading to B.S. in F.A. and
A. A. Tuition, $150 for nine months and laboratory fees. Enrollment,
105.
DE KALB
Northern Illinois State Teachers' College. Art Department.
L. Eveline Merritt, head of department ; two instructors. Founded
1899. Two years' normal art course, perspective, water color, design,
color theory, mechanical drawing; $12 for course of 36 weeks. En-
rollment, 50.
Summer. Tuition, $4 for six weeks. Enrollment, 35.
194 ART SCHOOLS
Illinois — (Continued).
JACKSONVILLE
•^Illinois Woman's College, School of Fine Arts.-
Nellie A. Knopf, director or art; two instructors. College founded
1846; art department about 1875. Teachers' diploma and certificate
courses in drawing and painting; courses in historic, practical and
theoretical design and applied arts; art appreciation; industrial art
and interior decoration. Tuition, $150 for eight months. Enroll-
ment, 65.
PEORIA
Bradley Polytechnic Institute, School of Arts and Sciences.
Theodore C. Burgess, president; four instructors in art. Founded
1897. Architectural, freehand and mechanical drawing; industrial
and normal art ; horology. Day and evening classes. Tuition, $100
for nine months. Enrollment in normal art, 75; industrial art, 12;
horology, 330.
Summer. Albert F. Siepert, director; two instructors. Four weeks.
Tuition, $25. Enrollment, about 150.
ROCKFORD
RocKFORD College, Fine and Applied Arts Department.
Mrs. Eleanor M. George, director; two instructors. Founded 1849.
Painting, composition, perspective, color theory, history of art; de-
sign; interior decoration; costume design. No extra charge to
regular students; $90 to outsiders for nine months. Enrollment,
about 22 in fine arts; 35 in domestic arts; 50 in history of art.
No report 1921.
URBANA AND CHAMPAIGN
University of Illinois, Department of Architecture.
L. H. Provine, head of department ; fifteen instructors. Department
founded 1870. Tuition free; nine months. Enrollment, 257.
Department of Art and Design, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Eduard J. Lake, head of department; four instructors. Department
founded 1873. Drawing, design, painting, modeling, history of art.
Tuition free; incidentals, $50 for nine months. Enrollment, 350.
INDIANA
INDIANAPOLIS
School of the John Herron Art Institute, Art Association of In-
dianapolis, Pennsylvania and Sixteenth Streets.
Eight instructors. Founded 1902. Drawing, painting, illustration,
industrial design, modeling, design, costume design, interior decoration,
and normal art. Tuition, $95 for eight months day course. Evening
and Saturday, $25; children's, $11. Enrollment, 366.
Summer. Twelve instructors. Tuition, $25 for six weeks. Enroll-
ment, 75.
LAFAYETTE
Purdue University, Art Department.
Laura A. Fry, director ; two instructors. Established 1869. Tuition,
free for nine months. Enrollment, 150.
ART SCHOOLS 195
Indiana — (Continued).
NOTRE DAME
University of Notre DAMii, College of Architecture.
Francis Wynne Kervick, head of department; six instructors. De-
partment founded 1898. Tuition, $150 for thirty-six weeks. En-
rollment, 80.
TERRE HAUTE
State Normal School, Art Department
William T. Turman, head of department. Founded 1870. Free-
hand and mechanical drawing and design suited to public schools ;
mechanical extended for vocational work ; industrial arts. Four
year normal and four year college course. Four terms of 12 weeks
each. Day classes. Tuition free to residents of Indiana; $12 a term
to non-residents. Enrollment, about 900.
VALPARAISO
Valparaiso University, Art Department.
Bula Beshears, director ; two instructors. Established 1873 ; crafts
department, 1902. Tuition, $135 for twelve months. Enrollment, 200.
IOWA
CEDAR FALLS
lowA State Teachers' College, Art Department.
Henrietta Thornton, head of department; eight instructors. Founded
1876. Normal art, for public school, rural school and supervision.
Tuition, $15 for three months. Enrollment, specializing in art, about
25- . .
Summer. Six instructors. Tuition, $5 for 12 weeks. Applied arts
and mechanical drawing. Enrollment, 420.
DAVENPORT
Tri-City Art League Students, Savings Bank Building.
Herman More, director; one instructor. Founded 1915. Day, even-
ing and Saturday classes. Tuition, $95 for seven months. Enroll-
ment, 100.
DES MOINES
Des Moines College, School of Art.
Edith Gilbert, director; two instructors. Founded 1901. Normal and
academic art, fine arts. Tuition, from $50 to $160 for 9 to 12 months.
Enrollment, 46.
Summer. Tuition, from $5 to $20 for 12 weeks. Enrollment, 15.
No report 1921.
IOWA CITY
State University of Iowa, College of Liberal Arts, Department of
Graphic and Elastic Arts.
Charles A. Cumming, head of department; seven instructors. Founded
1910. Academic drawing and painting, design with theory of linear
perspective and construction drawing. Day classes with lectures at
night. Tuition included in college fee of $40 for nine months. En-
rollment, 175.
No report 1921.
196 ART SCHOOLS
KANSAS
BALDWIN
Baker University, Art Department.
Ella Heath, director; one instructor. Founded 1858. Mechanical
drawing, applied design, illustration, design, applied arts. Tuition
varies according to course. Term of nine months. Enrollment,
about 60.
LAWRENCE
University of Kansas, Department of Architecture.
Goldwin Goldsmith, professor in charge; four instructors. Founded
1913. Architecture and Architectural Engineering lead to B.S. Tui-
tion, $20 for nine months for residents of Kansas; $30 for non-
residents. Enrollment, 60.
School of Fine Arts.
Harold L. Butler, dean; five instructors. Department founded 1877.
Dravv^ing, painting, design, pottery, history of art, crafts w^ork. Tui-
tion, $60 for nine months. Enrollment, 350.
. Summer. Harold Putnam Browne, instructor. Drawing and paint-
ing; normal course. Tuition, $10 for six weeks. Enrollment, 45.
LINDSBORG
Bethany College, Art Department.
Birger Sandzen, director; three instructors. Founded 1881. Draw-
ing, painting, china painting, normal art and design. Tuition, $64
for 36 weeks. Enrollment, 38.
MANHATTAN
►f«KANSAS State Agricultural College, Department of Architecture.
Cecil F. Baker, professor in charge ; four instructors. Founded 1863.
No tuition, incidental fee, $12 for nine months. Four-year course in
architecture. Enrollment, ?),?)76 in all courses.
Department of Applied Art.
Araminta Holman, head of department ; three instructors. Design,
interior decoration and furnishing ; craftswork. College incidental
fee, $23 for nine months. Enrollment, 500.
TOPEKA
►J* Washburn College, Art Department.
Mrs. L. D. Whittemore, director; five instructors. Founded 1910.
Drawing, painting, interior decoration. Tuition, $12 to $48 for ten
months. Enrollment, 145.
WICHITA
Fairmont College, Art Department.
Elizabeth Sprague, head of department; one instructor. Founded
1901. Drawing, painting, design, interior decoration, history of art.
Tuition included in College fee of $80 for nine months. Enroll-
ment, 100.
KENTUCKY
LEXINGTON
4*University of Kentucky, Art Department.
Two instructors. Founded 1918. Drawing, painting, art appreciation.
Term of ten months. Enrollment, 200,
ART SCHOOLS 197
Kentucky — ( Continued) .
LOUISVILLE
Louisville School of Art, 638 South Fourth Avenue.
Alexander J. Van Leshout, director ; five instructors. Founded 1919.
Freehand drawing, commercial art, painting, modeling and etching.
Day and evening classes. Tuition, $130 for 34 weeks. Enrollment, 75.
University of Louisville, Department of Architecture.
W. E. Glossop, head of department ; one instructor. Established
1913. Conducted in co-operation with the Beaux-Arts Institute of
Design. Tuition, $25 for nine months. Evening classes only.
Art Department, 119 West Broadway.
Keith Sperry, head of department ; one instructor. Established 1912.
Design, handicrafts, normal art. Tuition, $100 for full academic
course, $25 art alone; course, ten months. Enrollment, 22.
LOUISIANA
LAFAYETTE
Southwestern Louisiana Institute, Art Department.
Jane Gibbs, head of department; one instructor. Founded 1900. Tui-
tion free ; nine months. Enrollment, about 175.
NEW ORLEANS
Tulane University, College of Technology, School of Architecture.
Charles Armstrong, assistant professor of architecture ; four in-
structors. School founded 1907. Tuition, $100 for eight months.
Enrollment, about 30.
Tulane Normal Summer School.
A. B. Dinwiddie, director ; three instructors. Drawing, painting,
design, modeling, mechanical drawing. Tuition, $7.50 to teachers ;
others $15 for six weeks ; for nine weeks, $10 and $20. Enrollment,
1,375.
H. Sophie Nezvcomh Memorial College School of Art, Audubon Place,
New Orleans.
Ellsworth Woodward, director; eight instructors. Founded 1887.
Fine, decorative, industrial art ; special courses in pottery, book-
binding, jewelry, and embroidery. Tuition, $165 for eight months.
Enrollment, 311.
MAINE
BANGOR
School of the Bangor Society of Art, 25 Broad Street.
Alice P. Walker, head of department; six instructors. Founded 1917.
Painting, drawing, crafts. Tuition, $10 for course of 20 lessons.
Enrollment, 49.
No report 1921.
BOOTHBAY HARBOR
Commonwealth Art Colony, Summer Art School.
Asa G. Randall, director (winter, 498 Broadway, Providence, R. I.),
five instructors. Founded 1904. Drawing, painting, design, block
printing and crafts. Tuition, $35 for seven weeks. Enrollment, 64.
Snell Summer Class.
Henry B. Snell, director; one instructor. Founded 1921. Oil and
water color painting, composition. Tuition, $45 for from six to
eight weeks. Enrollment, 40.
198 ART SCHOOLS
Maine — ( Continued) .
OGUNQUIT
Summer School in Modeling.
Victor D. Brenner, director. Founded 1914. Sculpture, Tuition, $100
for six weeks.
Inactive.
Summer School of Drawing and Painting.
Russell T. Hyde, director ; one instructor. Founded 1919. Painting,
drawing. Tuition, $40 for six weeks. Enrollment, 20.
No report 1921.
Thurnscoe School of Modern Art.
Hamilton Easter Field (winter, 106 Columbia Heights, Borough of
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.), director; two instructors. Founded
1911. Painting, life drawing and wood carving. Tuition, $50 for
ten weeks. Enrollment, about 25,
PORTLAND
School of Fine Arts of the Portland Society of Art, Sweat Memorial,
97 Spring Street.
Alice H, Howes, director; four instructors. Founded 1911. Draw-
ing, painting, design. Tuition, $80 for eight months. Enrollment, 99.
MARYLAND
BALTIMORE
Charcoal Club School of Art, 1230 St. Paul Street.
R. McGill Mackall and Eric Haupt, directors. School founded 1883.
Drawing and painting, etching and architecture. Day, evening and
Saturday classes. Tuition, $10 to $36 for eight months. Enroll-
ment, 40.
Architectural Atelier.
Laurence H. Fowler, patron ; Guy Hecklinger, massier. Founded
1917. Architecture in co-operation with the Beaux-Arts Institute of
Design. Enrollment, 6.
Inactive.
Maryland Institute for the Promotion of the Mechanic Arts.
School of Fine and Practical Arts.
Alon Bement, director ; sixty-four instructors. Original school
founded in 1825 ; reorganized into two schools in 1849 ; reorganized
into three schools — School of Architectural Drawing, School of Fine
Arts, and School of Sculpture, in 1899. Tuition from $8 to $50 for
eight months. Total enrollment, 2,199.
Summer. Edith Hoyt Stewart, director. Founded 1916. Three in-
structors. Drawing and painting from the model and out-of-doors ;
landscape ; design. Tuition, $20 for six weeks. Open only to Fine
Art and Design students. Enrollment, 44.
Night School, Mt. Royal Avenue and Lanvale Street ; also Market Place.
B. Wheeler Sweany, principal Market Place schools ; thirty-two in-
structors. Founded 1850. Architecture, mechanical and sheet metal
courses ; free-hand drawing and design at Mt. Royal Avenue. Over
$500 annually in premiums. Four years leading to diploma. Three
evenings a week, 7.30 to 9.30 p.m. Tuition, $8 to $30.
ART SCHOOLS 199
Maryland Institute — ( Continued ) .
Saturday Schools, Mt. Royal Avenue ; also Market Place.
Seventeen instructors. Classes for both children and adults ^ in
sculpture, fine and industrial arts, teachers' training courses. Tuition,
$6 to $12 for eight months. Enrollment, 450.
RiNEHART School of Sculpture.
Maintained jointly by the Peabody Institute and the Maryland In-
stitute. Herbert Adams and Ephraim Keyser, instructors. Tuition,
free to graduates of the Maryland Institute, with 90 per cent,
average; to others, $50 for eight months. Traveling scholarships
to Paris and Rome. Enrollment, 8.
MASSACHUSETTS
AUBURNDALE
Lasell Seminary, Art Department.
Margarita W. Ells, director; one instructor. Founded 1851. Drawing,
painting, design, crafts, history of art. Tuition, $90 for nine months.
Enrollment, 24.
BOSTON
Boston Architectural Club, 16 Somerset Street.
William Roger Greeley, president (9 Park Street) ; ten instructors.
Architecture in co-operation with the Beaux-Arts Institute of De-
sign, Harvard, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Founded 1889. Evenings only. Tuition, $10 to $25 for eight
months. Enrollment, about 100.
Copley Society, Rogers Building. (See Society report).
Frederick W. Coburn, secretary ; John Wilson, instructor. Paint-
ing, sculpture; also use of models without instruction. Fees, $1.50
a month for members ; $2.50 for non-members.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Architecture,
491 Boylston Street.
William Emerson, chairman of department; Ralph Adams Cram,
senior professor of architecture; twelve instructors. Founded 1865.
Architecture and architectural engineering. Tuition, $300 for nine
months. Day classes only; rooms open evenings. Enrollment, 123.
Summer. Tuition, $20 to $75 for six to eight weeks.
►^•Massachusetts Normal Art School, Exeter and Newbury Streets.
Royal B. Farnum, director; twenty-five instructors. Founded 1873.
Elective courses : Applied arts in public schools, including depart-
mental instruction and supervision of drawing and handwork in
elementary schools — drawing, design, and handicrafts in high schools —
and mechanical and architectural drafting in high schools ; general
design ; modeling and casting ; and graphic arts, including general and
costume illustration. Courses are given in wood and metal working,
jewelry and drafting and proving of costume patterns. All candidates
for the diploma of the School (four years' course) are required to
demonstrate their ability to do practical work in part-time relations
in education and industry under co-ordinating and supervising in-
structors from the field. Full college entrance requirements for ad-
mission. Tuition is free to students who are citizens of this State;
to others, $100 for ten months. Enrollment, 300, day school, not
including postgraduates.
200 ART SCHOOLS
Massachusetts — (Continued) .
The New School, 248 Boylston Street.
Douglas John Connah, director; ten instructors. Founded 1911.
Design, painting, illustration, commercial design, interior decora-
tion, costume design, mural decoration ; Saturday classes. Tuition,
$150 for nine months ; evening, $50. Enrollment, 400.
Summer school at Boston ; four instructors. Tuition, $40 for nine
weeks. Enrollment, 75.
School of Decorative Design, 739 Boylston Street.
Amy M, Sacker, director; three instructors. Founded 1901, Gen-
eral design, costume, interior decoration, special lecture course on
interior decoration. Tuition, $120 for term of eight months.
School of Fine Arts, Crafts and Decorative Design, 349 Newbury
Street.
Katherine B. Child, director; C. Howard Walker, critic; nine in-
structors. Established 1913. Design, painting, drawing, interior
decoration, illustration, costume design, history of art, metal work,
etc. Work conducted by problems, criticisms and lectures ; Museum
study. Four years' course for diploma. Day and evening classes.
Tuition, $225 for eight months. Enrollment, 85.
School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Huntington Avenue.
Thomas Allen, Chairman of the Council ; eleven instructors. Founded
1876. Drawing required ;• painting, modeling or design elective.
Traveling Scholarships: Paige (painting). Hunt (modeling), Cum-
mings (design). 20 resident Scholarships, Registration fee of $10.
Tuition, $120 for first year; $110 for succeeding years. Term of
eight months. Enrollment, 283.
CAMBRIDGE
Harvard University
Graduate School of Architecture, Robinson Hall.
Charles Wilson Killam, chairman; ten instructors. Department
founded 1893. Courses leading to degree of Master in Architecture
and in Architectural Engineering. Tuition, $250 for nine months.
Enrollment, 38.
Graduate School of Landscape Architecture.
James Sturgis Pray, Chairman, and Charles Eliot, Professor ; Henry
Vincent Hubbard, Assistant Professor; four instructors. School es-
tablished 1900. Special course in city planning. Course leading to
degree of M.L.A. Several scholarships and traveling fellowships.
Tuition, $250 for nine months. Enrollment, Z2.
. Division of Fine Arts.
George Henry Chase, chairman ; eight professors and nine instruc-
tors. Department established 1874. Tuition, $250 for nine months.
Enrollment, 328.
Summer School of Architecture.
Charles W. Killam, chairman ; Architectural design. Tuition, $35
for six weeks ; registration fee, $5. Enrollment, 29,
Radcliffe College, Art Department, 10 Garden Street.
George H. Chase, chairman of department; four professors and
two instructors. Founded 1879. Drawing, painting, design and his-
tory of art. Tuition, $250 for nine months. Enrollment, about 100.
ART SCHOOLS 201
Massachusetts — (Continued).
CHATHAM
Chatham (Cape Cod) Summer Classes.
Harold C. Dunbar, director; one instructor. Founded 1915. Land-
scape painting, poster and monotype designing. Tuition, $20 a month.
Term of ten weeks. Enrollment, 21.
EAST GLOUCESTER
Breckenridge School of Painting.
Hugh H. Breckenridge, director. Founded 1920. Drawing and paint-
ing. Tuition, $65 for eight weeks; $40 for four weeks.
Summer Painting Class, 78 Rocky Neck Road.
Felicia Waldo Howell, director. Founded 1918. Tuition, $60 for
eight weeks. Enrollment, 26.
GROTON
LowTHORPE School of Landscape Architecture for Women.
Miss A. L. Cogswell, principal; six instructors. Founded 1901. Three-
year course in landscape architecture; two-year course in horticul-
ture and planting design. Tuition, $200 for nine and a half months.
Enrollment, 21.
LOWELL
Textile School, Moody Street and Colonial Avenue.
Charles H. Fames, president ; Herman H. Bachman, head of depart-
ment; two other instructors in drawing and design. Founded 1897;
building erected 1903. Design for textile trades with full technical
application. Tuition in day course $150 for residents of Massachu-
setts ; $200 for non-residents, and $300 for foreigners ; evening free to
residents of Lowell; others, $10 for two-night a week courses; $15
for three-night, and $20 for four-night. Term of 8 months for day
classes, 20 weeks for evening. Enrollment, 293.
MONTEREY
Berkshire Summer School of Art.
Raymond P. Ensign (of the Cleveland School of Art), and Ernest
W. Watson (of Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, New York), directors;
eight instructors. Founded 1915. Painting, pencil sketching, design,
crafts, commercial illustration, interior decoration, linoleum block
poster printing, mechanical drawing, normal course. Tuition, $40 for
six weeks. Enrollment, 112.
NEW BEDFORD
New Bedford Textile School, 1171-1219 Purchase Street.
W. E. Hatch, president ; Samuel Holt, head of art department ; two
instructors. Founded 1900. Textile design as part of a well-equipped
textile school. Tuition free for residents of State; for non-residents,
$150. Term of nine months. Enrollment, about 100.
SwAiN Free School of Design, 391 County Street.
H. A. Neyland, director; ten instructors. Founded 1882; re-or-
ganized 1902. Drawing, painting, illustration, arts and crafts, archi-
tecture, jewelry and metal work, ceramics, modeling; normal art.
Tuition free ; eight month course ; day and evening sessions. Sev-
eral prizes. Enrollment, 244.
Architectural Atelier.
Nat. C. Smith, patron; Joseph Welsh, massier. Architecture in co-
operation with the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design.
202 ART SCHOOLS
Massachusetts — (Continued).
PROVINCETOWN
Cape Cod School of Art.
Harry N. Campbell, director ; two instructors. Established 1899.
Still-life, portrait, figure and landscape painting. Tuition, $50 for two
months. Enrollment, 125.
Summer School of Drawing and Painting.
E. Ambrose Webster, director ; one instructor. Founded 1907. Draw-
ing, painting, landscape and still life. Tuition, $25 a month for 16
to 20 weeks. Enrollment, about 60.
West End School of Art.
George Elmer Browne, director. Landscape and figure painting, oil
and water color.
ROCKPORT
Summer School of Drawing and Painting.
A. T. Hubbard, director ; two instructors. Founded 1920. Composi-
tion, drawing and painting. Tuition, $50 for nine weeks. Enroll-
ment, 30.
SALEM
State Normal School, Art Department, Lafayette St. and Loring Ave.
Charles Frederick Whitney, head of Department ; two instructors.
Department established 1854. Practical and fine arts. Tuition free
to residents of Massachusetts. Term of ten months. Enrollment,
250 in regular art courses ; 30 taking special art courses.
WELLESLEY
Wellesley College, Art Department.
Alice Van Vechten Brown, head of department; seven instructors.
Founded 1875; re-organized 1897. Courses in history of art and
studio practice. Term of nine months. Enrollment, 268.
WORCESTER
School of the Worcester Art Museum, Salisbury House, 24 Highland
Street.
H. Stuart Michie, principal; six instructors. Founded 1898. De-
sign, drawing and painting, metal work, pottery, modeling, weaving
and basketry. Tuition for eight months, $30 in day class ; evening
class, $2 for six months ; several scholarships awarded. Enrollment,
344.
MICHIGAN
ANN ARBOR
University of Michigan, College of Architecture.
Emil Lorch, professor in charge ; thirteen instructors. School founded
1906. Architecture, building construction, decorative design, drawing
and painting. Tuition, nine months, for residents of the State, women
$91, men $95; non-residents, women $116, men $120. Enrollment, 183.
Summer. Four instructors. Architectural design, freehand drawing
and painting, teachers' art course. Tuition, $26.50 for eight weeks.
Enrollment, 53.
BATTLE CREEK
School of Applied Art.
C. W. Ellis, director ; four instructors. Founded, 1898. General draw-
ing, commercial illustration, cartooning, architectural perspective,
teachers' normal course. Correspondence classes only.
ART SCHOOLS 203
Michigan — (Continued) .
DETROIT
School of Fine Arts, Parsons Building, Adams Avenue.
John P. Wicker, director, and two instructors. Founded 1910. Paint-
ing, illustration, commercial design. Tuition, eight months, day $125,
evening $50. Enrollment, 350.
Van Leyen & Schilling Atelier, 1115 Union Trust Building,
Architecture in co-operation with the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design,
Enrollment, 6.
No report 1921.
GRAND RAPIDS
School of Art and Industry, Fountain Street.
A. G. Pelikan, director; five instructors. Established 1916. Drawing,
painting, illustration, decorative, applied and commercial design, model-
ing, interior decoration. Day, night and children's classes. Tuition,
$80 for non-residents; $40 for residents, for nine months. Enroll-
ment, 152,
KALAMAZOO
Western State Normal School, Art Department.
Rose R. Netzorg, director; three instructors. Founded 1904. Normal
drawing, painting, design, construction, history of art; industrial art.
Tuition, $22.50 for ten months. Enrollment, 200.
Summer. Four instructors. Teachers' art, handicrafts, design, figure
illustration, commercial art. Tuition, $5 for term of six weeks. En-
rollment, 125,
SAUGATUCK
Summer School of Art Institute of Chicago.
F. F, Fursman, director; two instructors. Founded 1911. Land-
scape, figure painting, composition, drawing. Tuition, $50 for ten
weeks. Enrollment, 80.
No report 1921.
MINNESOTA
MINNEAPOLIS
DuNwooDY Institute, 818 Superior Boulevard.
C. A. Prosser, director ; three instructors. Founded 1914. Interior
decoration; design for printers. Evening classes only. Tuition, $10
for six months. Enrollment, 50,
•^Federal Schools, Incorporated, (Federal School of Commercial
Designing and Federal School of Applied Cartooning), 15 South
Fourth Street,
Lauros Monroe Pheonix and Charles Batholomew, deans of schools;
eight instructors. Founded 1914. In commercial design ; composition,
rendering, advertising, theory of color, anatomy, lettering, perspective,
and book illustration. In applied cartooning; cartooning, animated
art, card writing, lettering, animal draftsmanship, covers, chalk talks.
Tuition in both schools, $125^. Instruction through correspondence
methods averages eighteen months of consecutive work. Enrollment,
commercial designing, 5,077; illustrating and cartooning, 1,828,
Minneapolis School of Art, Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 200 East
25th Street.
Mary Moulton Cheney, director ; seven instructors. Founded 1886.
Painting, illustration, sculpture, commercial design, interior decora-
204 ART SCHOOLS
Minnesota — Minneapolis School of Art — ^(Continued).
tion, textile and decorative design. Tuition, $125 for eight months ;
evening, $55 for six months. Enrollment, 400.
Summer. Six instructors. Outdoor figure and landscape painting,
outdoor figure-painting, modeling, drawing, design and lettering,
textile v^eaving. Tuition, $30 for six weeks. Enrollment, 71.
University of Minnesota, Department of Architecture.
Frederick M. Mann, professor in charge; eight instructors. Depart-
ment founded 1913. Architecture and decoration. Day and evening
classes. Tuition, $90 for residents of Minnesota; $120 for non-
residents for nine months. Enrollment, about 150.
Department of Art Education.
Ruth Raymond, principal; five instructors. Founded 1906; affiliated
with University 1918. Representative, decorative and industrial art
for teachers. Tuition, $60 for residents of Minnesota; $90 for non-
residents for nine months. Enrollment, 85.
MISSISSIPPI
JACKSON
Belhaven College, Art Department.
Elizabeth Cary Lemly, director. Founded 1911. Painting, drawing,
illustration, design, interior decoration, ceramics. Tuition, $50 for
nine months. Enrollment, 92, and 15 special.
MISSOURI
COLUMBIA
University of Missouri, Ai't Department.
John S. Ankeney; three instructors. Theory and practice of art, class-
ical archaeology, manual arts, history of art. Tuition free. Term
of'four months. Enrollment, 125.
KANSAS CITY
Kansas City Art Institute School, Armour and Warwick Boulevards.
H. M. Kurtzworth, director; six instructors. Founded 1907. Draw-
ing, painting, design, illustration, modeling, interior decoration. Day
and evening ; Saturday children classes. Tuition, $90 for day, $30 for
evening for thirty-three weeks. Enrollment, 340.
Summer. Academic and normal art. Tuition, $15 for six weeks.
Enrollment, 60.
ST. LOUIS
St. Louis Architectural Club Atelier, 514 Culver Way.
Gabriel Ferrand, director ; three instructors. Founded 1895. Prob-
lems in co-operation with Washington University. Evening classes
only. Four year course with Washington University credits, leading
to a certificate in architecture. Tuition, $30 for eight months. En-
rollm.ent, 45.
Washington University, School of Architecture.
Gabriel Ferrand, professor of design; one associate professor and
one assistant professor, and four instructors. School founded 1901.
Architecture. Day and evening classes. Tuition, eight months, $200;
day classes; $30, evening classes. Enrollment, 118.
ART SCHOOLS 205
Missouri — Washington University — ( Continued) .
Department of Draiving and History of Art.
Holmes Smith, professor in charge; three instructors. Department
founded 1896. History of art, eleven courses; drawing, nine courses.
Day and evening clases. Students are graduated as of The College
or The School of Architecture. Tuition in each department, $150
for 34 v^eeks.
School of Fine Arts, Skinker Read and Lindell Boulevard.
E. H. Wuerpel, director ; thirteen instructors. Founded 1874. Drav^-
ing, painting, sculpture, modeling, illustration, design, interior dec-
oration, metal work, etching, pottery, bookbinding, wood-carving, crafts.
Several scholarships. Tuition, $75 for full time, 36 weeks ; $54 for
half time. Saturday classes. Enrollment, 470.
WARRENSBURG
Central Missouri State Teachers' College, Art Department.
Mayme B. Harwood, head of department; two instructors. Founded
1870. Composition and perspective; theory and practice of teaching;
drawing, bookbinding, commercial and dress design, interior decora-
tion, history of art, applied science. Tuition, $36 for nine months;
two years' course. Enrollment, 1167.
Summer. Three instructors. Tuition, $12 for term of ten weeks.
Enrollment, 1496.
NEBRASKA
LINCOLN
University of Nebraska, School of Fine Arts.
Paul H. Grummann, director ; seven instructors. Reorganized 1912.
Degree of B.F.A. Gallery contains paintings purchased by Nebraska
Art Association. Fine industrial and normal art, interior decoration,
ceramics. Matriculation fee, $5 ; incidentals, $5 ; studio $2 and $3.
Term of nine months. Day and evening classes. Enrollment, 399
in university; 83 specializing in drawing and painting.
Summer. Four instructors. Fine and normal art and ceramics.
Tuition, $3 for six weeks. Enrollment 148.
NEW HAMPSHIRE
DUBLIN
Dublin School of Painting.
R. S. Meryman and A. R. James, directors ; two instructors. Founded
1920. Tuition, $80 for nine weeks $50 for five weeks, $11 for one
week. Enrollment, 27.
MANCHESTER
Manchester Institute of Arts and Sciences, Concord and Pine Streets.
Jennie Young, head of art department ; seven instructors. Founded
1898. Drawing, painting, modeling, design, wood carving, metal
vvork, jewelry, block printing, lace making, embroidery, basketry, book-
binding, weaving and rug making. Membership dues of $5 a year
include tuition ; twenty-four weeks' course. Day, evening and chil-
dren's classes. Enrollment, 1,200.
NEW JERSEY
NEWARK
Fawcett School of Industrial Art, 55 Academy Street.
Hugo B. Froehlich, director ; thirty-five instructors. Founded 1882. A
school of industrial art workers, particularly for engineers, drafts-
206 ART SCHOOLS
New Jersey — Fawcett School — (Continued).
men, machinists, tool-makers, building tradesmen, jewelers, commercial
illustrators and printers. Department: Industrial art, general art,
mechanical, architectural. Afternoon and evening classes ; courses
three to five years. Tuition free to residents of Newark, for others,
$30 for seven months. Enrollment, about 1,200.
Summer. Tuition, $5 for six weeks.
TRENTON
School of Industrial Arts, West State and Willow Streets.
Frank Forrest Frederick, director ; forty instructors. Founded 1898.
Fine, normal, mechanic, and domestic art, architecture, industrial art,
including pottery, and wood work. Winter, ten months : day and
evening sessions. Tuition, $25 a year for residents of New Jersey ;
treble for non-residents of State. Enrollment, 1,333.
NEW MEXICO
EAST LAS VEGAS
New Mexico Normal University, Art Department.
Marie Senecal, head of department; two instructors. Founded 1898.
Drawing, modeling, design. Registration, library and text fee of
$10.20 for nine months. Enrollment, 60.
Summer. Tuition, $5 for eight weeks. Enrollment, 30.
No report 1921.
SANTA FE
School of American Research, Palace of the Governors.
Edgar L. Hewett, director; Paul A. F. Walter, secretary; Lansing
Bloom, assistant to the director ; Kenneth M. Chapman, head of art
department. Founded 1907. Does not offer regular course of instruc-
tion. Maintains lecture courses. Offers facilities for original work.
Art Gallery and Museum of Archaeology. Continual art exhibitions.
Maintained by the Archaeological Institute of America and State of
New Mexico.
NEW YORK
ALFRED
•^New York State School of Clay-Working and Ceramics, Alfred
University.
Charles F. Binns, director; two art instructors. School founded
1900. Ceramic engineering, pottery, applied design. Tuition free for
residents of New York State. Term of nine months. Enrollment,
87.
BUFFALO
Art School of the Albright Art Gallery, 1110 Elmwood Avenue.
Urquhart Wilcox, head of department; ten instructors. Founded
1885. Drawing, painting, modeling, design, applied arts, interior
decoration, normal art. Day and evening classes. Tuition, $80 for
eight months. Enrollment, 250.
CHAUTAUQUA
Chautauqua School of Arts and Crafts.
Frank von der Lancken, director ; seven instructors. Founded 1903.
Twenty-seven courses, including outdoor sketching, crafts and normal
art. Tuition, $18 a course for six weeks; $35 for teachers' training
course. Enrollment, 208.
ART SCHOOLS 207
New York — (Continued).
ITHACA
Cornell University, College of Architecture.
Francke Huntington Bosworth, Jr., dean; twelve instructors. College
founded 1871. Four and five year courses for degree B.Arch. or
B.S.Arch. ; one year graduate course for M.Arch. ; two-year special
course for certificate. Tuition, $250 for nine months. Enrollment,
168.
MILTON-ON-HUDSON
Elverhoj Colony of Painters and Craftsmen, Summer School.
A. H. Andersen, director; four instructors. Founded 1913. Paint-
ing, sculpture, etching, weaving, pottery, jewelry and metal crafts.
Tuition, averages, $50 for ten weeks. Enrollment, 34.
NEW YORK CITY
American School of Miniature Painting, 939 Eighth Ave., Borough of
Manhattan,
Mabel R. Welch, director; three instructors. Established 1914. En-
rollment, 25.
Ardsley School of Modern Art, 106 Columbia Heights, Borough of
Brooklyn.
Hamilton Easter Field, director. Founded 1916. Life and figure
painting, wood carving. Term of eight months.
Summer at Ogunquit, Maine.
•I^Art Students' League of New York, 215 West 57th Street, Borough
of Manhattan.
Gififord Beal, president; twenty-three instructors. Founded 1875.
Painting, drawing, illustration, sculpture, etching. Day and evening
classes. Tuition, $70 to $80 for eight months. Enrollment, 2,381.
Summer. Three instructors. Drawing, painting, illustration. Tui-
tion, $30 for seventeen weeks. Enrollment, 346. Also summer at
Woodstock, N. Y. Enrollment, 135.
•^Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, 126 East 75th Street, Borough of
Manhattan. Lloyd Warren, director.
Department of Architecture. R. M. Hood, director. Established in
1894. Forty-six competitions annually in architectural design and
the styles of architecture, open to the draughtsmen and students
in architectural schools in the United States and Canada, and modeled
on the system of instruction adopted by the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in
Paris. Free, except for the annual registration fee of $2 for twelve
months, no restrictions as to the age, nationality or sex of the
students. No preliminary examinations, but new students are ex-
pected to have a knowledge of the five orders of architecture. Bronze
and silver medals awarded for excellence in design, and money-prizes
are offered in special prizes for decoration, group-planning of build-
ings, etc. Certificates presented to all students completing the course
as defined in the circular of information, which will be furnished
on request. Total enrollment, 850.
Department of Interior Decoration. Fourteen competitions, programs
issued every six weeks. Atelier in the building of the Institute with
instructor correcting twice a week in the evening. Open to male
students without examinations or fees. Programs sent to individuals
or schools on application ; they can be executed by students in any
locality and sent to the Insitute for judgment by the special jury.
Bronze and silver medals awarded. Enrollment, 58.
208 ART SCHOOLS
New York City — Beaux-Arts Institute — (Continued).
Department of Sculpture. John Gregory, director. Ateliers for male
students in the building of the Institute; three courses (Architectural
Ornament, Life Drawing and Modeling and Composition) ; no exam-
inations ; no fees ; open all day, and evening, all the year round,
instructors visit classes twice a week. Judgments by special juries
every four weeks. Bronze and silver medals awarded. Enroll-
ment, 330.
Department of Mural Painting. Ernest C. Peixotto, director. Programs
of problems issued every month to whoever applies for them. No
examinations, nor fees. No atelier for this department at the In-
stitute ; sketches criticized once a week by an artist who receives
the students at his studio. Out of town students work up the
problems under their own instructors; monthly judgment by jury
of artists. Bronze and silver medals awarded. Enrollment, 57.
Brooklyn Art School (Brooklyn Institute of Art and Sciences), 355
Adams Street, Borough of Brooklyn.
Francis Muller, director ; six instructors. Founded 1892. Life, cos-
tume and portrait classes for men and women. Afternoon and
evening classes. Tuition, $8 a month for term of eight months.
Columbia University, West 114th to 121st Streets, Borough of Man-
hattan.
Nicholas Murray Butler, president. Founded 1754.
School of Architecture, Avery Hall.
W. H. Carpenter, chairman Administrative Board ; William A. Bor-
ing, director ; fourteen instructors. Founded as Department under
School of Mines 1881; School under faculty of Fine Arts 1902; self-
governing school 1912. Day School of Architecture, four year course,
admits only candidates for the degree of Bachelor of Architecture.
The equivalent of two years of academic study in a college of recog-
nized standing is required for entrance. The Combined Course (Col-
lege and Architecture) is designed to enable students to begin the
study of architecture as early in the College course as practicable.
Time required about six years. Three fellowships for foreign study,
six undergraduate scholarships, emergency appropriation for students,
annual medals of the Alumni Association of the School and of the
American Institute of Architects. Tuition in Day School on basis
of $8 an academic "point," averages $360 for eight months. Enroll-
ment, about 85.
Extension Teaching Course in Architecture.
Evening classes, leading to the Certificate of Proficiency admits stu-
dents who have graduated from an accredited high school and have
had one year's office work. Qualified students, not candidates for a
certificate, may be admitted to individual courses as special students.
Tuition in extension courses, $8 a point; total amount varies accord-
ing to number of courses a student carries a session. Enrollment,
about 205.
Summer Session, Deportment of Architecture.
John J. Coss, director; six instructors. Department founded 1900.
Six weeks during July and August. Separate courses open to those
qualified without examination. Tuition, $8 a point; term of six
weeks. Enrollment, 78.
ART SCHOOLS 209
New York City— Columbia Vniversity— (Continued).
Extension Teaching, Department of Architecture and Fine Arts.
J. C. Egbert, director; twelve instructors. Department founded 1910.
Design, painting, drawing, modeling. Afternoon, evening and Sat-
urday sessions, open without examination to those qualified for indi-
vidual courses. Tuition, $6 per point. . Term of 15 weeks. Enroll-
ment, 1,031.
No report 1921.
Teachers College of Columbia University, School of Practical Arts,
525 West 120th Street, Borough of Manhattan.
Maurice A. Bigelow, director.
Department of Fine Arts.
Arthur W. Dow, director; eighteen instructors. Fundamental courses
in art structure, free-hand drawing and appreciation. Five majors,
any one of which may lead to Bachelor's degree: I, Drawing, paint-
ing and modeling; II, Design in the art industries, including color
printing, silversmithing, jewelry, wood carving and photography; III,
House design and decoration, including furniture and metal design;
IV, Costume design and illustration ; V, Fine Arts education. Tui-
tion $180 to $200 for nine months. Enrollment, 810.
Summer. Arthur W. Dow, director; ten instructors. Same courses
as in winter. Tuition, $8 a point; term of six weeks. Enrollment,
580.
Cooper Union for the advancement of Science and Art, Fourth Avenue
and Eighth Street, Borough of Manhattan.
Charles R. Richards, director.
Night School of Art for Men.
Frederick Dielman, art director ; thirty-two instructors. Founded
1860. Architectural and free-hand drawing, including life class, mod-
eling, principles of design, interior decoration, historic decorative
design ; design for printing and for costume. Tuition free ; eight
months' session. Enrollment, 681.
No report 1921.
Woman's Art School.
Frederick Dielman, art director ; Kate L. Reynolds, principal ; fifteen
instructors. .Founded 1859. Elementary, antique, life, illustration, oil
and water color painting, design, fashion design, modeling. School
library 2,546 volumes ; facilities for work in Museum of Decorative
Arts. Tuition free ; eight months' session. Enrollment, 250.
Educational Alliance, Art School, 197 East Broadway, Borough of
Manhattan.
Abbo Ostrowsky, director ; seven instructors. Founded 1914 as draw-
ing class ; reorganized and enlarged 1917. Drawing, painting, model-
ing, etching, batik and pottery. Tuition, $12 for twelve months.
Day and evening classes. Enrollment, 145.
Federal School of Commercial Designing (of Minneapolis, Minn.),
185 Madison Avenue, Borough of Manhattan.
L. M. Pheonix, dean of Eastern Division.
Greenwich House Neighborhood Art School, 27 Barrow Street, Bor-
ough of Manhattan.
Victor Salvatore, chairman of committee ; seven instructors. Draw-
ing, painting, pottery, wood carving, toy making, modeling. Day and
evening classes.
210 ART SCHOOLS
New York City — (Continued).
Mechanics' Institute, 20 West 44th Street, Borough of Manhattan.
Louis Rouillion, director; twenty- four instructors. Architectural and
mechanical drafting, free-hand drawing, decorative design and physics.
Free evening school only. Courses 7.30 to 9.30 p.m. for six months.
Library of 100,000 volumes. Enrollment over 1,700 in school, many
taking drafting and a few design.
Metropolitan Art School, 58 West 57th Street, Borough of Manhattan.
Michel Jacobs, director ; seven instructors. Color, drawing, design,
Sculpture. Day and evening classes. Tuition, $50 to $200 for term
of eight months. Enrollment, 125.
National Academy of Design Free Schools, 175 West 109th Street,
Borough of Manhattan.
William S. Robinson, chairman school committee ; nine instructors and
three lecturers. Founded 1826. Drawing, painting, sculpture, etching,
perspective, composition and anatomy. Day and evening classes.
Over $1,000 annually in scholarships and prizes. Matriculation fee
of $10 for each of the two terms of the school year; tuition free
for term of seven months. Enrollment, 506.
New York Evening School of Industrial Art, 204-214 East 42d Street,
Borough of Manhattan.
George K. Gombarts, principal ; seventeen instructors. Founded 1913.
Book illustration, costume design, interior decoration, jewelry and
metal design, textile and stained glass design, poster and commercial
design, mural decoration, modeling and sculpture. Tuition free ; 7.30
to 9.30 P.M., four nights a week for nine months. Enrollment, 875.
•^New York School of Applied Design for Women, 160 Lexington Ave.,
Borough of Manhattan.
Ellen J. Pond, superintendent, eleven instructors. Incorporated 1892.
Design for textiles, fashion sketching, posters, advanced commercial
art, interior decoration, illustration. Frequent exhibitions. Tuition,
$105 for seven and one-half months. Several free scholarships in
school ; about $700 in prizes. Enrollment limited to 400.
New York School of Fine and Applied Art, 2239 Broadway, Borough
of Manhattan.
Frank Alvah Parsons, president ; thirty-six instructors. Founded 1909.
Design, landscape and domestic architecture, interior decoration, illus-
tration, advertising, posters, stage design, costume, normal training.
Tuition, $200 for nine months. Enrollment, 700.
Summer. Eleven instructors. Same as winter. Tuition, $50 for six
weeks. Enrollment, 225.
New York University, Summer School of Art, University Heights, Bor-
ough of the Bronx.
James Parton Haney, director (winter. Director of Art, High Schools,
500 Park Ave., New York City) ; three instructors. Department
founded 1907. Double normal course each summer in methods of
teaching and in practice of design. Course changed each session
through five successive summers. Tuition, $40 for three weeks. En-
rollment, 122.
»f«PRATT Institute, School of Fine and Applied Arts, 215 Ryerson Street,
Borough of Brooklyn.
Walter Scott Perry, director ; forty-two instructors. Founded 1887.
Applied design; interior decoration; jewelry; crafts; pictorial, com-
ART SCHOOLS 211
New York City — Pratt Institute — (Continued) .
mercial and costume illustration; painting; mural painting; archi-
tectural construction and design; applied design; crafts; normal
art and manual training. Saturday morning class in pottery. Library,
lectures and exhibitions. Tuition, $100 for nine months. Evening
7.30 to 9.30 P.M., three evenings a week; tuition, $15 for six months.
Enrollment, day course, 498; evening, 433; Saturday, 284; total, 1,215.
Reiss School, 4 Christopher Street, Borough of Manhattan.
Winold Reiss, director. Founded 1914. Commercial and fine art.
Tuition, $360 for eight months.
No report 1921.
School of American Sculpture, 9 East 59th Street, Borough of Man-
hattan.
Solon H. Borglum, director ; one instructor. Founded 1919. Con-
struction from the human form and from the horse, drawing in
black and white, modeling. Day and evening classes. Tuition, $50
a month for day class; $20 for night class. Open all year. Enroll-
ment, 50.
School of the New York Society of Craftsmen, 65 East 56th Street,
Borough of Manhattan.
Charles E. Pellew, president ; seven instructors. Founded 1919. Batik,
block printing, dyeing, history of ornament, leather working, weaving.
Tuition, $25 for course of 12 lessons of 2^ hours. Enrollment, 26.
Summer at National Academy of Design Building, 109th Street and
Amsterdam Avenue, Borough of Manhattan. Six weeks course.
School of Design and Liberal Arts, 212 Central Park, South (West
59th Street), Borough of Manhattan.
Irene Weir, director; eleven instructors. Founded 1917. Drawing,
painting, illustration, applied design, interior decoration, costume
design, weaving, pottery, etching. Registration fee of $5 ; tuition,
$200 for eight months; special rates of $50 for half year. Enroll-
ment, 75.
School of the Society of Illustrators, 370 Seventh Avenue, Borough
of Manhattan.
W. A. Rogers, director. Founded 1920. The instructors are members
of the Society of Illustrators and volunteer to teach. Conducted under
the auspices of the Federal Board of Vocational Education. The pur-
pose of this school is to teach Federal Board students lettering and de-
signing, advertising, illustration, poster designing, typography. Term
of eleven months. Enrollment, about 75.
White (Clarence H.) School of Photography, 460 West 144th Street,
Borough of Manhattan.
Clarence H. White, director; seven instructors. Founded 1909. Art
photography design, and art appreciation. Day and evening classes.
Tuition, $300 for 30 weeks. Special classes $50 and up. Enroll-
ment, 67.
Summer at Canaan, Conn.
OYSTER BAY
Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation (Art Guild), Oyster Bay, L. I.,
N. Y.
Stanley Lothrop. resident director. Established 1919. The Foundation
provides a residence and working facilities for a limited number of
212 ART SCHOOLS
New York — Tiffany Foundation — (Continued).
artists of ability and technical training. Such artists must be American
citizens between the ages of 20 and 35. They are selected upon the
comparative quality of the work submitted by the various candidates,
and upon the recommendation of well-known artists. Purpose is
not to give academic training but opportunity for independent work
under the most favorable conditions and largely out of doors. No
tuition ; $10 a week charged for board. A limited number of Fel-
lowships offered of sufficient size to cover the artists' expenses while
in residence.
ROCHESTER
•|<RocHESTER Athenaeum and Mechanics Institute, School of Fine
and Applied Art, Bevier Memorial Building, 55 Plymouth Avenue.
Clifford M. Ulp, director ; fourteen instructors. Athenaeum chartered
1830. School of Fine and Applied Art founded 1903, Architecture,
design, crafts, teachers' training in art and craft education and art
and manual training, costume design, fine and graphic arts, pottery,
modeling, metal and jewelry, toy making, interior decoration; chil-
dren's classes, occupational therapy. Salesroom for work by faculty,
graduates and students. Day and evening courses. Tuition, $200
for nine months. Enrollment about 100.
SARATOGA SPRINGS
Skidmore School of Arts.
Charles Henry Keyes, president; Cora L. Stebbins, director; four
instructors. Founded 1911. Domestic science, normal art, fine arts,
music. Tuition, $175 for ten months. Enrollment, 304; three and
four year courses and confers degrees in four year course.
SYRACUSE
Syracuse University, College of Fine Arts.
George A. Parker, dean ; seven instructors. College founded 1873.
Besides the formative arts includes music and belles-lettres. Day
and evening classes. Tuition, $200 for nine months. Enrollment,
about 150.
Department of Architecture.
Frederick W. Revels, director ; ten instructors. Department founded
1882. Three four year courses lead to B.A. degree ; one two year
course leads to certificate ; one three year course in interior architec-
tural design and decoration leads to certificate. Several scholarships
and prizes. Tuition, $200 for nine months.
Department of Painting.
Jeannette Scott, head of Department; nine instructors. Painting, il-
lustration, design, china decoration. Three year course in design,
and three year course in illustration giving certificate. Four year
course in drawing and painting leading to B.P. ; four year course
in design leading to B.D.. Traveling fellowship of $500, several
scholarships and prizes. Three year course in illustration for cer-
tificate. Tuition, $200 for all courses, for term of nine months. En-
rollment, 150.
Summer School of Draming, Painting, and Design.
C. Bertram Walker, director; four instructors. Founded 1911. Paint-
ing, design, applied art. Tuition, $25 for six weeks. Enrollment, 40.
ART SCHOOLS 213
New York — Syracuse University — (Continued).
Department of Public School Art, Teachers' College.
Rilla E. Jackman, head of department; four instructors in art.
Founded 1906. Four year course leading to Bachelor of Science; three
year course leading to certificate in art ; three year combination music
and art course leading to certificate. Tuition, $200 for nine months.
Enrollment, 30.
WOODSTOCK
Woodstock School of Landscape Pointing (Summer School of the Art
Students' League of New York).
Charles Rosen, director. Founded 1875. Landscape and figure paint-
ing. Tuition, $20 a month for landscape class, $15 a month for studio
class. Term of four months. Enrollment, 135.
YONKERS
YoNKERs School of Design, 2 Manor House Square.
Frank Leonard Allen, director. Drawing, painting, composition, com-
mercial illustration, design. Day and evening classes. Tuition free
for term of eight months. Enrollment about 75.
NORTH DAKOTA
UNIVERSITY
University of North Dakota, Department of Art and Design.
Erwin O. Christensen, head of department; two instructors. Univer-
sity founded 1883 ; art department 1910. Drawing, painting and design
Tuition, $25 for nine months. Enrollment, 305.
OHIO
ADA
Ohio Northern University, School of Fine Arts, South Main Street
Three instructors. Founded 1882. Modeling, drawing, painting china
decoration, stenciling, Indian basketry. Tuition, $75 for eleven months
No report 1921.
BOWLING GREEN
State Normal College, Industrial Arts Department.
Daniel J. Crowley ; two instructors. Department founded 1910 Draw-
mg, design, mechanic arts. Tuition free. Enrollment, 350.
CINCINNATI
Art Academy, Eden Park.
J. H. Gest, director; ten instructors. Founded 1869. Fine arts, handi-
cratt design, wood carvmg, china painting, metal work, leather work
bookbinding. Thirty scholarships. Tuition, $80 for eight and one-
halt months; evening, $10 for eight months. Enrollment 380
^unimer. Five mstructors.. Fine arts, design, wood carving china
paintmg. Tuition, $20 for ten weeks. Enrollment, 50.
Ohio Mechanics Institute, Department of Applied Arts, Canal and
Walnut Streets.
John T. Faig, President ; ten instructors in art course. Founded 18^8 •
art department 1856. Architectural and mechanical drawing, industrial
design wood and metal work, graphic arts, needlework, lithographv
several scholarships in lithography. Tuition, $50 to $100 for nine
months; day and evening classes. Enrollment about 250
Summer Six instructors. Tuition, $10 to $50 for six weeks. En-
rollment about 155.
214 ART SCHOOLS
Ohio — (Continued).
CLEVELAND
Cleveland School of Art, 11,441 Juniper Road.
Henry Turner Bailey, director; George Leighton Norton, associate
director ; eighteen instructors. Founded 1882. Painting, sculpture,
illustration, design, normal art, ceramics, costume design, interior deco-
ration, architecture and crafts. Graduate school, individual special
courses under supervision. Scholarships and prizes. Mutual Service
Fund. Frequent special exhibitions. Tuition, $175 for eight months ;
evening courses, $24 for six months. Enrollment, 700.
John Huntington Polytechnic Institute, 2307 Prospect Avenue.
Henry T. Bailey, director; eight instructors. Founded 1918. Archi-
tectural design ; commercial life drawing ; advertising ; industrial per-
spective ; theory of color. Evening classes with privilege of working
during the day. Tuition free. Term of eight months. Enrollment,
246.
COLUMBUS
Columbus Art School, Columbus Art Association, 492 East Broad St.
Helen G. Brown, director ; four instructors. Founded 1879 by the
Columbus Art Association. Drawing, painting, illustrating, sculpture,
interior decoration, design. Tuition, $100 for first year, regular course.
Day and night classes. Diploma Course of eight months. Tuition,
$100.
►f'OHio State University, Art Department.
Charles Fabens Kelley, head of department ; eight instructors. Founded
1898. Drawing, painting, design, history of art, normal art. Tuition,
$15 for each semester for four and one-half months. Enrollment, 14.
Department of Architecture.
Joseph N. Bradford, professor in charge; five instructors. Depart-
ment founded 1890. Architecture and architectural engineering. Tui-
tion free, incidentals $50, for ten months. Enrollment, 120.
DELAWARE
•^Ohio Wesleyan University, School of Fine Arts.
Sallie T. Humphreys, director ; five instructors. Founded 1854.
Drawing, painting, and design in both theory and practice; crafts;
normal art; home decoration. Tuition, $35 to $100 for nine months.
Enrollment, 145.
OBERLIN
Oberlin College, Department of Fine Arts.
Clarence Ward, head of department; five instructors. Founded 1917.
Theory and practice of art. Tuition, $200 for nine months. Enroll-
ment about 350.
TOLEDO
School of the Toledo Museum of Art, Scott Place.
Mrs. George W. Stevens, director; three instructors. Theory of de-
sign, interpretative drawing, crafts, costume design, toy making. Free
instruction to selected pupils from Toledo schools.
Summer. Term of six weeks. Enrollment, 314.
WESTERVILLE
Otterbein University, Fine Arts Department.
Delphine Dunn, director; three instructors. Founded 1847. Fine and
normal arts, applied design. Tuition, $90 for term of nine months.
Enrollment about 50.
ART SCHOOLS 215
Ohio — (Continued).
YOUNGSTOWN
School of the Butler Art Institute.
Margaret Evans, director. Founded 1921. Classes in drawing, paint-
ing, jewelry, pottery.
OKLAHOMA
CHICKASHA
Oklahoma College for Women, Art Department.
Marion D. Pease, head of department; one instructor with student as-
sistant. Founded 1908. Costume design, house planning, interior
decoration, painting, crafts, commercial design. Tuition free for nine
months. Enrollment about 114.
EDMOND
Central State Normal School, Art Department.
Clara M. Howard, head of department; one instructor, with assist-
ants. Founded 1890. Normal course in drawing and industrial arts ;
crafts, costume design, interior decoration ; graduates required to take
one term's work. Tuition free ; eleven months. Enrollment, 42.
Summer. Nine weeks ; tuition free. One instructor with assistant.
Enrollment, 125.
NORMAN
University of Oklahoma, Department of Art.
Oscar B. Jacobson, head of department; six instructors. Estab-
lished 1909. Drawing, painting, history of art; history of architec-
ture, commercial art, home architecture, costume design, design, inte-
rior decoration, composition, normal art. Tuition, free for eleven
months. Enrollment. 270.
OREGON
CORVALLIS
Oregon State Agricultural College, Department of Art and Archi-
tecture.
Farley D. McLouth, head of department; four instructors. Founded
1902. Drawing, composition, design, water color, clay modeling, pot-
tery, metal work and jewelry. Tuition nominal. Term of nine months.
Enrollment about 40O.
EUGENE
University of Oregon, School of Architecture and Allied Art.
Ellis F. Lawrence, M.S., dean ; ten instructors. Founded 1914. Archi-
tecture, painting, modeling, drawing, design ; teachers' courses ; history
and appreciation of art. Small fee. Term of nine months. Day and
evening classes. Enrollment, architecture, 40; art, 80.
PORTLAND
Portland Atelier, Extension of the University of Oregon, Central
Library.
Ellis F. Lawrence, patron. Founded 1914. Architectural design;
problems in co-operation with the Beaux- Arts Institute of Design.
Tuition nominal for term ^f nine months. Enrollment, 12.
216 ART SCHOOLS
Oregon — (Continued) .
School of the Portland Art Association, Fifth and Taylor Streets.
Anna B. Crocker, curator; five instructors. Founded 1909. Paint-
ing, drawing, design, crafts ; children's classes. Three scholarships
awarded. Tuition, day, $100 for eight months ; evening, ^36 ; chil-
dren's class $24 to $30. Five day and two evening classes a week.
Enrollment, 155.
PENNSYLVANIA
CALIFORNIA
Southwestern State Normal School, Art Department.
Irene C. Niebaum, head of department; one instructor. Founded 1874.
Drawing, elementary handwork, industrial arts. Tuition paid by
State. Term of eleven months. Enrollment, 200.
CHESTER SPRINGS
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Summer School.
D. Roy Miller, director; four instructors. Founded 1917. Outdoor
painting, sculpture. Tuition, including board, $12.50 and up a week.
Term of twenty-four weeks. Enrollment, 215.
EDENBORO
State Normal Art School.
Waldo Bates, director; two instructors. Founded 1920. Normal art,
crafts, outdoor sketching. Tuition, $80 for nine weeks. Enrollment,
350.
INDIANA
Pennsylvania State Normal School, Art Department.
Jean R. McElhaney, director ; three instructors. Founded 1907. Nor-
mal course of two years. Tuition, $40 for ten months. Enrollment, 15.
No report 1921.
JENKINTOWN
►J'Beechwood School of Fine Arts.
R.^ C. Nuse, director ; six instructors. Founded 1912. Drawing,
painting, design, ceramics, leather work, jewelry, interior decoration,
and wood-block printing. Tuition, $100 for eight months. Enroll-
ment, 138.
MILLERVILLE
State Normal School, Art Department.
Helena Way, head of department; two instructors. Founded 1859.
Drawing, industrial arts, manual training. Tuition, $80 a year for
regular normal course of ten months. Enrollment, 740. No report
1921.
PHILADELPHIA
Graphic Sketch Club, 719 Catharine Street.
David Finkelgreen, president; eight instructors. Founded 1898. Or-
ganized as Beginners (under 16), Class members. Juniors, Seniors,
and Advisory Board ; each group has its officers ; non-sectarian and no
limit to age, sex or race. Painting, sculpture, illustration, fashion
design. Evening classes open all year. Tuition free. Enrollment, 300.
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Broad Street, above Arch.
Eleanor B. Barker, curator ; twelve instructors. Founded 1805.
Drawing, painting, sculpture, illustration. Twenty-two free scholar-
ART SCHOOLS 217
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts — <(Continucd).
ships in school; 20 William Emlen Cresson traveling scholarships of
$500 each; other prizes. Tuition, $150 for eight months. Day and
evening classes. Enrollment, 300.
Summer. School at Chester Springs, Pa.
•^Philadelphia School of Design for Women; Broad and Master
Streets.
Harriet Sartain, principal ; seventeen instructors. Founded 1844. The-
oretic and technical design, normal art, fine arts, fashion illustration,
.interior decoration. Six fellowships for year's study in school; city
and State scholarships; Widener European fellowship. Tuition, $100
for eight months. Day, evening and Saturday classes. Enrollment,
about 180.
Public Industrial Art School, Park Avenue, below Master Street.
Ida E. Fenimore, principal; ten instructors. Organized 1881, Open
to pupils in the Grammar Grades of the Public Schools ; each pupil
attends one afternoon a week, bemg excused from the regular school
session to do so. All pupils work in the three departments — drawing,
clay modeling and wood carving, rotating monthly. Tuition free; ten
months. Enrollment, 1,000.
•^School of Industrial Art; School at Broad and Pine Streets.
Huger Elliott, principal; forty-two instructors. Founded 1877. Free
scholarships in each county of State; seventy to pupils in Philadelphia
high schools ; also scholarships for meritorious work in school and
numerous prizes. Museum in Fairmount Park. Tuition, $100 for
eight months. Day, evening and Saturday classes. Total enrollment,
1,588.
Industrial Art Department — Huger Elliott, principal; twenty-four instruc-
tors. Design, wood work and carving, decorative painting, modeling,
illustration, architectural drawing, metal work, interior decoration,
pottery, teachers' training course. Tuition, $100 for eight months ;
evenings, $20; Saturdays, $10 for six months. Enrollment, 1,009.
Summer School — Huger Elliott, principal ; ten instructors. Established
1914. Esthetics, design, normal art, interior decoration, crafts. Tui-
tion, $25 for four weeks. Enrollment, 100.
Philadelphia Textile School — E. W. France, director; eighteen instructors.
Fully equipped with courses in dyeing, weaving and finishing as well as
design. Tuition, $250 in day course; evening, $20. Enrollment, 579.
T Square Club Atelier, 204 South Quince Street.
John F. Harbeson, director; two instructors. Founded 1902. Archi-
tecture in co-operation with the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design;
drafting, architectural design, and rendering. Evening classes only.
Tuition, $12 for ten months, with an additional charge of $5 a prob-
lem. Enrollment, 45.
HhUNiVERSiTY OF PENNSYLVANIA, School of Fine Arts, Department of
Architecture.
Warren P. Laird, head of department; twenty-eight instructors.
Founded 1890. Four-year course leads to B.S. in Arch. ; two-year
special course leading to certificate of proficiency; graduate course
leading to degree of M. Arch. Tuition, $300 for eight and one-half
months. Enrollment, 200.
Summer. H. Lamar Crosby, director. Six weeks' course. Architec-
tural subjects and course in drawing for teachers. Tuition, from
$12.50 to $50.
218 ART SCHOOLS
University of Pennsylvania — (Continued).
School of Fine Arts, Department of Fine Arts.
Warren P. Laird, dean ; twenty-nine instructors. Founded 1920.
Four-year course leading to degree of B.F.A. Special course in science
of painting. Tuition, $250 for term of eight and one-half months.
PITTSBURGH
►f«CARNEGiE Institute of Technology, College of Fine Arts.
E. Raymond Bossange, director ; sixty instructors. Founded 1909 ;
present building erected 1913. Architecture — design and construction ;
painting and illustration — commercial art, mural, landscape, figure and
portrait; applied art — crafts, costume design, normal art, advertising
and industrial art ; music — vocal, instrumental, composition, teacher's
course, music supervisor's course ; dramatic art — acting, production,
play-writing, sculpture. Day and evening courses of nine months.
Tuition, day, $150; night, $40. Enrollment, 700.
University of Pittsburgh, School of Education, Department of Fine and
Industrial Arts.
Walter H. Klar, head of department ; six instructors. University
founded 1787 ; art department, 1913. Thirty-two courses in fine and
industrial arts. Tuition, $210 for thirty-two weeks. Day and evening
classes. Enrollment, 160.
Summer. Three instructors. Twelve courses in fine and industrial
arts. Tuition, $7 a credit for six weeks. Enrollment, 59.
SCRANTON
School of Illustration and Design of the International Corre-
spondence Schools.
E. Leonard Roller, principal ; sixteen instructors. Founded 1900.
Practical, artistic and commercial courses in magazine and book illus-
trating; newspaper illustrating; cartooning; advertisement illustrating;
handicrafts and industrial designing; architectural drawing and de-
signing; interior decoration. Courses are by the correspondence
method. Tuition, $100 to $150 a course.
SLIPPERY ROCK
State Normal School, Art Department.
Inis F. McClymonds, head of department ; two instructors. Founded
1889. Open all year. Art included in regular normal course with
enrollment of 400.
STATE COLLEGE
Pennsylvania State College, Department of Architectural Engineering.
A. L. Kocher, director ; eleven instructors. Founded 1910. Archi-
tectural engineering and industrial art; architectural design in co-
operation with Beaux-Arts Institute of Design. Nominal fees ; nine
months' course. Enrollment, 54.
Department of Industrial and Fine Art.
A. L. Kocher, head of department; eleven instructors. Founded 1865.
Free-hand drawing ; construction and design, interior decoration, paint-
ing, metal work, posters, history of art, public school art. Fee, $3.50
for term of five months. Enrollment, 650.
Summer. Five instructors. Founded 1909. Public school art, paint-
ing, industrial design. Term of nine weeks. Enrollment, 258.
WEST CHESTER
State Normal School, Art Department.
Herbert A. Stiles, head of department; three instructors. Founded
1871. Drawing, painting, industrial art, crafts. Term of ten months.
ART SCHOOLS 219
RHODE ISLAND
NEWPORT
Art Association of Newport School, Totiro Park, Bellevue Avenue.
Helena Sturtevant, director ; four instructors. Founded 1912. Draw-
ing, painting, modeling, decorative design, and mechanical drawing;
Saturday morning classes for juniors. Day and evening classes. Tui-
tion, $50 for six months. Enrollment, 51 in fine arts; 30 mechanical
drawing.
PROVIDENCE
Rhode Island School of Design, 11 Waterman Street.
L. Earle Rowe, director ; Roger Oilman, dean ; forty-eight instructors.
Founded 1877. Special facilities for work in Museum and Library ;
lectures and concerts in Memorial Hall ; 468 State, 100 city and 22
competitive scholarships. Departments : I. Drawing, painting and
illustration; II. Decorative design; III. Alodeling; IV. Architecture,
interior decoration; V. Mechanical design; VI. Textile design; VII.
Jewelry design and silversmithing; VIII. Normal art; IX. Saturday
classes for teachers and children. Tuition, $90 in day, $20 in evening ;
$10 for Saturday classes; for eight months. Enrollment, 1,856, of
whom 243 are in day, 982 in evening and 314 in Saturday classes, and
317 special classes.
SOUTH DAKOTA
SPRINGFIELD
Southern Normal School, Art Department.
Mary E. Hodges, head of department; one instructor. Department
founded 1911. Normal art; two-year course. Tuition, $12 for nine
months. Enrollment, 75.
Summer. Founded 1920. Drawing, basketry, weaving. Tuition, $5
for six weeks. Enrollment, 67.
TENNESSEE
KNOXVILLE
University of Tennessee, Department of Fine and Applied Arts.
Mrs. Cora Fischer Braun, director; two instructors. Drawing, paint-
ing, theory of design, applied design, normal art. Matriculation fee
$10, and studio fee of $2.
Summer, Term of twelve weeks.
MURFREESBORO
Middle Tennessee State Normal School, Art Department.
Mrs. Elizabeth Cunningham, head of department, one instructor.
Founded 1911. Public school drawing; elementary water color and
design; advanced color. Term of forty-six weeks; tuition free. En-
rollment, 405.
Tennessee College, Art Department.
Ernma Cadwallader, director. School founded 1907. Drawing and
painting.
NASHVILLE
George Peabody College for Teachers, Art Dcpt., Hillsboro Road.
George S. Dutch, director ; two instructors. Founded 1914. House
decoration, modeling, design, applied design, public school drawing.
Tuition, $100 to $150 for nine months. Enrollment, about 200.
Summer. Average tuition, $30 to $50 for term of twelve weeks. En-
rollment, 300.
220 ART SCHOOLS
Nashville — Peabody College — (Continued) .
Department of Industrial Arts.
Clarence H. Lander, head of department; two instructors. Founded
1914. Mechanical drawing, wood working, metal working; printing.
Tuition averages $100 for nine months. Enrollment, about 100.
Summer. Term of twelve weeks. Enrollment, about 100.
St. Cecilia Academy, Art Department.
Sister Mary Luke, director; two instructors. School founded 1860.
Term of nine months.
School of Art and Applied Design, 301 Vauxhall Annex,
L. Pearl Saunders, director; two instructors. Founded 1907. Draw-
ing and painting; illustration; design and its application. Nine
months. Enrollment, 60.
Summer. Eight weeks. Enrollment, 20,
Ward-Belmont College, Sixteenth Avenue.
Mrs. Cora G. Plunkett, director. Illustration, design, interior decor-
ation, poster advertising, crafts.
Watkins Institute Free Night School.
Waldemar Hirschfeld, director. Free-hand drawing and design.
NORMAL
West Tennessee State Normal School, Art Department.
Marie McCormack, head of department. Founded 1909. Normal art.
TEXAS
ABILENE
Simmons College.
Ella Marie Ross, head of department; one instructor. Founded 1891.
Painting, crafts, designing. Tuition, $108 for nine months. Enroll-
ment, 35.
AUSTIN
University of Texas, School of Architecture.
F. E. Giesecke, chairman; two instructors. School founded 1910.
Tuition free ; matriculation fee, $10 ; nine months. Four-year course
leading to degree of B.S. in architecture; five year course leading
to degree of M.S. in architecture; four-year course leading to degree
of B.S. in architectural engineering. Work carried on in co-opera-
tion with the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design. Enrollment, 70.
BROWNWOOD
Daniel Baker College.
Martha Wilson Morris, director ; one instructor. Painting, drawing,
china painting. Tuition, $75 for nine months. Enrollment, about 12.
No report 1921.
COLLEGE STATION
Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, Department of
Architecture.
E. B. La Roche, B.Arch., head of dep^irtment ; four instructors. Archi-
tectural engineering founded 1906 ; Architecture founded 1912. Term
of nine months. Enrollment, 65.
ART SCHOOLS 221
Texas — (Contmued).
DALLAS
AuNSPAUGH Art School, 3409 Bryan Street.
Vivian L. Aunspaugh, director; two instructors. Founded 1902.
Fine, decorative and normal art ; commercial art and illustrating.
Tuition, $135 for nine months. • Enrollment, 90.
Summer. Founded 1902. Tuition, $12 to $30 for eight weeks. En-
rollment, 40, including sketching camp.
Southern Methodist University, Art Department.
Olive Donaldson, head of department; three instructors. Founded
1915. Portraiture, illustration, landscape, design, commercial art ;
modeling, interior decoration; normal course. Tuition, $150 for
nine months five lessons a week. Enrollment, 95.
No report 1921.
DENTON
College of Industrial Arts (State College for Women), Department
of Fine and Applied Art.
Virginia Alexander, director ; eight instructors. Founded 1903.
Courses in design and illustration, drawing, painting, advertising, inte-
rior decoration, costume design, pottery, modeling, bookbinding, china
painting, art appreciation and education are credited towards a B.S.
degree with Fine Arts as a major subject. A three year professional
course is offered in applied design, interior decoration and pottery.
Tuition, $35 for nine months. Enrollment, 810.
North Texas State Normal College, Art Department.
Elizabeth A. Hillyer, head of department ; two instructors. Founded
1900. Public school drawing, costume design, household decoration.
Tuition free; term of eleven and one-half months. Enrollment, 800.
FORT WORTH
►f«TEXAs Christian University, Art Department.
Mrs. Dura Brokaw Cockrell, principal ; three instructors. Founded
1899. Fine, decorative, commercial and normal art. Tuition, $100 for
nine months. Enrollment, 40.
Summer. Two instructors. Tuition, $25 for six weeks. Enroll-
ment, 25.
Texas Woman's College, Art Department.
S. P. Ziegler, principal; three instructors. Founded 1913 (succeeds
Polytechnic College). Classical, decorative, and normal art. Tui-
tion, $120 to $150 for nine months. Enrollment, 64.
HOUSTON
Rice Institute, Department of Architecture.
William Ward Watkins, director; four instructors. Founded 1912.
Architectural design and construction; rendering; history of art.
Five-year course in architecture which leads to degree of A.B. at
end of fourth year, and architectural degree at end of the fifth year.
Term, nine months. Enrollment, 38.
SHERMAN
KiDD Key College and Conservatory of Music and Art.
Evangeline Fowler, director of art ; two instructors. Founded 1868.
Industrial art ; design ; fine arts ; history of art ; normal course.
Tuition, $80 for nine months ; four-year course. Enrollment, 68 in
technical ; 93 in history of art.
222 ART SCHOOLS
UTAH
CEDAR CITY
Branch Agricultural College, Art Department.
F. C. Braithwaite, head of department; one instructor. Founded 1908.
Mechanical drawing, applied design, interior decoration, costume design,
crafts, textile work, china painting. Tuition, $11 for term of nine
months. Enrollment, 350.
LOGAN
Utah Agricultural College, Art Department.
Calvin Fletcher, professor of applied art; J. S. Powell, professor
of fine art ; three instructors. Founded 1889. Design, crafts, interior
decoration, painting, drawing, sculpture, architectural design; theory
and history. Tuition free; incidentals, $20 for nine months. Enroll-
ment, 479.
PROVO
Brigham Young University, Art Department.
Elbert H. Eastmond, head of department ; three instructors. Founded
1905. Normal art, costume design, drawing, crafts. Tuition, $20 for
term of nine months. Enrollment, 171.
SALT LAKE CITY
University of Utah, Art Department.
Six instructors. Founded 1868. Drawing, painting, design, normal art,
commercial art, cartooning. Day and evening classes. Tuition, $22.50
for term of nine months. Enrollment, 200.
VIRGINIA
CHARLOTTESVILLE
McIntire School of Fine Arts, University of Virginia^ Department
of Art.
Founded 1819 by President Jefiferson ; re-established 1919 as the
McIntire School of Fine Arts under an endowment from Paul Good-
loe McIntire. Drawing, painting and the history of art. Tuition,
residents of State, $10; non-residents, $135. Enrollment, 60.
Department of Architecture.
Fiske Kimball, head of department ; eight instructors. Professional
course in architecture leads to Bachelor of Science in Architecture.
Tuition, residents of State, $10; non-residents, $135. Enrollment, 20.
LYNCHBURG
Lynchburg Art School, 700 Church Street, Lynchburg.
Georgie W. Morgan, director; one instructor. Founded 1911. Draw-
ing, painting, illustration, poster, history of art, interior decoration.
Tuition, $72.50 for nine months. Enrollment, 30.
Randolph-Macon Woman's College.
Louise J. Smith, head of art department ; one instructor. Founded
1891. History and practice courses. Tuition, $54 for ten hours' work,
$90 for "double time" for nine months. Enrollment, 75; special, 8.
RICHMOND
Atelier Virginia League of Fine Arts and Handicrafts, 519 East
Franklin Street.
Nora Houston and Adele Clark, directors; two instructors. Founded
1917. Drawing, painting, modeling, handicraft. Day and evening
classes. Tuition, %2S to $100 for eight month.s. Enrollment, 40.
ART SCHOOLS 223
WASHINGTON
PULLMAN
State College of Washington, Department of Architecture.
Rudolph Weaver, head of department; four instructors. Department
founded 1911. Four-year course in architecture leads to B.S. in
Arch.; two-year special course. Tuition free; term of nine months;
day classes only. Enrollment, 55.
Department of Fine Arts.
William T. McDermitt, associate professor in charge; three instructors.
Drawing, painting, design, commercial art, crafts, history of art.
Tuition free ; term of nine months. Enrollment, 250.
SEATTLE
Gargoyle Club, 512 Hinckley Building.
David J. Myers, director ; two instructors. Founded 1919. Arch-
itecture. Evening classes only. Tuition, $15 for term of twelve
months. Enrollment, 12.
University of Washington, College of Fine Arts.
Irving M. Glen, dean ; twelve instructors. College founded 1913,
architecture 1914. Architecture ; design and drawing ; pottery, sculp-
ture ; normal course. Tuition, $30 for nine months. Enrollment, 50
"major" in architecture; 140 "major" in design and drawing.
Summer. Five instructors. Tuition, $10 for eleven weeks. Enroll-
ment, about 30.
WEST VIRGINIA
HUNTINGTON
Marshall College, Art Department.
E. E. Myers, instructor. Department founded 1901. Mechanical
drawing, free-hand drawing, color and design, interior decoration.
Tuition, $15 for nine months. Enrollment, 165.
WISCONSIN
MADISON
University of Wisconsin, Department of Industrial Education and Ap-
plied Arts. ,
William H. Varnum, director ; six instructors. Founded 1910. Draw-
ing, design, crafts. Tuition free to Wisconsin students, $100 for non-
residents ; nine months. Courses leading to degree of B.S. in Applied
Arts. Enrollment, 360.
Summer. Five instructors. Founded 1912. Art practice, art theory,
vocational education, crafts and drawing. Tuition, $20 for six weeks.
Enrollment, 386.
MENOMINIE
Stout Institute.
L. D. Harvey, president; Mrs. H. W. Cuthbertson, head of art de-
partment; three instructors. Founded 1903. Drawing and design;
architectural and mechanical drafting; metal and wood 'working ;
interior decoration; costume design and art needlework; normal
courses leading to degree. Tuition, $100 for nine months. Enroll-
ment. 400.
224 ART SCHOOLS
Wisconsin — {Continued).
MILWAUKEE
Layton School of Art, 158 Mason Street.
Charlotte Russell Partridge, director ; seven instructors. Founded
1920. Industrial and costume design, commercial art, illustration, in-
terior decoration, painting, normal art. Day and evening classes.
Tuition, $175 for term of nine months; evenings, $45. Enrollment, 316.
MiLV^AUKEE-DowNER COLLEGE, Department of Art.
Charlotte Russell Partridge, director ; five instructors. Founded 1895.
Fine Arts, crafts, occupational therapy. Tuition, $200 for term of nine
months. Enrollment, 150.
State Normal School, School of Fine and Applied Arts.
Alexander Mueller, director ; fourteen instructors. Affiliated with
State Normal School 1911. Fine, applied and normal arts. Day and
evening classes. Tuition, $40 for fine and applied arts; $10 for
teachers' courses, for nine months. Enrollment, 326.
Summer. Founded 1900; fifteen instructors. Tuition, $10 for six
v^eeks. Enrollment, 98.
EUROPE
ROME, ITALY
American Academy in Rome, Porta San Pancrazio (101 Park Avenue,
New York, N. Y.).
Gorham P. Stevens, director of the Academy; Frank P. Fairbanks,
professor in charge of the School of Fine Arts; George M. Whicher,
professor in charge of School of Classical Studies; Felix Lamond,
professor of Musical Composition. Founded 1894. Competitive fellow-
ships awarded in architecture, sculpture, painting, landscape, music
and classical studies, including archaeology and history of art. The
fellowships in the School of Fine Arts pay $1,000 annually for three
years ; the fellowships in the School of Classical Studies pay $1,000
annually for one or two years. The recipients are required to reside
at the Academy's home in Rome, and work under the director's guid-
ance. Enrollment, 51. Application must be made to the secretary,
101 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y., between January 1 and March 1
of each year.
Abbott H. Thayer, N.A.
1849-1921
Obituaries
1920-1921
ADAMS, MRS. CHARLES F.— An art patron, died at her home at Hinsdale, 111..
October 1, 1921. Through her efforts an art salon was established in Chicago from
which developed the annual exhibitions of Chicago artists at the Art Institute.
BACHMANN, MAX.— A sculptor, died in New York City, January 13, 1921. He de-
signed the allegorical figures of the continents for the Pulitzer Building in New York
City.
BEARDSLEY, RUDOLPH.— A painter and illustrator, died at his home in New ^crk,
August IS, 1921. He was born in 1875. He was a captain in the camouflage division
during the World War, and trained artists in camouflage in Washington and in
France. He designed the stage settings for "Scandals of 1921."
BIXBEE, WILLIAM JOHNSON.— A painter, illustrator and teacher, died at his home
at Lynn, Mass., July 14, 1921. He was born at Manchester, N. H., August 31, 1850,
and was a pupil of the Lowell Institute, Tomaso Juglaris; S. P. R. Triscott and Mar-
cus Waterman in Boston. He was a member of the Society of Independent Artists,
and for twenty-seven years was secretary of the Boston Society of Water Color
Painters. He designed the seal of the City of Lynn, and is represented by "Morning"
at the Poland Spring Art Gallery, South Poland, Me.
BORKMAN, GUSTAF.— A wood engraver, died in Brooklyn, February 19, 1921. He was
born in Sweden in 1842, and his work as an engraver included many of the old-time
illustrations for the "Graphic," "Harper's Weekly" and "Harper's Monthly."
BRADSTREET, EDWARD D.— A painter, died at Meriden, Conn., January 14, 1921.
He was born at Meriden in 1878, and was a member of the Connecticut Academy of
Fine Arts, New Haven Faint and Clay Club, and Arts and Crafts Association of
Meriden.
BRENNAN, ALFRED LAURENS.— A painter and illustrator, died at his home in
Brooklyn, June 14, 1921. He was born in 1853. He made more than 10,000 pen-and-
ink drawings which appeared in various publications, and at the time of his death was
working on a series of water colors reminiscent of his boyhood days. He was also a
poet and writer of art and literary reviews.
BURLIN, MRS. NATALIE CURTIS.— A painter, and wife of the painter, Paul Burlin,
died in Paris, October 23, 1921. She was a sister of the portrait painter, Constance
Curtis.
CHAMBERS, FANNY MUNSELL.— An illustrator, died August 27, 1920. She was born
in Brooklyn, N. Y., and was a pupil of the Chicago Art Institute and Art Students'
League of New York. She was an associate member of the Society of Illustrators.
She illustrated "Saints Progress" by Galsworthy, and made cover designs for many
magazines.
COADY, ROBERT T. — A painter and formerly editor of "The Soil," an art magazine, died
at his home in Brooklyn, January 6, 1921. He was born in New York in 1881, and
studied painting in Paris.
COHEN, HARRY. — A painter, died suddenly at his home in New York City, August
22, 1921. He was born in 1891.
COLL. JO'SEPH CLEMENT.— An illustrator, died at the Presbyterian Hospital, Phila-
delphia, October 19. 1921. _ He was born in Philadelphia, July 2, 1881, and began his
career in 1900 on The Chicago American. He illustrated stories by A. Conan Doyle
and Sax Rohmer, and was frequently represented in important magazines.
CONANT, LUC^' SCARBOROUGH.— A painter and teacher, died in Boston, January
2, 1921. She was born in Brooklyn, Conn., in 1867, and studied art in Boston and
Paris. She was a member of the Copley Society, 1892; Boston Water Color Club,
Philadelphia Water Color Club,_ and Boston Society of Arts and Crafts. In 1919-20
she gave courses at the University of California, Berkeley, in dramatic art, and in the
designing and directing of pageants.
CONVERSE, EDMUND COGSWELL.— An art collector, died at Pasadena, Cal., April 4,
1921. He was born in 1849.
CORSON, CHARLES SCHELL.— A painter, died June 18, 1921. He was a member of
the Art Club of Philadelphia. In 1915 and 1917 he was awarded honorable mention
by the Art Club of Philadelphia.
COXE, MARY BOWMAN.— A painter, died in Providence, R. I., October 16, 1921.
At the time of her death she was connected with the Rhode Island School of Design.
She had formerly tauglit at the Art Students' League of Buffalo.
DAVIS, MRS. CORNELIA CASSADY.— A painter, died at her home in Cincinnati,
December 23, 1920. She was born at Cleves, Ohio, December 18, 1870, and was a
pupil of the Cincinnati Art Academy under Lvitz, Noble and Duveneck. Slie was an
honorary member of the Cincinnati Woman's Art Club. Her awards included the
fourth prize in the Osborne competition. New York, 1906; first prize, Ohio Suffrage
poster. 1912. She is represented by "Portrait of President William McKinley" in
Westminster Central Hall, London; "The Hopi Indian Snake Ceremony," El Tovar
Gallery, Grand Canyon, Arizona.
225
226 OBITUARIES
DAVIES, DAVID. — A painter, died suddenly in the La Salle Station, Chicago, Septem-
ber 20, 1921. He was born in 1876.
DEIGENDESCH, HERMAN F.— A painter, etcher and teacher, died at Southampton,
Pa., May 9, 1921. He was born in Philadelphia, in 1858, and was a pupil of the
Munich Academy. For many years he was an instructor at the School of Industrial
Art in Philadelphia. He was a member of the Philadelphia Society of Etchers.
DEXTER. WILSON C— An illustrator, was killed in New York City, by an "L" train
on February 6, 1921. He was born in 1881.
EARLE, LAWRENCE CARMICHAEL.— A painter, died at his home at Grand Rapids.
November 20, 1921. He was born in New York City, November 11, 1845, and studied
in Munich, Florence and Rome. He was an Associate of the National Academy of
Design, and a member of the American Water Color Society; Artists' Fund Society;
Art Institute of Chicago (honorary) ; and the New York Water Color Club. He was
represented in the Art Institute of Chicago, and in the Chicago National Bank. He
made a specialty of portraits.
EDDY, AUGUSTUS.— A painter, died in Paris during the summer of 1921. He was
born in 1851. He studied art in Paris, and had lived there since 1909.
EIDLITZ, CYRUS L. W.— An architect, died suddenly at his summer home at South-
ampton, L. I., October 5, 1921. He was born in New York in 1853, and studied in
Switzerland and Germany. Among the buildings he designed were the Buffalo Public
Library, and the Bar Association, Washington Life and Liberty Bank, and the Civil
Engineer House in New York.
EVERETT, MRS. CAROLINE MILLS.— A portrait painter and writer, died in the
American Hospital in Paris, July 14, 1921. She was the author of "The House Oppo-
site" and "The Privilege of Pain."
FRY, MRS. GEORGIA TIMKEN.— A painter, and wife of the painter John H. Fry, died
in Peking, China, September 8, 1921. She was born in St. Louis in 1864,
and was a oupil of Harry Thompson, Aime Morot, Schenck and Cazin in Paris. She
was a member of the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors; Society
of New York Artists; Society of Women Artists. She is represented by "Return of
the Flock" at the Boston Art Club. She made a specialty of landscapes with sheep.
HALLETT, HENDRICKS A.— A painter, died at his home in Boston, March 17, 1921.
He was born at Charlestown, Mass., in 1847, and studied in Antwerp and Paris. He
was well known for his pictures of various types of ships and notable events. He was
a member of the Boston Art Club and the Boston Society of Water Color Painters.
He was awarded a bronze medal at the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanics' Associa-
tion, Boston, 1892.
HART, MRS. MARY THERESA.— A painter, and widow of artist James M. Hart, died
at her summer home at Lakeville, Conn., September 19, 1921. She was born in _ 1829.
She was also an educator, and in 1906 was a member of the Board of Education in
Brooklyn. ••' i 1 in^T^
HEALY, AARON AUGUSTUS.— An art collector, died suddenly at his home at Cold
Snrine- Harbnr-on-the-Hudson, September 28, 1921. He was born in Brooklyn. June
26, 1850. His aid to Italian immigrants caused the King of Italy to make him a
Knight of the Crown of Italy. For twenty-five years he was the President of the
Board of Trustees of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, and it was under
his direction that the institute made such progress. He was a member of the Muni-
cipal Art Commission and a director of the Brooklyn Academy of Music, and a mem-
bef of the National Arts, Century, Rembrandt, Hamilton and City Clubs.
HEINE, F. W. — A painter and founder of the Heine Art School of Milwaukee, died
August 27. 1921. He was born in Leipzig, Germany, in 1845, and studied art in that
country. He came to America in 1885.
HENDERSON, MRS. JEANIE H. REID.— A painter, died in London, September 15,
1921. 'She was born in 1835.
HUNEKER, JAMES GIBBON'S.— A well-known critic of music, drama, art and literature,
died at his home in Brooklyn, February 9, 1921. He was born in Philadelphia in
1860. He was the author of numerous books and had been connected with the New
\'ork Recorder, Advertiser, Sun, Times and World.
KERIGAN, MRS. MILDRED ANDERSON POST.— A painter and illustrator, died in
July, 1921. She was born in Wayne, Pa., in 1892, and was a pupil of Walter Everett
and Thornton Oakley. She was a member of the Philadelphia Water Color Club.
KLUTH, ROBERT. — A marine and landscape painter, died at his home in Brooklyn,
September 23, 1921. He was born in Germany in 1854, and came to America at the
age of seven years. He studied art in America and in Germany and Norway. _ He
was one of the founders of the Brooklyn Society of Artists. Many of his paintings
of Norwegian fjords were purchased by Andrew Carnegie for public libraries.
KURZ, LOUIS.- — A mural painter and one of the founders of the Chicago Art Institute,
died at his home in Chicago, March 21, 1921. He was born in Austria in 1834, and
.came to America in 1848. He fought for the North in the Civil War, and was a
personal friend of Lincoln. His sketches of the Civil War were the first to be issued
after the close of the conflict.
LAUB, ALBERT F.— The secretary of the Buffalo Fine Arts Academy, the Albright Art
Gallery, died at his home in Buffalo, March 7, 1921. He was born at Buffalo May 28,
1870. He was also a director of the Buffalo Fine Arts School.
OBITUARIES 227
LAUX, AUGUST. — A landscape and fresco painter, died at his home in Brooklyn, Jiily
21, 1921. He was born in Bavaria in 1853, and .came to America in 1863. He was
a pupil of the National Academy of Design.
LONGFELLOW, ERNEST WADSWORTH.— A painter, and son of the poet, Henry W.
Longfellow, died in Boston, November 23, 1921. He was born in Cambridge in 1845,
and was a pupil of Hebert, Bonnat and Couture in Paris. He was a member of the
Century Association. He is represented by "Marine" in the Boston Museum of Fine
Arts.
McAULIFFE, JAMES J.— A painter, died August 22, 1921, at Medford, Mass. He was
born in St. Johns, N. F., in 1848, and studied at the Boston Art ^School. He made
a specialty of religious and marine subjects. His "Ecce Homo" and seventy-five
life-size figures are in the Roman Catholic Cathedral in St. Johns; he is also repre-
sented by "The Constitution," in the P'arlin Library, Everett.
McDON'OUGH, CHARLES J.— An art dealer, died in New York City, March 14, 1921.
McFADDEN, JOHN HOWARD.— A collector of paintings, died at Atlantic City, Feb-
ruary 16, 1921. He was born in 1851. For several years he was president of the
Philadelphia Art Club.
MEEKEL, CHARLES HAVILAND.— A dealer in stamps and writer on philatelic sub-
jects, died suddenly at his home at Bethlehem, Pa., October 14, 1921. He was born
in 1863. He founded various periodicals devoted to news of stamp collecting, and
helped to organize the American Philatelic Society in 1886.
MIFFLIN, LLOYD. — A portrait painter and author of lyrics, died at his home at Nor-
wood, Lancaster Co., Pa., July 16, 1921. He was born in 1846. He had published
more than 500 sonnets.
MILLER, ELEAZER H.— A painter and etcher, died at his home in Washington, D. C,
April 4, 1921. He was born at Shepherdstown, W. Va., in 1831, and was a pupil
of Gibson and of Healy, and was the first artist of national reputation to make his
home in Washington. He was a member of the Society of Washington Artists and
of the Washington Water Color Club. He is represented by "Moonrise and Twilight,"
Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington.
MITCHELL, GUERNSEY.— A sculptor, died in Rochester, N. Y., August 1, 1921. He
was a graduate of the Ecole des Beaux Arts, in Paris, and made his home in that
city for twenty-one years. Among his best known works are the statue of Martin B.
Anderson, former president of the University of Rochester, which is at the Univer-
sity; "Aurora," "The Young Botanist" and "David and Goliath.
MOSENTHAL, ELIZABETH.— A designer and illuminator, died suddenly at Segovia,
Spain, July 29, 1921. F'or many years she was an instructor at the New York School
of Applied Design for Women, and was a member of the Board of Directors of the
New York Society of Craftsmen.
MURPHY, JOHN FRANCIS, N.A.— A noted landscape painter, died at Roosevelt Hos-
.pital, New \ork, January 29. 1921. He was born in Oswego, N. Y., in 1853. In 1885
he was made an Associate of the National Academy of Design, and in 1887 he was
made an Academician. He was a member of the Society of American Artists, 1901;
American Water Color Society; Salmagundi Club; Rochester Art Club; Brooklyn Art
Club, 1900; Lotos Club. His awards included the second Hallgarten prize, National
Academy of Design, 1885; Webb prize, Society of American Artists, 1887; medal,
Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893; Evans prize, American Water Color Society,
1894; gold medal, Philadelphia Art Club, 1889; honorable mention, Paris Exposition,
1900; silver medal, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901; gold medal, Charleston
Exposition, 1902; Carnegie prize. Society of American Artists, 1902; silver medal, St.
Louis Exposition, 1904; Inness gold medal, National Academy of Design, 1910; Eyans
prize, Salmagundi Club, 1911; silver medal, Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco,
1915. He is represented by "October" in the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington;
"Neglected Lands," Buffalo Academy of Fine Arts; "The Clearing," Worcester Art
Museum; "The Path to the Village" and "Indian Summer," National Gallery, Wash-
ington; "The Hill Top," Chicago Art Institute; "The Old Barn," Metropolitan Museum
of Art, New York; "Afternoon Lights on the Hills," Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh;
"■September Noon," Montclair Art Museum; "After the Rain" and "Landscape,"
Brooklyn Institute Museum; "Evening," Rhode Island School of Design, Providence,
NELSON, MRS. WILLIAM R.— Widow of the founder of the Kansas City Art Institute,
died at her home in Kansas City, October 5, 1921. She was always much interested
in the development of the Art Institute.
O'LEARY, ANGELA.— A painter, died in Providence, R. I., Oct. 2, 1921. She was born
at Providence, October 29, 1879, and was a member of the Providence Art Club and
of the Providence Water Color Club. She had studed in England, and later on the
Continent, and painted landscaiie and genre pictures, mainly in water colors.
PARKHURST, HENRY LANDON.— A painter and instructor in architecture at Pratt
Institute, died in New York City. January 31, 1921. He was born at Oswego, N. Y.,
in 1867, and studied at the New "York Academy of Fine Arts. He was also formerly
instructor in architecture at Cooper Union and in the New York School of Applied
Design for Women, and was a member of the New York Sketch Club.
228 OBITUARIES
PEABODY, JOHN ENDICOTT.— The president of the Boston Society of Arts and Crafts,
died at his home at Brookline, Mass., August 17, 1921. He was born in Salem,
Mass., January 6, 1853, and was educated at Cambridge. He was for three years
one of the park commissioners of Brookline, ana was keenly interested in art and
literature. He was a member of the Copley Society of Boston.
PECK, ORIN. — A painter, died in Los Angeles, Cal., January 20, 1921. He was born
in Delaware County, N. Y., in 1860. He was in charge of the artistic work
planned for the ranch of W. R. Hearst in northern California, and had painted several
portraits of the Hearst family. He was awarded a gold medal at the Columbian Ex-
position, Chicago, 1893, for his *'Scene in the Garden of the Santa Barbara Mission."
PEIX, CHARLES H. — For the past eight years connected with the John Levy Galleries,
died February 1, 1921, at his home in New York City. He was born in 1874.
PERRIE, BERTHA EVERSF'IELD.— A painter and teacher, died at Gloucester, Mass.,
September 16, 1921. She was a member of the Washington Water Color Club, the
Society of Washington Artists, Art Students' League of New York, and the Penn-
sylvania Society of Miniature Painters. She was awarded the second Corcoran
prize, Washington Water Color Club, 1900; first Corcoran prize, Washington Water
Color Club, 1904. For twenty years she was a teacher of water color at the Corcoran
Gallery of Art in Washington, and also taught in many private schools.
PETERS, SAMUEL T. — A collector of Chinese paintings, porcelains and jades, died at
his home at Islip, L. I., October 21, 1921. He was born in 1854. He was a trustee
of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and had presented the Museum with two collec-
tions of jades.
PIERSON', ALDEN. — An illustrator and art director of "The American Magazine," died
May 3, 1921, in New York City. He was born in Baltimore in 1874, and was a
member of the Society of Illustrators.
REINHARDT, HENRY.— A well-known art dealer, died at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel, New
York, January 13, 1921. He was born in 1858, and had been prominent in art circles
for thirty-five years. He had galleries in Milwaukee, Chicago, New York and Paris,
and was instrumental in organizing and building some of the best known art museums
in the West. Through him the Toledo Museum of Art acquired the famous "Moon-
light," by R. A. Blakelock. During the Great War he donated an ambulance to the
American Ambulance Service in France, and turned his galleries in Paris over to the
French Red Cross. He was a member of the Lotos Club of New York.
RICHARDS, FREDERICK THOMPSON.— A cartoonist, illustrator and writer, died sud-
denly of heart disease at his home in Philadelphia, July 8, 1921. He was born in
Philadelphia, May 27, 1864, and was a pupil of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts under Eakins and E. B. Bensell; and also studied at the Art Students' League
of New York. He was a member of the Philadelphia Sketch Club, the Fellowship
of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and of the Players Club. He had
been on the staff of "Life" since 1888, and had made cartoons for the New York
Herald, Times, and Philadelphia North American. He was the author of "Color
Prints from Dickens" and "The Blot Book."
ROGERS, MARY.— A painter, died in New York City, August 26, 1920. She was born
in Pittsburgh in 1882, and was a pupil of Robert Henri, and of Simon and Menard
in Paris. She was a member and also a director of the Society of Independent
Artists.
ROHL-SMITH, MRS. SARA.— The widow of the Danish-American sculptor, Carl Rohl-
Smith, died in Copenhagen, Denmark, June 19, 1921.
SATTIG, VIOLET MILLER.— A painter, died September 18, 1920. She was a member
of the New Haven Paint and Clay Club.
SEEBOLD, W. E.— An art dealer, died June 25, 1921. He was born in Hanover, Ger-
many, in 1833, and came to America while a young man. He fought for the Con-
federacy during the Civil War. For over half a century he had been a prominent
dealer in New Orle(ans, and in his galleries were held exhibitions of work by all the
local artists and by many visiting artists of note. He was the last survivor of the Art
Union, the first association of artists in New Orleans. His son H. deB. Seebold, and
his daughter, Mrs. Andres Molinary, are both recognized painters.
SCHMITT, HENRY.— A sculptor, died in Buffalo, N. Y., May 1, 1921. He was born
in Germany, and came to America in 1884. Most of his work is in Roman Catholic
churches in Buffalo.
SEE, MILTON. — An architect, died October 27, 1920. at his home at Mount Vernon,
N. Y. He was born in 1854, and for many years was a member of the firm of
Cady, Bird & See. Among the important buildings for which Mr. See's firm pre-
pared plans were the original Metropolitan Opera House, the Museum of Natural His-
tory and the Presbyterian Hospital. He also helped in designing many churches.
SHUMAN, ANNA M. — A painter and teacher, died February 26, 1919. She was born
in Pittsburgh in 1890, and was a pupil of Hawthorne and Dow. She was a member
of the Pittsburgh Art Association.
SMILLIE, GEORGE HENRY, N.A.— A landscape painter, died at his home at Bronxville,
New York, November 10, 1921. He was a son of the engraver, James Smillie. and a
brother of the etcher and painter, James D. Smillie. He was a pupil of James M. Hart.
In 1864 he became an associate of the National Academy of Design, and became an
Academician in 1882. He was also a member of the American Water Color Society,
Century Association and Lotos Club. His awards included a first prize from the
American Art Association, New York, 1885; bronze medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904;
silver medal, American Art Society, Philadelphia, 1907. He is represented by "A
OBITUARIES 229
Long Island Farm" and "Autumn on Massachusetts Coast," Corcoran Gallery, Wash-
ington; "Light and Shadow Along Shore," Union League Club, Philadelphia; "Autumn
Afternoon," Metropolitan Mviseum, New York; "From West Mountain, near Ridge-
field," Lotos Club, New York; "Hillside," Rhode Island School of Design, Provi-
dence; "A Group of Cedars," Public Library, Erie, Pa.
SMITH, EDWARD ROBINSON.— A painter and sculptor, died at Stamford, Conn.,
March 21, 192L He was born at Beyrout, Syria, in 1854, and was a pupil of William
Rimmer and Duveneck. He was a former librarian of Avery Library, Columbia Univer-
sity, and was a member of the New York Architectural League, New York Municipal
Art Society, American Numismatic Society, and American Library Association.
SMITH, LETTA CRAPO.— A painter, died in Boston, March 17, 1921. She was born
in Flint, Mich., in 1862, and was a pupil of Chase in New York; Julius Rolshoven,
George Hitchcock and Julian Academy in Paris. She was awarded a bronze medal
at the St. Louis Exposition in 1904.
SPRINGER, CHARLES HENRY.— A painter, craftsman, sculptor, illustrator, designer
and teacher, died in May, 1920. He was born in Providence, R. I., July 15, 1857.
He was a pupil of the Art Students' League of New York, Hugo Breul in Provi-
dence, F. W. Freer in New York, and studied architecture in Providence. He was a
member of the Providence Art Club and of the Rhode Island School of Design. He
made a specialty of woodcarving and furniture design.
STEVENSON, MRS. CORNELIUS.— Curator and lecturer of the Museum and School
of Industrial Art, died in Philadelphia, November 14, 1921. She was the first
president of the Society of Little Gardens, and was greatly interested in art matters.
S\'LVESTER, HARRY ELLIOTT.— A painter and wood engraver, died in a hospital in
Boston, February 22, 1921. He was born at North Easton, Mass., in 1860, and was
a pupil of John A. Eraser and Childe Hassam; engraving under George E. Johnson.
He was a member of the Boston Art Club, and is represented in the Carnegie Insti-
tute, Pittsburgh.
SYMMONDS, CHARLES S.— An art patron, died at his home in Utica, N. Y., Septem-
ber 21, 1921. He was the president of the Utica National Bank.
TAYLOR, F'RANK WALTER.— An illustrator, died in Philadelphia during the summer
of 1921. He was born in Philadelphia in 1874, the son of Frank H. Taylor, and was
a pupil of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and studied in Paris. He
was a member of the Fellowship of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts;
Society of Illustrators, and Philadelphia Water Color Club. His awards included a
medal of honor, Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, 1915. His best known
work included illustrations for "Fisherman's Luck," by Henry Van Dyck; "Marriage
a la Mode," by Mrs. Humphrey Ward; "The Iron Woman," by Margaret Deland.
TAYLOR, HORACE. — A newspaper illustrator and water colorist, died at Swamp Lake,
Wis., September 18, 1921. He was born in 1864.
THAYER, ABBOTT HANDERSON, N.A.— A painter, writer and discoverer of camou-
flage, died at his home at Monadnock, N. H., May 29, 1921. He was born in Boston
in 1849, and was a pupil of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris under Gerome and
Lehmann. He was made an Associate of the National Academy of Design in 1898,
and an Academician in 1901, and was a member of the Society of American Artists,
1879; National Academy of Arts and Letters; Societa delle Belle Arti Denominata de
San Luca, Rome. He is represented by "Florence Protecting the Arts," mural deco-
ration in Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Me.; Paintings — "Young Woman" and "Win-
ter Sunrise on Monadnock," Metropolitan Museum, New York; "Caritas," Museum
of Fine Arts, Boston; "Winged Figure," Smith College, Northampton, Mass.; "Por-
trait of a Lady," Cincinnati Museum; ten oil paintings and one water color. National
Gallery, Washington; "Portrait of a Young Girl" and "Roses," Worcester Art Mu-
seum. Discoverer of the laws of concealing coloration in the animal kingdom which
gave rise to the system of camouflage in military practice.
THEVENAZ, PAUL. — A painter, died at the Greenwich Hospital, New York, July 6,
1921. He was born at Geneva, Switzerland. February 22, 1891, and was of Italian
descent. He came to the United States at the age of twenty-six, and served in the
American Army during the World War.
TOWNSEND, JAMES BLISS.— An art critic and editor of "The American Art
News," died suddenly at his home in New York City, March 10, 1921. He was born
in^ New York in 1855. As an art critic he had been connected with the New York
World and Herald and had also written for various other publications.
TURNER, EMERY S. — At one time head of the Anderson Art Galleries, died at Saranac
Lake, N. Y., October 11, 1921. He was born in 1841 and was a major in the Federal
Army during the Civil War.
UPTON, ETHELWYN.— A painter, died in the spring of 1921. She was a member of
the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors.
WATROUS, MRS. ELIZABETH SNOWDEN NICHOLS.— A painter and writer, and
wife of the painter, Harry W. Watrous. died at her home in New York City, October
4, 1921. She was born in New York in 1858, and studied with Henner and Carolus-
Duran in Paris. She was a member of the New York Woman's Art Club, the Pen
and Brush Club, Society of Women Painters and 'Sculptors, the Professional Women's
League. She was the author of two novels, "Ti" and "It."
230 OBITUARIES
WEBER, CARL.— A landscape painter, died at Ambler, Pa., January 24, 1921. He was
born at Philadelphia in 1850, and was a pupil of his father, Paul Weber, Becker in
Frankfort, Steinle in Vienna, Raupp in Munich, and also studied in Paris. He was a
member of the Philadelphia Artists' Fund Society; American Art Society, Philadel-
phia; Philadelphia Art Club. His awards included medal, London, 1873; hon. men-
tion, Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893; hon. mention, Atlanta Exposition, 1895;
gold medal for water .color, American Art Society, Philadelphia.
WHEELER, MAR^' C— A painter, died in March, 1920. She was a member of the
Providence Art Club.
WILLET, WILLIAM. — A well-known mural painter, craftsman, lecturer and writer,
died at his home in Philadelphia, March 29, 1921, He was born in New York City
in 1868, and was a pupil of Mechanics' and Tradesmen's Institute, New York; Van
Kirk, Chase, John La Farge; studied in France and England. He was a member of
the Mural Painters; New York Architectural League, 1910; Boston Society of Arts
and Crafts; St. Dunstan's Club, Boston; Fellowship of the Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts; Philadelphia Alliance. His work included: Sanctuary Window, West
Point Military Academy; window in Proctor Hall, Princeton; Mather Memorial,
Trinity Cathedral, Cleveland; Guthrie Memorial, St. John's Church, Locust Valley,
L. I.; St. Paul's Cathedral, Pittsburgh; Harrison Memorial, Cavalry Church, Ger-
mantown; mural paintings in St. Alvernia's Convent, Pittsburgh; Presbyterian Hospital
Chapel, Pittsburgh; Thaw Memorial, Third Presbyterian Church, Pittsburgh; memorial
in Greenwood Cemetery Chapel, New York; Trinity Church, Syracuse; St. Paul's
Church, Halifax, N. S. He was the author of "Stained Glass in Our Churches" and
other articles on stained glass.
WILSON, MELVA BEATRICE.— A sculptor, mural painter, poet and lecturer, died in
New York City, June 2, 1921. She was born in Madiscn, Ind., in 1866. Her work
is in the Farley Memorial Chapel at Calvary Cemetery, L. I., N. Y., and in the St.
Louis Cathedral, St. Louis, Mo.
Art Magazines
A. for annual; M. for monthlies; W. for weeklies; Q. for quarterlies.
Single Yearly
Academy Notes (Semi-A.) — Cornelia B. Sage Quinton, Editor; Albright
Art Gallery, Buffalo, N. Y $0.75
All the Arts. — ^Official organ of Detroit Orchestral Association, N. T. Corey,
Editor-in-chief; 292 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich
American Architect, The (Fortnightly). — William H. Crocker, Editor;
243 West 39th St., New York .' 35 6.00
American Art Annual. — American Federation of Arts, Publishers, 1741
New York Ave., Washington, D, C 7.50
American Art News (W., October 15 to July 1; M., July 15 to September
15). Peyton Boswell, Editor, 786 Sixth Ave., New York 15 4.00
American Art Student.— W. W. Hubbard, Editor; 21 Park Row, New
New York, N. Y 25 2.50
American Institute of Architects, Journal of the (M.) — 313 East 23rd St.,
New York 50 5.00
American Magazine of Art (M.), Organ of The American Federation of
Arts. — Leila Mechlin, Editor; 1741 New \brk Ave., Washington, D. C. .25 2.50
Antiques (M.). — Homer Eaton Keyes, Editor; 683 Atlantic Ave., Boston,
Mass ...
Architect and Engineer (M.) — Frederick W. Jones, Editor; The Architect
and Engineer, Inc., Publishers, 627 Foxcroft Bldg., San Francisco, Cal. .50 2.50
Architectural Forum (M.). — A. J. MacDonald, Editor; Rogers & Hanson
Co., Publishers; 142 Berkeley St., Boston, Mass 60 6.00
Architectural Record (M.).— Michael A. Mikkelsen, Editor; 119 West
40th St., New York 35 3.00
Architecture (M.). — J. B. Carrington, Editor; Scribner's, Publishers, 599
Fifth Ave., New York 1.00 5.00
Architecture and Building (M.).— W. F. Comstock, Managing Editor;
William T. Comstock Co., Publishers, 23 Warren St., New York 30 3.00
Art and Archaeology (M.). — Mitchell Carroll, Editor; Archaeological In-
stitute, The Octagon, Washington, D. C 50 5.00
Art in America and Elsewhere (Bi-M.). — Frederic Fairchild Sherman, Edi-
tor and Publisher, 8 West 47th St., New York. 1.00 6.00
Arts, The (Ten times a year). — Hamilton Easter Field, Editor and Pub-
lisher, Ardsley Studios, 110 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, N. Y 40 3.00
Arts and Decoration (M.). — Matlack Price, Editor; Joseph A. Judd Pub-
lishing Co., Inc., Publishers; 50 West 47th St., New York 40 5.00
Bookplate Booklet (Q.).— Alfred Fowler, Editor; 17 Board of Trade Bldg.,
Kansas City, Mo 50 2.00
Bookplate Chronicle (M.). — Alfred Fowler, Editor; 17 Board of Trade
Bldg., Kansas City, Mo 10 1.00
Boston Museum of Fine Arts Bulletin (Bi-M.). — B. I. Oilman, Editor;
Huntington Ave., Boston 10 .50
Brooklyn Museum Quarterly. — W. H. F'ox, Editor, Eastern Parkway,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y
Buffalo Magazine of Arts (M.). — Carl L. Bredemeier, Editor; 56 Bedford
Ave., Buffalo, N. Y 20 2.00
Builder, The (M.).— J. B. Johnston, Editor; Lyceum Bldg., Pittsburgh, Fa. .50 3.00
Building Review (M.). — Harris Allen and Henry H. Gutterson, Editors,
50 Main St., San Francisco, Calif 25 2 . 00
Chicago Art Institute Bulletin (M., September to May) 05 .50
Cleveland Museum of Art Bulletin (Ten times a year). — F. A. Whiting,
Editor, East Boulevard, Wade Park, Cleveland, Ohio 10 1.00
College Art Association Bulletin (Q.). — Prof. John Shapley, Brown Uni-
versity, Providence, R. 1 1.00 3.00
Decorative Furnisher (M.). — James P. Rome, Editor; T. A. Cawthra &
Co., Publishers, 381 Fourth Ave., New York, N'. Y 30 3.00
Detroit Institute of Arts Bulletin (M., except June to October). — Clyde
H. Burroughs, Editor; Detroit, Mich ...
El Palacio, Journal of the Museum of New Mexico (W.). — Paul A. F.
Walter, Editor ; 'Santa Fe, New Mexico 05 2.00
Good Furniture (M.). — Henry W. Frohne, Editor; Dean-Hicks Co., Pub-
lishers, Grand Rapids, Mich 25 3.00
Herron Art Institute Quarterly. — Indianapolis, Ind ...
House and Garden (M.). — Richardson Wright, Editor; Conde Nast and
Co., Publishers, 19 West 44th St., New York 35 3.50
231
232 ART MAGAZINES
Single Yearly
House Beautiful, The (M.).— Charlotte Lewis, Editor; 8 Arlington St.,
Boston, Mass $0.35 $4.00
Industrial Arts Magazine (M.). — Bruce Publishing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. .30 2.50
Jnternational Studio (M.). — Peyton Boswell, Editor, 786 Sixth Avenue,
New York 60 6 . 00
Keramic Studio (M., except July and August, published as single num-
ber).— Keramic Studio Co., Publishers; 543 South Clinton St., Syra-
cuse, N. Y. 50 5.00
Landscape Architecture (Q.). — Landscape Architecture, Inc., Publisher,
Crescent and Mulberry Sts., Harrisburg, Fa 75 3.00
Los Angeles Museum of History, Science and Art Bulletin (Q.) .50
Manual Training Magazine (M.). — Charles A. Bennett, Editor; Manual
Arts Press, Peoria, 111 25 1.50
Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin (M.). — Henry W. Kent, Editor;
New York 20 2.00
Milwaukee Art Institute Bulletin (Eight times a year). — Mrs. William
Mayhew, Editor,' 456 Jefferson St., Milwaukee, Wis 10 .80
Minneapolis Institute of Arts Bulletin (M., October to June). — Minne-
apolis, Minn 10 .75
Municipal Art Society of New York Bulletin (Q.). — Mrs. H. B. Keen,
Secretary; 119 East 19th St., New York, N. Y
Museum Work (Bi-M.). — Organ of American Association of Museums,
Harold L. Madison, Editor, Cleveland Museum of Natural History,
Cleveland; Josephine M. Lansing, Art Editor, Metropolitan Museum,
New York 25 2.00
Museum Journal (Q.). — -University Museum, Philadelphia, Pa 50 2.00
National Architect (M.). — National Architect Co., Publishers, Crozer
Building, Philadelphia. Pa.. 50 5.00
Needle and Bobbin Club Bulletin (Semi-annual). — Richard C. Greenleaf,
Editor, Lawrence, L. I., N. Y 1.50 3 . 00
Newark Museum Bulletin (occasional). — J. C. Dana, Editor; Newark, N. J.
Numismatic Notes and Monographs (M.). — The American Numismatic
Society, West 156th St., New York, N. Y
Numismatist (M.). — Frank G. Duffield, Editor; The American Numismatic
Association, Publishers, Baltimore, Md 15 1.50
Old Time New England (Q.). — Bulletin of the Society for the Preserva-
tion of New England Antiquities; Harrison Gray Otis House, 2 Lynde
St., Boston, Mass
Park and Cemetery and Landscape Gardening (M.). — O. H. Sample,
Editor; Allied Arts Publishing Co., 114 South Carroll St., Madison,
Wis 50 3.00
Pencil Points (M.). — Eugene Clute, Editor; Pencil Points Press, Inc., Pub-
lishers, 1 Madison Ave.. New York 15 1 . 00
Pennsylvania Museum Bulletin (Q.). — Langdon Warner, Editor; Fairmount
Park, Philadelphia, Pa 25 1 . 00
Picture and Gift Journal (M.).— W. W. Raleigh, Manager, 537 S. Dear-
born St., Chicago, 111 20 2.00
Poster (M.).— Roy O. Randall, Editor; 1620 Steger Bldg., 28 East Jack-
son Blvd., Chicago, 111 25 3.00
Print Connoisseur (M.).— W. P. Truesdell, Publisher, 154 East 38th St.,
New York 5.00
Rhode Island School of Design Bulletin (Q.).— L. E. Rowe, Editor;
Providence, R. I ...
Saint Louis Art League Bulletin (Bi-M.). — Syndicate Trust Bldg 25 1.00
St. Louis City Art Museum Bulletin (Q.). — 15
Saint Paul Institute Bulletin (M., Nov. to April). — St. Paul, Minn 10
School Arts Magazine (M., except July and August). — Pedro J. Leraos,
Editor; Davis Press, Inc., Publishers, 25 Foster St., Worcester, Mass. .35 3.00
Smith College Bulletin (A.). — Northampton, Mass
Student's Art Magazine (Bi-M.).— G. H. Lockwood, Publisher; 124 West
Main St., Kalamazoo, Mich 20 1.00
Syracuse (N. Y.) Museum of Fine Arts Bulletin (Q.)
Three Arts Club Journal (M.). — Mrs. A. Elliott Mullinier, Editor; pub-
lished by the Three Arts Club, 250 South 17th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Toledo Museum Bulletin (M.). — George W. Stevens, Editor; Toledo, Ohio .10 .50
Upholsterer and Interior Decorator (M.). — John W. Stephenson. Editor;
Clifford and Lawton, Publishers, 373 Fourth Ave., New York, N. Y. . .30 3.00
Western Architect (M.). — Robert Craik McLean, Editor; Western Archi-
tect, Inc., Publishers, 215 S. Market St., Chicago, 111 50 5.00
Wayside Tales and Cartoons Magazine (M.). — H. H. Windsor, Editor;
6 North Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111 25 3 . 00
Worcester Art Museum Bulletin (Q.). — Raymond Wyer, Worcester, Mass.
ress
List
Daily and weekly papers that devote space to art; all are dailies unless otherwise noted.
Art critic's name is given in parentheses.
ALBANY, N. Y.— Daily and Weekly Herald.
BALTIMORE, MD. — Baltimore Evening Sun (John Oldmixon Lambdin).
BOSTON, MASS.— Herald (Frederick VV. Coburn) ; The Evening Transcript (Wm.
H. Downes) ; Sunday Advertiser (Jean Nutting Oliver); Boston Post (Sidney
Woodward); Christian Science Monitor (Sidney Woodward).
BUFFALO, N. Y.— News (W. F. O'Connell) ; Sunday Times.
BURLINGTON, lA.— Saturday Evening Post (W.) (J. W. Murphy).
CAMDEN, N. J.— Camden Daily Courier (Mrs. Juliet Lit Stern).
CHARLESTON, S. C— Charleston Evening Post.
CHICAGO, ILL.— Chicago Evening Post (Lena M. McCauley) ; The Chicago Tribune
(Eleanor Jewett) ; Chicago Herald and Examiner (Henriette Weber).
CINCINNATI, O. — Cincinnati Enquirer (W. L. Brilmayer; Mrs. Alice C. Swain);
Cincinnati Erie Presse (Carl Pletz) ; Times-Star (Mrs. Mary L. Alexander).
CLEVELAND, O.— Sunday News-Leader (Benjamin Karr) ; Cleveland Plain Dealer
(Jessie C. Glasier).
COLUMBUS, O.— Dispatch (H. E. Cherrington).
DENVER, COL.— Denver News (Mrs. M. R. F. Valle) ; Denver Post; Rocky Mountain
News (Mrs. M. R. F. Valle).
DETROIT, MICH.— Free Press (Mary Humphrey); News (Leonard Lanson Cline) ;
Journal (Ralph Holmes).
HARTFORD, CONN.— Courant (William D. Freer).
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.— News (Adolph Schmuck); Star (Lucille E. Morehouse).
KANSAS CITY, MO.— Kansas City Star (Mrs. Minna Powell).
LAGUNA BEACH, CAL.— Laguna Life (Antony Anderson).
LOS ANGELES, CAL. — Evening Express (Alma May Cook); Times (Antony Ander-
son).
LOUISVILLE, KY.— Herald (C. A. Segner) ; Evening Post (Adele Brandeis).
MILWAUKEE, WIS.— Free Press (Alvin Otis Royse).
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.— Journal; Tribune (Miss Hamblin).
NEWARJv, N. J.— Evening News.
NEW HAVEN, CONN.— The New Haven Evening Register.
NEW ORLEANS, LA.— The Times-Picayune (W.) (Robert Mayfield and Lyle
Saxon).
NEW YORK, N. Y.—
Brooklyn Eagle (Hamilton Easter Field), Eagle Bldg., Brooklyn.
Brooklyn Standard-Union (John Brockway), 292 Washington St., Brooklyn.
Brooklyn Daily Times (Arthur Wakeling), Fourth and Atlantic Aves., Brooklyn.
Evening Mail (Maurice Joy), 25 City Hall PL, Manhattan.
Evening Post (David Lloyd), 20 Vesey St., Manhattan.
Evening World (W. G. Bowdoin), liJS? East 39th St., Brooklyn.
New York Globe (Mrs. G. L. Nelson), 751 Dey St., Manhattan.
New York Herald (Henry McBride), Sun Bldg., 150 Nassau St., Manhattan.
New York Times (Elisabeth L. Gary), Broadway and 42d St., Manhattan.
New York Tribune (Royal Cortissoz), 154 Nassau St., Manhattan.
New ^ork World (Henry Tyrrell), 63 Park Row, Manhattan.
Staats-Zeitung (Julius Krause), P. O. Box 1207, Manhattan.
Sun (T. Ccan), Sun Bldg., Manhattan.
OAKLAND, CAL.— Oakland Tribune (Mrs. Laura Bride Powers).
OMAHA, NEB.— Omaha World-Herald.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.— Item (James J. Wray) ; Philadelphia Gazette-Democrat (Max
Heinrici) ; North American (F. Cresson Schell) ; Philadelphia Inquirer (Bushnell
Dimcnd); Public Ledger (Harvey M. Watts); The Record,
PITTSBURGH, PA.— Dispatch (E. W. Lightner).
PORTLAND, ME.— Evening Express Advertiser (Mrs. Emma Mosley);.
PROVIDENCE, R. I.— Providence Journal (Grace L. Slocum) ; Tribune (Mrs. N. B.
Pettis).
QUINCY, ILL.— The Herald (Helen B. Osborn).
RICHMOND, IND.— The Richmond Item (Esther Griffen White).
ROCHESTER, N. Y.— Post Express (S. B. Sabin) ; Rochester Herald (Howard S.
Ruddy); Times (Annie Croughton).
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.— Argonaut (W.) (Sidney Coryn) ; Bulletin; Chronicle
(Margaret Medbury); News-Letter (W.).
SPRINGFIELD, ILL.— News Record.
SPRINGFIELD, MASS.— Springfield Republican (Louise Mace).
ST. LOUIS, MO.— Globe Democrat (Emily G. Hutchings) ; Post Dispatch; St. Louis
Star (Mary Powell); St. Louis Times (Harry L. Burke).
ST. PAUL, MINN.— Dispatch-Pioneer Press (Arthur L. Wilhelm).
SYRACUSE, N. Y.— Herald.
TOLEDO, O.— Toledo Blade (Harry L. Hewes).
WASHINGTON, D. C— Evening Star (Leila Mechlin).
WILMINGTON, DEL.— Morning News; Star (W.) (Mary Russell).
WORCESTER, MASS.— Worcester Telegram.
233
List of Sales — Season of 1 920- 1 92 1
The words set in heavy face type in the following index of the sales
held during the past season are used in the tabulated list to indicate the
name of the sale.
These lists have been compiled with the co-operation of the various
auction firms. All sales were held in New York City unless otherwise
stated. The record includes 1,395 paintings sold for $50 and over for a
total of $724,852, 106 drawings sold for $25 and over for a total of $49,906,
1,502 prints sold for $25 and over for a total of $212,311, and 260 pieces
of sculpture sold for $50 and over for a total of $82,061.
A. A. A. — American Art Association:
November 17, 18, 1920. — Collection of paintings sold with furniture
and objects of art belonging to Charles of London, for $511,307.
December 2, 3, 1920.— 302 etchings, "The Men of 1830" and other artists,
belonging to John Boland, sold for $3,944.50.
December 10, 1920. — Etchings and engravings, including the collec-
tion of Mrs. Eben Sutton of Baltimore.
December 10, 1920. — 63 modern etchings after famous paintings from the
estate of Helen C. Bostwick sold for $2,305.
January 20, 21, 1921. — 167 paintings collected by the late JuHus E. French,
of Cleveland, Ohio; John G. Holmes, of Pittsburgh, Pa.; Helen C.
Bostwick, and from the collections of Mrs. F. S. Smithers and a
New York collector, deceased; sold for $139,240.
January 27, 1921, — 71 paintings and pastels by the late Hilaire Germain
Edgar Degas, the private collection of Jacques Seligman, of Paris,
sold for $226,800.
January 27, 28, 29, 1921. — Sculpture and paintings from the collection of
the late Henry C. Lawrence, sold with objects of art for $451,057.50.
February 3, 1921. — 91 paintings from the collections of Martin Beck;
Albert E. Smith; Mrs. William H. Burgess; Fernand Goossens, Pro-
fessor of Fine Arts, University of Brussels ; Charles Prentiss Noyes ;
and from the estates of Edward Wasserman, of New York, and
Royal C. Taft, of Providence, R. L, sold for $88,855.
February 3, 4, 5, 1921. — Oriental paintings and sculpture sold with objects
of art, belonging to Yamanaka and Company, for $100,017.50.
February 10, 11, 12, 1921. — Rare Japanese color prints belonging to Carl
Schraubsfadter sold for $20,474.50.
February 14, 1921. — 88 old and modern paintings belonging to Radcliffe
Baldwin, Edwin H. Fricke, and from the estate of Mary Hutchinson
and from other private owners, sold for $7,457.50.
February 16, 1921. — Italian paintings and sculpture sold with objects of
art from the collection of Luigi Orselli for $170,532.50.
February 17, 1921. — 113 paintings belonging to Fernand Goossens, Pro-
fessor of Fine Arts, University of Brussels, and from the estate of
Royal Taft and from other estates and private owners, sold for
$3,958.50.
February 24, 1921. — 66 paintings by old and modern masters from the
collections of Fernand Goossens, Professor of Fine Arts, University
Brussels; Col. Leon Ost'errcith, of Antwerp; Harriet Williams, J. S.
Aron, V. Winthrop Newman, Victor Harris, and from the estate of
Mary A. Robbins, and from other estates and private owners, sold for
$28,550.
234
LIST OF SALES 235
March 7, 1921. — 66 paintings belonging to Fernand Goossens, Professor
of Fine Arts, University of Brussels, other private collectors, and
from the estate of Mrs. Franklin Bartlett, sold for $4,750.50.
March 9, 10, 1921. — 444 etchings, the collection of Trowbridge Hall, of
New York City, sold for $20,180.
March 21, 1921. — Mezzotints printed in colors and drawings belonging
to Mrs. Lucille Flanagan, Trowbridge Hall, Eleanor Fitzgibbons,
Arthur Whitney, a New York collector, and by order of Richard Ely,
Armond Apol, and from the estate of Col. Leon Osterreith, sold for
$6,982.
March 29, 1921. — 98 paintings belonging to W. G. Peckham, of Westfield,
N. J., sold for $11,405.
April 5, 1921. — Ancient paintings and sculpture sold with objects of art
from the collection of Senor Laureano Medina, of Spain, for $5,084.
April 13, 14, 15, 16, 1921. — Paintings and sculpture sold with objects of art
from the Cattadori Art Galleries for $114,054.50
April 19, 1921. — 51 paintings, the works of Alexander Harrison, N.A.,
and his brother, Birge Harrison, N.A., sold with one piece of sculp-
ture for $6,505.
April 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 1921.— Spanish paintings and sculpture with ob-
jects of art from the Almoneda Collection, owned by Herbert P.
Weissberger, of Spain, sold for $99,599.50.
G. — Anderson Galleries:
October 30, 1920. — Early American paintings and prints belonging
to Edward A. Housman, of Brookfield Centre, sold for $4,485.50.
November 9, 1920. — Collection of French engravings and drawings of
the XVIII Century belonging to Ellis Parker, sold for $36,465.
November 26, 1920. — Collection of paintings belonging to Walter Kerr
and other private owners and estates, sold for $8,023.
January 14, 1921. — 62 old masters gathered in Europe during the last
year sold for $23,287.50.
January 26, 27, 28, 29, 1921. — Collection of Greek and Roman marbles,
Gothic sculpture, primitive paintings, formed by a well-known
European connoisseur, sold with objects of art for $203,606.
February 3, 1921. — Prints and drawings from the stock of the late
George D. Smith sold for $5,164.
February 4, 1921. — 294 etchings, engravings, drawings and prints,
duplicates from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, selections
from the collections of the late Russell W. Moore, and from
other collections, sold for $4,517.
February 5, 1921. — Paintings from the collection of Emil Pares sold
with furniture and objects of art for $91,671.50.
February 18, 1921. — Paintings, drawings, sculpture, the collection of a
New York gentleman, sold for $51,127.
March 28, 29, 1921. — 282 etchings, the collection of Hcrschel V. Jones,
Minneapolis, Minn., sold for $42,555.50.
March 28, 29, 30, 1921. — Paintings belonging to Richard W. Lehne
sold with antiques for $176,288.
April 5, 1921. — 64 paintings from the collection of Holger Ferlov and
other collections, sold for $3,622.50.
April 18-23, 1921 (Part I). — 2 bronzes sold with furniture and objects
of art belonging to Louis V. Bell, of New York, for $50,006.50.
April 21, 1921 (Part II). — Engravings and drawings, English and
French color prints collected by Louis V. Bell, of New York,
sold for $2,721.50.
April 29, 1921. — 113 paintings, the private collection of the late William
H. Cummings, of Brooklyn, sold for $6,639.
236 LIST OF SALES
May 12, 13, 14, 1921. — Far Eastern paintings and sculpture sold with
rugs and objects of art for $32,909.
May 17, 1921. — 117 paintings by Marsden Hartley sold with 75 by
James N. Rosenberg, for $5,959.50.
May 19, 1921. — Lithographs, paintings, aquatints of coaching, hunt-
ing and racing scenes, belonging to William Brewster, of New York
City, sold for $1,769.25.
May 20, 21, 1921. — Bronzes and sculpture collected by Azeez Khayat, of
New York and Palestine, sold with objects of art and Italian and
French brocades collected by Charles Pollacek, of New York,
sold for $8,168.
Apol — Water color drawings sold by order of Armond Apol, with mezzo-
tints belonging to private collectors, sold for $6,982; American
Art Association, March 21, 1921.
Aron — 66 paintings by old and modern masters from the collection of
J. S. Aron and from other private owners and estates, sold for
$28,550; American Art Association, February 24, 1921.
Baldwin — 68 old and modern paintings belonging to Radcliffe Baldwin
and other private owners and estates, sold for $7,457.50; American
Art Association, February 14, 1921.
Bartlett — 66 paintings from the estate of Mrs. Franklin Bartlett and other
private collectors, sold for $4,750.50; American Art Association,
March 7, 1921.
Beck — 91 paintings owned by Martin Beck and other private owners and
from several estates, sold for $88,855; American Art Association,
February 3, 1921.
Bell, Part I — 2 bronzes sold with furniture and objects of art belonging
to Louis V. Bell, of New York, for $50,006.50; Anderson Gal-
leries, April 18, 23, 1921.
Bell, Part II — Engravings and drawings, English and French color prints
collected by Louis V. Bell, of New York, sold for $2,721.50;
Anderson Galleries, April 21, 1921.
Boland — 302 etchings belonging to John Boland, sold for $3,944.50; Amer-
ican Art Association, December 2, 3, 1920.
Boston Museum — 294 etchings, engravings, drawings, prints, duplicates
from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, selections from the col-
lection of the late Russell Moore and from other collections, sold
for $4,517; Anderson Galleries, February 4, 1921.
Bostwick — 63 modern etchings after famous paintings, from the estate
of Helen C. Bostwick, sold for $2,305 ; American Art Association,
December 10, 1920.
Brewster — Lithographs, paintings, aquatints of coaching, hunting and
racing scenes, belonging to William Brewster, of New York,
sold for $1,769.25; Anderson Galleries, May 19, 1921.
Burgess — Paintings belonging to E. G. Burgess and others sold at the
Fifth Avenue Auction Rooms, December 11, 1920.
Burgess — 91 paintings from the collection of Mrs. William H. Burgess,
and from other collectors and several estates, sold for $88,855;
American Art Association, February 3, 1921.
Cattadori — Paintings and sculpture from the Cattadori Art Galleries, sold
with furniture and other objects of art for $114,054.50; American
Art Association, April 13, 14, 15, 16, 1921.
Charles — Collection of paintings sold with furniture and objects of art
belonging to Charles of London, for $511,307; American Art Asso-
ciation, November 17, 18, 1920.
Cummings — 113 paintings, the private collection of the late William H.
Cummings, of Brooklyn, N. Y., sold for $6,639; Anderson Gal-
leries, April 29, 1921.
LIST OF SALES 237
C^^ster — Paintings from the estate of E. A. Custer and other estates and
private owners, sold at the Fifty-seventh Street Galleries, May
5, 6, 1921.
Ely — Colored engravings sold by order of Richard Ely, with mezzotints
and drawings belonging to private collectors, sold for $6,982;
American Art Association, March 21, 1921.
F. A. A. G. — Fifth Avenue Art Galleries:
November 26, 27, 1920. — 308 paintings, modern and antique.
F. A. A. R. — Fifth Avenue Auction Rooms:
December 11, 1920. — Paintings belonging to E. G. Burgess, Mary A.
Robbins and others.
February 9, 10, 1921. — Paintings from the estates of the late Hon.
Charles Hazen Russell and William A. Warnock, and also from
private consignors.
March 18, 1921. — Paintings from private owners and estates.
April 9, 1921. — Paintings from the estate of John J. Sullivan, with
additions from other estates and owners.
May 7, 1921. — Paintings belonging to Mrs. Anna Cleveland James and
others.
Ferlov — 64 paintings from the collection of Holger Ferlov and other
collections, sold for $3,622.50; Anderson Galleries, April 5, 1921.
Fitzgibbons — Mezzotints and drawings belonging to Eleanor Fitzgibbons
and others sold for $6,979; American Art Association, March 21,
1921.
Flanagan — Mezzotints printed in colors and drawings belonging to Mrs.
Lucille Flanagan and others, sold for $6,982; American Art Asso-
ciation, March 21, 1921.
Fifty-seventh Street Galleries:
February 23, 24, 1921. — Paintings formerly owned by Edwin G. Hodg-
kins and family portraits from the estate of Eugenie A. Heylyn,
Hartford, Conn.
May 5, 6, 1921. — Paintings from the estate of the late E. A. Custer.
French — 167 paintings collected by the late Julius E. French, of Cleve-
land, Ohio; John G. Holmes, of Pittsburgh, Pa.; Helen C. Bost-
wick, and from the collections of Mrs. F. S. Smithers and a New
York collector, deceased, sold for $139,240 ; American Art Asso-
ciation, January 20, 21, 1921.
Fricke — 68 old and modern paintings belonging to Edwin H. Fricke and
other private owners and estates, sold for $7,457.50; American
Art Association, February 14, 1921.
Goossens — 91 paintings from the collection of Fernand Goossens, Pro-
fessor of Fine Arts, University of Brussels, and from other
private collections and from several estates, sold for $88,855;
American Art Association, February 3, 1921.
Goossens — 66 paintings by old and modern masters from the collection
of Fernand Goossens, of Brussels, and from other collections,
sold for $20,180; American Art Association, March 9, 10, 1921.
Goossens — 66 paintings belonging to Fernand Goossens, of Brussels, and
belonging to other collectors and an estate, sold for $4,750.50;
American Art Association, March 7, 1921.
Hall — 444 etchings, the collection of Trowbridge Hall, of New York City,
sold for $20,180; American Art Association, March 9, 10, 1921.
Hall — Mezzotints and drawings belonging to Trowbridge Hall and others
sold for $6,982; American Art Association, March 21, 1921.
Harris — 66 paintings by old and modern masters from the collection of
Victor Harris and from other private owners and estates, sold
for $28,550: American Art Association, February 24, 1921.
238 LIST OF SALES
Harrison — 51 paintings, the works of Alexander Harrison, N.A,, and his
brother, Birge Harrison, N.A., and one piece of sculpture, sold for
$6,505; American Art Association, April 19, 1921.
Hart — Paintings and engravings from the estate of Reginald L. Hart, of
Wayne, Pa., and from other estates, sold at the Henkels Gal-
leries, Philadelphia, March 28, 29, 1921.
Hartley — 117 pictures by Marsden Hartley sold with 75 by James N.
Rosenberg for $5,959.50; Anderson Galleries, May 17, 1921.
Henkels Galleries, Philadelphia:
December 14, 1920. — Collection of early American miniatures and
small oil portraits belonging to Albert Rosenthal, including the
collection of miniatures painted by James P. Smith and belonging
tO' his estate.
March 28, 29, 1921. — Paintings and engravings from the estates of
Charles F. Warwick, late Mayor of Philadelphia; Charles H.
Swan, of Germantown, Pa., and Reginald L. Hart, of Wayne, Pa.
April 11, 12, 1921. — Old miniatures and oil portraits from several
collections with furniture and objects of art sold for $30,000.
Hodgkins — Paintings formerly owned by Edwin G. Hodgkins sold with
family portraits from an estate, at the Fifty-seventh Street Gal-
leries, February 23, 1921.
Holmes — 167 paintings from the estate of John G. Holmes, of Pittsburgh,
Pa., and from other estates and private owners, sold for $139,240;
American Art Association, January 20, 21, 1921.
■Housman — Early American paintings and prints from the collection of
Edward A. Housman, of Brookfield Centre, Conn., sold for
$4,485.50; Anderson Galleries, October 30, 1920.
Hutchinson — 68 old and modern paintings from the estate of Mary
Hutchinson and belonging to private owners, sold for $7,457.50;
American Art Association, February 14, 1921.
James — Paintings belonging to Mrs. Anna Cleveland James and others
•sold at the Fifth Avenue Auction Rooms, May 7, 1921.
Jones — 282 etchings, the collection of Herschel V. Jones, Minneapolis,
Minn., sold for $42,555.50; Anderson Galleries, March 28, 29, 1921.
Kerr — Paintings, the collection of the late Walter Kerr, of East Orange,
N. J., sold with other collections for $8,023 ; Anderson Galleries,
November 26, 1920.
Khayat — Ancient bronzes and paintings collected by Azees Khayat, of
New York, and Haifa, Palestine, sold with objects of art and
Italian and French brocades collected by Charles Pollacek, of
New York, for $8,168; Anderson Galleries, May 20, 21, 1921.
Lawrence — Sculpture and paintings from the collection of the late Henry
C. Lawrence, sold with furniture and objects of art for $451,057.50,
American Art Association, January 28, 1921.
Lehne — Paintings belonging to Richard W. Lehne sold with antiques for
$176,288; Anderson Galleries, March 28, 29, 30, April 1, 2, 1921
Medina — Ancient paintings and sculpture from the collection of Senor
Laureano Medina, of Spain, sold for $5,084; American Art Asso-
ciation, April 5, 1921.
Metzgar — Japanese prints, mainly the work of Hiroshige, belonging to
Judson D. Metzger, sold at the Walpole Galleries, April 4, 5, 1921.
Moore — 294 etchings, engravings, drawings, prints, selections from the col-
lection of the late Russell W. Moore, from the Boston Museum
of Fine Arts and from other collections, sold for $4,517; Ander-
son Galleries, February 4, 1921.
Newman — 66 paintings by old and modern masters from the collection
of V. Winthrop Newman and from other private owners and
estates, sold for $28,550; American Art Association, February 24,
1921.
LIST OF SALES 239
Noyes — 91 paintings from the collection of Charles Prentiss Noyes and
from other private collections and from several estates, sold for
$88,855; American Art Association, February 3, 1921.
Osterreith — 66 paintings by old and modern masters from the collection of
Col. Leon Osterreith, of Antwerp, and other private ow^ners and
estates, sold for $28,550; American Art Association, February
24, 1921.
Osterreith — Mezzotints and draw-ings from the estate of Col. Leon Oster-
reith and from private owners, sold for $6,982 ; American Art Asso-
ciation, March 21, 1921.
Orselli — Italian paintings and sculpture from the collection of Luigi Or-
selli sold with objects of art for $170,532.50; American Art Asso-
ciation, February 16, 1921.
Pares — Paintings from the collection of Emil Pares, sold with furniture
for $91,671 ; Anderson Galleries, February 5, 1921.
Parker — 88 French engravings and drawings of the XVIII Century, the
collection of Ellis Parker, Esq., sold for $36,465; Anderson
Galleries, November 9, 1920.
Peckham — 98 paintings belonging to W. G. Peckham, of Westfield, N. J.,
sold for $11,405, American Art Association, March 29, 1921.
Plaza — Plaza Art Rooms:
October 9, 1920.
October 23, 1920.
November 5, 1920.
November 20, 1920.
January 6, 1921.
Paintings from the estate of Anna Weiler and belonging to
Henry O. Havemeyer, Jr. and others.
Ramsay — Paintings collected by Mrs. C. Sears Ramsay of James River,
Virginia, sold with furniture and objects of art for $29,632;
American Art Association, March 9, 1921.
Robbins — Paintings belonging to Mary A. Robbins and others sold at
the Fifth Avenue Auction Rooms, December 11, 1920.
Robbins — 66 paintings from the estate of Mary A. Robbins and from
other estates and private owners sold for $27,955; American Art
Association, February 24, 1921.
Rockwell, Part V — Japanese paintings and prints collected by George
T. Rockwell, of Cedar Grove, N. J., sold with objects of art for
$2,286; Walpole Galleries, May 4, 5, 1921.
Rosenberg — 75 paintings by James N. Rosenberg, sold with 117 by
Marsden Hartley for $5,959.50; Anderson Galleries, May 17, 1921.
Rosenthal — Collection of early American miniatures and small oil por-
traits belonging to Albert Rosenthal, including the collection of
miniatures painted by James P. Smith, and belonging to his estate,
Henkels Galleries, December 14. 1920.
Ruiz — Paintings and sculpture collected by Senor Luis Ruiz, of Madrid,
Spain, sold with furniture and objects of art for $70,165; Clarke's
Galleries, May 17-21, 1921.
Ruiz, Raimondo — Paintings and sculpture belonging to Senor Raimondo
Ruiz, of Madrid, Spain, sold at the Clarke Galleries, April 4-14, 1921.
Russell — Paintings from the estate of the Hon. Charles Hazen Russell and
another estate and private owners, sold at the Fifth Avenue
Auction Rooms, February 9, 10, 1921.
Schraubstadter — Japanese color prints belonging to Carl Schraubstadter,
sold for $20,474.50; American Art Association, February 10, 11,
12, 1921.
Seligmann — 71 paintings and pastels by the late Hilaire Germain Edgar
Degas, the private collection of Jacques Seligmann, of Paris,
sold for $226,800; American Art Association, January 27, 1921.
240 LIST OF SALES
Smith — Miniatures painted by James P. Smith and belonging to his estate,
sold with a collection of early American miniatures and portraits
belonging to Albert Rosenthal, Henkels, Phila., December 14,
1920.
Smith — 91 paintings from the collection of Albert E. Smith and other col-
lectors and estates, sold for $88,855, American Art Association,
February 3, 1921.
Smith — Prints and drawings from the stock of the late George D. Smith,
sold at the Anderson Galleries, February 3, 1921.
Smith & JafTe:—
May 18, 19, 20, and 21, 1921.— Paintings from the estate of the
Baroness Von , sold with furniture and objects of art.
Smithers — 167 paintings from the collection of Mrs. F. S. Smithers and
other private owners and estates, sold for $139,240, American Art
Association, January 20, 21, 1921.
Sutton — Etchings and engravings, including the collection of Mrs. Eben
Sutton, of Baltimore, Maryland, American Art Association, De-
cember 10, 1920.
Swan — Paintings and engravings from the estate of Charles H, Swan, of
Germantown, Phila., and from other estates, sold at the Henkels
Galleries, March 28, 29, 1921.
Taft — 91 paintings from the estate of Royal C. Taft and from other estates
and private owners, sold for $91,455; American Art Association,
February 3, 1921.
Taft — 113 paintings from the estate of Royal C. Taft and from other
estates and private owners, sold for $3,958; American Art Associ-
ation, February 17, 1921.
Walpole — Walpole Galleries:
January 20, 21, 22, 1921. — 692 Japanese color prints collected by
a distinguished French connoisseur, sold for $72,858.
March 2, 3, 1921. — 331 Japanese color prints, including the collection
of Julio Van Caneghem, sold for $18,495.
April 4, 5, 1921. — Japanese prints, mainly the work of Hiroshige, be-
longing to Judson D. Metzgar.
April 13, 1921. — 309 etchings, engravings, and drawings belonging to
Mrs. Frank J. Sprague, Edgar C. Riebe, the estate of James
Stillman and others.
Warnock — Paintings from the estate of William A. Warnock and from
another estate and private owners, sold at the Fifth Avenue
Auction Rooms, February 9, 10, 1921.
Warwick — Paintings and engravings from the estate of Charles F. War-
wick, late Mayor of Phila., and from other estates, sold at the
Henkels Galleries, Phila., March 28, 29, 1921.
Wasserman — 91 paintings from the estate of Edward Wasserman, of
New York, and from other estates and private owners, sold for
$91,455; American Art Association, February 3, 1921.
Weissberger — Spanish paintings and sculpture from the Almoneda Col-
lection, owned by Herbert P. Weissberger. of Madrid, Spain, sold
with furniture and objects of art for $99,592.50; American Art
Association, April 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 1921.
Whitney — Mezzotints printed in colors and drawings belonging to Arthur
Whitney and others, sold for $6,979; American Art Association,
March 21, 1921.
Williams — 66 paintings from the collection of Harriet Williams and others,
sold for $27,955, American Art Association, February 24, 1921.
Yamanaka — Oriental paintings and sculpture belonging to Yamanaka
& Co., sold by the American Art Association, February 4, 5, 1921.
Paintings, Drawings, Prints and Sculpture
Sold at Auction
Season of 1920-1921
All paintings and pieces of sculpture sold for $50 and over, all prints and drawings
sold for $25 and over are here classified under the name of the artist.
_ Facts are given in the following order: Name of artist, followed by R. A. or N. A.,
indicating member of the Royal Academy of England or National Academy of Design of
the United States; date of birth and death; nationality. On following line, name of
sale (list of which with details will be found on page 234) ; en third line, catalogue
number, title of painting, drawing, print, or piece of sculpture; size in parentheses;
buyer; and price.
Paintings Sold at Auction
Abbey, Edwin Austin, N. A., R. A.; 1852-1911, American.
Feckham, March 29, 1921.
11. Baron Steuben (12^x734), V. Harris $50
Abbott, Lemuel Francis; 1760-1803, British (After).
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
45. Portrait of Lord Nelson (34x251/^), h. Edwards 100
Achenbach, Oswald; 1827-1905, German.
A. A. A., Jan. 20, 1921.
82. The Bay of Naples (28x39), J. Frank 200
Adams, Charles Partridge; 1858- , American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
287. Landscape (40x60), Ellis 70
Adam, Julius; 1852- , German.
Holmes, Tan. 20, 1921.
1. Kittens (5i^x7^), R. H. Wallach 130
Alexander, Francis; 1800-1880, American.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
60. Portrait of Daniel Webster (30x25) 100
Alvarez, Don Luis; 1841-1901, French.
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
61. The Christening (25x47), H. W. Goddard 750
American School, XIX Century.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
42. Landscape (23x28), Dr. A. Kahanoinez 57
American School; XIX Century.
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
83. Panoramic View (10x18) 92
American School, Early.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
69. Charles Gordon Patterson, M.D 70
70. Catherine B. Wainwright (3i^xlH) 70
Andreotti, Frederico; 1847- , Italian.
Rcebling, Jan. 20. 1921.
80. Promenade dans le pare (24^x43 1^), J. M. Heatherton 190
Andalusian School; XVII Century.
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
435. Mater Dolorosa (4i/^x3^), E. T. Hargrove SO
Appel, Charles F.
Clarke, Ian. 12, 1921.
87. Sunset Landscape (15x21), S. A. Powel •. . 60
Asselyn, Jan; 1610-1652, Dutch.
Gocssens, Feb. 17, 1921.
1 04. Landscape (23x28) , J. Phipps 80
241
242 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Atkins, Samuel; 1787-1808, British.
Parker, Nov, 9, 1920.
5. Dutch Boats in a Seascape (14x183^) (water color), Palmer Campbell.. $180
6. Dutch Boats Lowering Sails (14xl8->4) (water color) ISO
7. Dutch Man-of-War (14xl8fO (water color) 175
8. Dutch Man-of-War Leaving Harbor (14x18^4) (water color) 160
Aved, Jacques Andre Joseph; 1702-1766, French.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
52. Portrait of a Gentleman (39i4x31^), H. Edwards 3,000
Averkamp, Hendrik Van; about 1585-1663, Dutch.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
64. Group of Three Men on the Ice (4J4x3^), M. Sloog 60
Backhuysen, Ludolf; 1631-1708, Dutch.
A. G., Tan. 14, 1921.
17. the Fish Wife (10^x10^), F. Klein 615
20. Marine (26^x36^), H. Edwards 120
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Shipwrecked (28x38) , H, H. Smith 100
Ball, Joseph Claude; 1862- , French.
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
158. Making Pickles (36^x29), H. Markam 950
Baker, George, N.A.; 1821-1880, American,
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
13. General Andrew Jackson (4x3 J^) 130
Bakker-Korff, A. H.; 1824-1882, Dutch.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
28. The Pinch of Snuff (8x6^), McDonough Galleries 170
Barbatelli, Bernardino (called Poccetti), School of; XVIII Century, Italian.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
275. Ceiling (96x144), S. F. Carnavan 800
Barker, Samuel.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
886. Flowers (48x34), Mrs. A. Kridel 140
Barker, Wright: XIX Century, British.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
303. Highland Cattle (40x50), McDonough 110
Barosso, Girolamo; 1378-1409, Catalcnian.
Orselli, Feb. 16; 1921.
269. Saint George and the Dragon (52x37), W. R. Hearst 875
Bartolozzi, Francisco; 1727-1815, Italian.
Henkels, April 11, 1921.
26. Memorial Medallion (on ivory) 60
Barye, Antoine Louis; 1795-1875, French.
Wasserman, Feb. 3, 1921.
2. The Bear (103/^x14^) (water color), D. J. R. Ushikubo 260
3. Tiger and His Prey (15^x18^), R. C. & N. M. Vose 300
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
Battoni, Pompeo; 1708-1787, Roman.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
267. Portrait of a Lady (28x24), Mrs. L. D. Armstrong 60
Beale, Mary, 1652-1697, British.
Charles, Nov. 16, 1920.
857. Peahen and Flowers (7^x26), Mrs. Band 60
Beauquesne, Wilfred C; 1847-1913, French.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
45. Scene During the Franco-Prussian War (21x25), Chas. Oberwalder's
Sons 80
F. A. A. R., March 18, 1921.
315. Military Faggot Gatherers. P. F. Murphy 57
Beechey, Richard; 1808-1895, British.
Lehnc, April \. 1921.
918. Battle of Trafalgar, October 21, 1805 (10^x15^^), Williams 100
Beechey, Sir William, R. A.; 1753-1839, British.
Bartlett, March 7, 1921.
43. Baron Serdobin (29x233/^), Mrs. M. Glynn 80
Ram.say, March 9, 1921.
323. Portrait of George IV (36x22i^), W. H. Vanderpoole 85
Becker, Carl Ludwig F.; 1820-1900, German.
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Flower Girl (19x27), Bonaventure 75
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 243
Beham, Hans Sebald; 1500-1550, German.
F. A. A. R., March 19, 1921.
507. The Pieta. W. R. Hearst $105
Belle, Alexis Simon; 1674-1734, French.
Charles, Nov. 17, 1920.
676. A Daughter of Louis XV (49^x39^), I. Rosenfield 800
Benedito-Y-Vives; Contemporary, Spanish.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
29. A Belle of Seville (16x15), A. Babcock 85
Benner, Emmanuel Michel; 1873- , French.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
261. Marie Antoinette (after Virgee le Brun) (44^x34^), Ellis 120
Beraud, Jean; 1849- , French.
Freeman Gal., Phila., Feb. 26, 1921.
753. Le Havre (18i^x22) .• SO
Berghem, Nicholas; 1620-1683, Dutch.
Bartlett, March 7, 1921.
34. Gipsy Encampment (21i4x28), F. K. Richards 90
Berchem, Nicholas; Dutch.
Clarke, Tan. 12, 1921.
139. Foliage Landscape (31^x243^), Brittain 110
Berchere, Narcisse; 1819-1891, French.
F. A. A. R., May 7, 1921.
864. River Bank and Figures (12x17), P. Thompson 75
Bergen, Dirk Van; 1645-1689, Dutch.
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
52. At the Fountain (20^x24^), C. Thompson 300
Berne-Bellecour, Etienne Prosper; 1838-1910, French.
Kerr, Nov. 26, 1920.
27. The Sign Board (15x10), McDonough Galleries 100
Berruguete, Pedro; ?-l503, Spanish.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1113. The Last Supper (5 ft. 10 in. x 3 ft. 8 in.), H. C. Mathews 725
1191. Birth of the Virgin and Visit of the Virgin to 'St. Joachim (4 ft x
2 ft. 10 in.), W. R. Hearst 500
Beyschlag, Robert; 1838-1903, German.
F. A. A. R., May 7, 1921.
866. Walking in the Woods (15x21), Thos. Grace _. 65
Bierstadt, Albert, N.A.; 1829-1902, American.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
151. Rainbow at Falls, Italian Alps (29x38) SO
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Scene in California (26x36) , J. J. Wilson 62
Birch, William; 1755-1834, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
15. George Washington (3x2J/^) (enameled on copper) 750
16. Mrs. Whitaker, of Baltimore (3x2>^ ) 80
Birney, W. Verplank, A. N. A.; 1858-1909, American.
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
249. Interesting Story (18x24), S. Sprague 130
Blakelock, Ralph Albert, N. A.; 1847-1919, American.
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
63. The Mountain Stream (12x22) 60
F. A. A. R., May 7, 1921.
877. Autumn Landscape (11x9), Dr. La Porte 60
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., May 6, 1921.
139. Landscape. S. G. Rains 84
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
14. Autumnal Landscape (6^x5^4). A. L. Sinsheimer 320
Plaza. Jan. 6, 1921.
Indian Encampment (8x10), J. J. Wilson 70
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
202. Landscape (8x10), J. S. Read 70
Blenner, Carle J.; 1864- , American.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
7. Lavender and Rose (14x12), M. B. Bernstein 80
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
64. Contentment {521/2x38), George Utassy 310
244 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Blommers, Bernhardus Johannes; 1845-1914, Dutch.
Holmes, Jan. 21, 1921.
91. At the Window (13j4xl0j^), C. W. Kraushaar $535
Blum, Maurice; 1832- , French.
F. A. A. R., May 7, 1921.
876. Birthday Party (25x21), B. Voss 75
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
The Birthday Party (22x25), H. Rosenberg 85
Bock, Theophile de; 1850-1904, Dutch.
A. A. A., Feb. 17, 1921.
69. Moonlight Marine (16^4x12^4), McCarthy 50
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
6. Cattle at the Pool (8^x14^), Robert Anderson 470
Bogert, George H., N. A.; 1864- , American.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
62. Evening Glow of Gold (37^x48), A. H. Harlow 260
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
55. Dutch Landscape (26x31) 150
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
221. Landscape (25x30), Lounes 130
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Sunset (28x36), F. Grunewald 350
Boggs, Frank M.; 1858- , American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
308. La Place St. Germain (70x96), Devany 60
Bol, Ferdinand; 1611-1691, Dutch.
Charles, Nov. 17, 1920.
675. Portrait of a Burgomaster's Wife (381^x30), M. House 650
Boldini, Giovanni; 1844- , Italian.
A. A. A., Jan. 20, 1921.
59. Teasing the Parrot (18x13), Dr. E. Cadgene 800
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
94. In the Garden (11^4x20^), Seaman, Agent 725
Bologna, Simone Da; active about 1370, Bolognese.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
104. The Crucifixion with Saints and Angels (14^x8), F. Kleinberger
Galleries 560
Bolognese School; XVIII Century.
Cattadore, April 15, 1921.
542. Portico and Entrance Courtyard of an Ecclesiastical Edifice (66x79),
Mrs. F. Raineri 140
543. Facade and Portico of a Palladian Palace (66x79), Mrs. F. Raineri... 140
Bonheur, Rosa; 1822-1899, French.
A. A. A., Jan. 20, 1921.
63. Stag Around (23^x28^), Miss M. H. Dodge 3,100
Bostwick, Jan. 21, 1921.
101. A King of the Forest (13xl6J4), Miss M. Dodge 900
Goossens, Feb. 3, 1921.
13. A French Farmyard (12J4x24), A. Rudert, Agent 325
Goossens, Feb. 17, 1921.
112. Before the Storm (25j4x41), F. K. Richards 100
Borel, Antoine; 1742-1810, French.
Charles, Nov. 17, 1920.
650. The Mountebanks (I7^x2]i'9, P. Thompson 55
Lehne, March 30, 1921.
442. Infant's Amusement. J. Graham 110
Borthnep, IVIilh.; Contemporary.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
103. Venetian Scene (39x23), Chas. Oberwalder's Sons 70
Boskerck, Robert Ward Van, N. A.; 1855- , American.
Holmes, Jan. 20, 1921.
23. The Old Oaks (18x15), Mr. Sterling 150
Boucher, Francois; 1703-1770, French.
Cattadori, April 16, 1921.
678. La Comtesse de Chastelard (21^x18) 380
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
232. Women with Flowers (27x36), D. G. Carmichael 55
Boucher, School of.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
877. Sportive Cupidons (2) (2534x33i4) 100
879. Sportive Cupids (37j4x52j4), Keeble 70
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 245
Boudin, Eugene; 1824-1898, French.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
101. Venice (20x29i^), McDonough Galleries $550
Fiftv-seventh St. Gal., F'tb. 24, 1921.
287. On the Shore at Antwerp (HJ/^xlS), Frederick Sherman 125
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., May 6. 1921.
133. The French Coast. H. C. Ryon 140
Bounetheau, Henry Brintwell; American.
Rosenthal. Dec. 14, 1920.
18. Henry Heyward Manigault (4l4->i334) 85
Both, Jan; 1610-1652, Dutch.
Ferlov, April 5, 1921.
•43. The Herdsman (33x19), A. Pope 100
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
264. Sunset (35x40), McCarthy 110
Boughton, George Henry, N. A., R. A.; 1834-1905, American.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
12. Beside the Blue Sea (13x21), Thos. Footer 50
Bouguereau, William Adolphe; 1825-1905, French.
A. A. A.. Feb. 3, 1921.
69. L'Aurore (82x421^), M. J. Rougeron 1,700
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
59. Far-Away Thoughts (24x19^), McDonough Galleries 220
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
60. Innocence (37^x23^), John Levy 1,250
Bostwick. Tan. 20, 1921.
79. The Shepherdess (46x29), Peter Van Veen 850
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
66. La Chanson Rossignol (54x35), J. F. Albee 2,500
Bradford, William; 1830-1892, American.
F. A. A. R., Feb. 9, 1921.
9. Marine (28x44) , J. R. Collins 60
Brakenburgh, Richard; 1660-1702, Dutch.
A. G., Tan. 14, 1921.
16. the Doctor's Visit (13x11^4), F. A. Lawlor 120
Breitner, George Hendrick; 1857- , Dutch.
A. A. A., March 7. 1921.
31. A Dutch Corner (27^x19), A. A. Boon 150
Brendel, A.; 1827-1895, German.
Smith & Taffe, May 20, 1921.
1236. Sheepfold 65
Bressot, F.
Fifty-seventh St. Gal.. Feb. 23, 1921.
29. The Young Shepherdess (12i^xl5), P. Thompson 50
Breton, Jules Adolphe; 1827-1906, French.
Goossens, Feb. 24, 1921.
25. Landscape (14x21^) 300
Taft, Feb. 3, 1921.
65. The Lookout (323/4x46^). Mrs. M. H. Dodge 775
Breughel, Peter, the Elder; 1530-1569, Flemish.
Charles. Nov. 17, 1920.
692. Landscape (403/^x52), C. S. Wilson 125
Bricher, A. T.; 1873-1908, American.
Plaza. Tan. 8. 1921.
Seascape (17x38), John Slattery 190
BrII, Paulus; 1556-1626, Flemish.
A. G., Tan. 14, 1921.
21. Rest on the Flight to Egypt (63/^x93,4), F. A. Muschenheim 135
Briscoe, F. D.; 1844-1903, American.
F. A. A. R., Feb. 9, 1921.
25. Coast Scene (33x50), A. Janssen 110
Brissot de Warville, Felix Saturnin; 1818-1892, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 17, 1921.
65. Return of the Flock (13xl6i4), Arlington Galleries 57
British School.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
69. Portrait of a Lady (36x27^4), McCarthy 200
Bronscombe, Jennie.
Plaza, Nov. 5, 1920.
Mother of the Revolution, Dr. J. Dorr 70
2^6 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Brooks, Maria; 1827-1913, British.
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
3. Candies (10x7), R. H. Wallach ^150
5. Little Treasures (10x7), M. E. Keim 70
30. Disappointed (16x10), C, Thompson 110
Brown, George Lewis; Contemporary, American.
A. A. A., March 7, 1921.
61. Naples from the Sea (34x50), B. R. Kittredge 55
Brouwer, Adriaen; 1605 or 6-1638, Flemish.
Osterreith, Feb. 24, 1921.
15. Le Buveur (8j4x7^), Harrison 800
Brown, J. G., N.A.; 1831-1913, American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
239. Waiting (25x36), E. J. Ellsworth 75
302. Leisure Moments (24x1 6) , McDonough 330
Kerr, Nov. 26, 1920.
51. The Flower Girl (21x17), A. J. Houston 260
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
44. Pals (24x16), Holland Galferies 470
Brucli, Hans; Contemporary, German.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
92. Saint Hubert Preaching to the Deer (5lx45>^), Robert Hyman 105
Bruegiiel, Jan, The Elder; 1568-1629, Flemish.
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
10. A Village Festival (7^x9j4), Mr. E. Kein 70
12. Travellers on the Road. J. C. Willever 90
122. Holy Family and Wreath of Flowers (25xl9i^), Mrs. Coler 125
Brun, Cliaries Le; 1619-1690, French.
Ramsay, March 9, 1921.
325. Peace (71x65), A. McCrea 200
326. Plenty (71x65), A. McCrea 200
Brunery, Francois; Contemporary, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
25. Youth and Age (213^x18^), J. C. Leslie 105
Brunet-Newville.
F. A. A. R., March 19, 1921.
501. A Basket of Fruit. R. L. Titus 65
Bruyn, Barthel, The Elder; 1492-553, Dutch.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
55. Diptych: Donors with Saints (32x9^), Dr. A. Hahanoinecz 510
Bunce, William Gedney, N. A.; 1840-1916, American,
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
1. Apples (10x14^), A. Shilling 55
Butterworth, J. E.; 1839-1854, British.
Lehne, April 1, 1921.
923. Yacht Race off Sandy Hook (9^x13^^) SO
Butterworth, Thomas; active 1813-1827, British.
Lehne, April 1, 1921.
913. Battle of the Nile, Ten O'clock at Night (20x28), W. E. Kemble 190
919. Battle of Copenhagen, April 2, 1810 (11x17), Shoyer 100
Castilian School; XV Century.
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
438. Four Altar Panels {llxTyi), Mrs. W. L. Engle 50
Caille, Leon; 1836-1907, French.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
274. Mother and Children (36x25), McDonough 67
Calame, Alexandre De; 1810-1864, Swiss.
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
36. A Winter Afternoon (18x25 J^), C. Thompson 190
Callot, Jacques; 1592-1635, French.
Osterreith, Feb. 24, 1921.
48. La Foire d'Imprimeta (21 3^:^x35^), A. Rudert, Agent 210
Canaletto, Antonio; 1697-1768, Venetian.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
48. Venice (25^x3514), A. Olivetti & Co 125
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
121. Venice (24x39), W. R. Hearst 1,100
Goossens, Feb. 24, 1921.
57. Church of St. George the Greater, Venice i22x33H), Towne 200
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 247
Canaletto, School of.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
868. The Grand Canal (21^x27^), H. L. Adams, Jr $380
Carabain, Jacques Francois; 1834- , Dutch.
Colton, Feb. 4, 1921.
51. In the Netherlands (29i^x37), A. Olivetti & Co 70
Carlsen, Emil, N.A.; 1853- , American.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
4. Still Life (17x14), J. W. Lynde 95
Carolus-Duran, Emile Auguste; 1837-1917, French.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
57. Ennui (28xl5>^), A. Babcock 105
Carpione, Giulio; 1611-1674, Venetian.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
27. Symbolical Subject: The Apparition of the Christian Virtues to the
Heathen (42^x54), Miss I. Taylor 400
Carracci, Lodovico; 1555-1619, Italian.
Bartlett, March 7, 1921.
41. Portrait of a Lady (28x20), B. R. Kittredge 125
Caruson.
Henkels, April 11, 1921.
84. Miniature of Eliza Kortright Monroe, daughter of President James
Monroe. Bert 900
Casanova, Francesco; 1727-1802, Italian.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
11. Courtyard Scene (14^x18) 80
11a. Starting for the Hunt (14^x18) 55
Casanova y Estorach, Antonio; 1847-1896, Spanish.
Bostwick, Tan. 20, 1921.
38. Strolling Players (18x24), W. T. Heniot 200
Holmes, Jan. 20, 1921.
23. A Cup of Chocolate (20x15^^), S. T. Hubbard 426
Cassana, Giovanni Battista; 1658-1720, Neapolitan.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
260. Still Life (24i^x30), M. J. Rougeron 225
Casteels, T.; XVIII Century, Dutch.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
895. Flowers (40Mx5lH), H. A. James 60
894. Fruit and Flowers (40Hx5lp<), Ben Ernstein 160
Castiiian School; Late XV Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1117. Bust of Christ (2 ft. 10 in. x 1 ft. 10 in.), J. J. Murray 240
Castiiian School; Renaissance Period.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1119. Bust of Christ (3 ft. 8 in, x 2 ft. 2 in.), H. C. Brown 250
Catlin, Georges; 1762-1872, American.
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921.
130. Portrait of De Witt Clinton. W. L. Washington 60
Cazin, Jean Charles; 1841-1901, French.
AAA Tan 20 1921
' 72'. A Village in Holland (26x18^), W. R. Hearst 1,950
A. A. A., Jan. 21, 1921.
149. Windmill near Dunkerque (25^x21j4), J. Levy 3,100
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
55. Windmill and Cornfield (25^x311^) 10,000
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
275. French Village (12x18), P. Tartoue 100
F. A. A. R., May 7, 1921.
867. Landscape (21x25), Clapp & Graham 1,100
Holmes. Jan. 21, 1921.
141. Early Evening (22x18), H. Buhl 1,500
Wasserman, Feb. 3, 1921.
29. Paysage (15 J4xl8j^), M. B. Philipp 625
Ceulen, Cornells Janssens Van; 1593-1664, Flemish (Attributed to).
Peckhaci, March 29, 1921.
68. Portrait of a Boy (30>4x24)^), L. J. O'Reilly 390
Chao Tzu-Chao; Chinese, Yuan (Attributed to).
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
452. Landscape and Figures (59}^x42), J. L. Gilchrist 70
248 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUQTION
Chardin, Simon; 1707-1799, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
38. Still Life (24x28), F. K. Richards $105
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
116. Still Life (14^x18), R. C. Vose 700
Chase, William M., N. A.; 1849-1916, American.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
41. Fish with Still Life (29x36), H. Thole 500
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
44. The Red Gown (20x16), D. Calo & Sons 75
Chatain, A.; Contemporary, American.
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
86. Head of a Little Girl (16^x14), A. Chatain 230
Chinese School; Sung.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
434. Portrait of the Emperor Chao Lieh Ti (65x38), P. C. Carter 320
435. Composition of Horses and Men (11^x26^), C. Daniels 70
Chinese School; Early Yuan.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
443. Painted Screen (50x24^), W. C. Clark 150
Chinese School; Yuan.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
438. Portrait of a Priest (34^x26^), E. Takamine 60
439. Figure of Monju (36^x205^), O. F. Roberts 120
440. Birds and Flowers (40x21]^), O. F. Roberts 55
442. Ancestral Portrait (41x24i4), J. M. Lane 100
444. Kuan-yin (54x27), Miss I. M. Lane 125
447. Portrait of a Mandarin (54^x31^), P. Carter 225
448. Still Life (68x363/^), J. Morris 50
449. Portrait of a Nobleman (54x31 J^), P. C. Carter 950
450. Lohan at Worship (57^x27^4), P. C. Carter 300
451. Portrait of a Priest (55^x32^), O. F. Roberts 210
453. Willow and Birds (63^x39), W. C. Adams 130
454. Ducks and Blossoms (72^x38>4), W. C. Fanning 140
455. Pheasants (72x3834), C. H.Brown 15C
456. Birds (77x45) 425
Chinese School; Ming.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
470. Cats and Flowers (25x20), Dr. A. Gently 55
471. Portrait of the Ancestors (28^x28^4) 50
472. Religious Portrait (34^x16), O. F. Roberts 55
474. Ancestral Portrait of a Coronetted Lady (29i^xl9>0, C. Se Feo 70
476. Falcon (39i/2x21^), F. Kelly 50
477. Three Fu-Lions (40>4x38>i ) , Towne 100
480. Lohan and Fu-Lions (43^^x21), C. H. Walton 80
482. Portrait of a Lohan (47x23), C. H. Brown 50
485. Figure Composition (11^x49^), J. Walker 85
486. Infant Learning to Walk (48^x21^), H. H. Phipps 70
487. The Five Gods of Philosophy (57x31), F. Keally 50
488. Tree and Birds (56^x38^^), L. A. Oliver 60
489. Portrait of a Priest (58x36^ ),C. H. Walton 100
490. Portrait of a Mandarin (59;^x3534), O. F. Roberts 95
491. Buddha Enthroned (60x31), J. L. Gilchrist 55
492. Portrait of a Noble Lady (60^x37^), C. H. Walton 70
495. Pheasants (62^x29^), R. Glendenning 120
496. Portrait of the Priest Peifeng (64x425^), P. C. Carter 375
497. Portrait of a Nobleman (733/^x40^), P- C. Carter 575
498. Portrait of a Nobleman (67^x40), C. H. Walton 160
499. Lotus (76J^x483/4), C. F. Meyer 130
500. Flowers and Birds (79x36^ ) 220
501. Flowers and Birds (83^x86^), J. L. Gilchrist 125
Chinese School; Ch'ien-lung.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
507. Seaport (on leather) (82x107), Mrs. Hugh 100
508. Landscape and Figures (38x22 1^:^), C. H. Brown 50
Chinese School; K'ang-hsi.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 192l.
504. Portrait of a Young Lady (19^x11^), H. Fay 55
505. Peacock and Peonies (49x21^), E. E. Spitzer 60
502. Album of Eight Paintings on Sycamore Leaves (8^x5^4), D. F.
Roberts 70
503. Portrait of a Lady of the Nobility (19^x11^), H. Fay 60
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 249
Church, F. E.; 1826-1900, American.
F. A. A. R., Dec. 11, 1920.
784. On the Magdelena River (24x36), Chas. F. Clark $425
Church, F. S., N. A.; 1842- , American.
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
62. Shooting Star (33x16) 130
Kerr, Nov. 26, 1920.
79. Woodland Vaudeville (21x36), A. J. Houston 75
Cione, Nardo Di; active 1340-1365, Florentine.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
106. The Crucifixion (28x12^), F. Kleinberger Galleries 1,175
Clark, Alvan; 1804-1887, American,
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
22. Mrs. Alvan Clark (3x2^) 80
Clays, Paul Jean; 1819-1900, Belgian.
A. A. A., Jan. 21, 1921.
26. Calme: Mer due Nord (22x16), R. G. Caldwell 250
A. A. A., Feb. 3, 1921.
161. Dutch Fishing Boats (29i/4x43j4), M. H. Goldblatt 750
Cleefs, Joos Van; 1520-1556, Dutch.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
36. Madonna and Child (10^x8), E. Collins 820
A. G., Jan. 28, 1921.
681. Virgin and Child (height 22, width 3, panels 34), Baer 8,000
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
110. St. Jerome (15x11), J. C. H. Helding 1,500
Cochin, Charles Nicholas Le Jeune; 1715-1790, French.
Charles, Nov. 17, 1920.
667. A Spanish Carnival (251^x4254), Sam Weisberger 225
Coello, Alonso Sanchez; 1531-1588, Spanish.
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
470. Portrait of Don Carlos, Infante of Spain (12^xl0f^), Heckser . .. 250
Coffin, William Anderson, N. A.; 1855- , American.
Holmes, Jan. 21, 1921.
145. The Old Stage Tavern (20x30), W. B. Goodwin 425
163. Clearing After a Thunderstorm (25x30), F. Steinberg 275
Coiman, Samuel, N. A.; 1832-1920, American.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
33. Saw Mill River (16x30) 65
Cologne, School of.
Osterreith, Feb. 24, 1921.
51. Martyrdom of St. Thomas of Canterbury (23^x1634), R. B. Bowler 350
Coman, Charlotte B.; 1833- . American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
268. Landscape (16x20), McDonough Galleries 80
Comerre, Leon; 1850- , French.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
Nautch Girl (46x28) 150
Constable, John; 1776-1837, British.
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
155. English Landscape (18x25), Seaman, Agent 2,100
Conroy, George.
Plaza, Nov. 5, 1920.
Landscape, Mrs. Watkins 50
Constant, Jean Joseph Benjamin; 1845-1902, French.
Hutchinson, Feb. 14, 1921.
63. Judith (48x31), N. B. Bernstein 300
Cooper, Thomas Sidney; 1803-1902, British.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
295. Sheep in the Mountains (31^x39^), Martin 80
Copal.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
27. Sale of Emigree's Effects in France During the Revolution (15^^x22^)
(water color) 210
Cornelisz, Jacob; (Follower of), about 1510, Dutch.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
109. The Entombment (28^^x20), H. L. R. Lear 2,400
Corot, Jean Baptiste Camille; 1796-1875, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 17, 1921.
50. Landscape (11x14) (water color), Dessart 80
53. Florence (8J4xl63^), F. K. Richards 90
250 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Co-rot — Continued.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
10. The Pasturage (ll^xl9>^), Mrs. Johnson $925
30. Landscape (16x12^), Mrs. H. F. Boardsman 950
23. Glade in Pierre Woods, in Evaux, near Chateau-Thierry (18x13^),
J. Aron 1,800
Bostwick, Jan. 21, 1921.
137. Danseuses des Bois (26x32), A. A. Healy 6,300
F. A. A. R., March 19, 1921.
499. A River Windstorm. W. D. Hunter. 75
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., Feb. 25, 1921.
147. Landscape with Figures (18^x11 H), J- C. Leslie 70
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
134. Landscape in France (12j/^xl7i^), Knoedler & Co 3,000
Noyes, Feb. 3, 1921.
47. Landscape with Figure: Ville d'Avray (16^x32), J. F. Albee 5,200
Taft, Feb. 3, 1921.
45. The Woodland Road (23^4x1 73.^), Holland Galleries 875
Wasserman, Feb. 3, 1921.
36. Landscape (15^x23), J. C. Leslie 250
Corrodi, H.; 1844- , Italian.
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921.
101. Turkish Landscape with Figures (34x65), J. R. Collins 105
102. Napoleon on the Island of St. Helena (40x66), M. Maggi 55
103. On the Banks of the Tigris (40x25), J. J. Laughlin. 80
Cosway, Richard; 1740-1821, British.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
64. Mrs. Fitzherbert (27^/^x23^) 220
Cottet, Charles; 1863- , French.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
63. Breton Sailor (29x21 J^ ) , Kraushaar Galleries 110
Courbet, Gustave; 1819-1877, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
32. The Blacksmith's Shed (23i^x29), F. Spencer 400
Goossens. Feb. 3, 1921.
52. Landscape (32x25^), R. C. & N. M. Vose 750
Craesbeeck, Joost Van; 1605-1662, Dutch.
A. A. A., Jan. 20, 1921.
35. The Quack Doctor (21xl7j^), Bernet, Agent 220
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
32. Peasant Inn (14^x20) 80
Craig, Thomas B.; 1849- , American.
F'. A A. G, Nov. 27, 1920.
155. Evening Sunlight (18x26), Widemeyer 60
Cranach, Lucas, The Elder; 1472-1553, German.
A. G., Jan. 28, 1921.
682. Mother and Child (26x14^), Agent 1,850
Fares, Feb. 5, 1921.
182. Hercules and the Maidens of Omphale (33x48) 1,500
Crane, Bruce, N. A.; 1857- , American.
Cummings. April 29, 1921.
26. Autumn Landscape (8x10) 155
66. Autumn Scene (17x12) 280
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
243. Near Newport (14x20), Lounes 103
Smithers, Jan. 21. 1921.
144. Country Near the Sea (20x30), J. Woodward 575
Creifelds, D.; Contemporary, American.
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
38. The Dogs (30x24) 62
46. Portrait of an Indian Chief (34x26) 65
51 Autumn Landscape (36x48) oO
54. Indian Chief (33x25) 55
60. Woodland Scene (38x50) 70
Cropsey, J. F.; 1823-1900, American.
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
River Scene, Orange County, N. J. (24x43), Mrs. Rolphs 70
Cubells-Y-Ruiz, E. M.; Contemporary, Spanish.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
85. Landing the Fishing Boat (32i^x41), H. C. Lowenstein 210
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 251
Curran, Charles Courtney, N, A.; 1861- , American.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
34. Girl with Violin (36xl6i4), W. B. Dickson $70
A. G., April 5, 1921.
21. The Tanagra Statuette (22x22), Rohlf 67
Dagnan-Bouveret, Pascal Adolphe Jean; 1852- , French.
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
99. Girl with Cherries (16^x13), F. M. Donohue 275
Dagnan-Bouveret, Pascal Adolphe Jean; 1852- , French.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
36. The Midday Rest (19x15^), H. S. Labey 125
Dalmau, Luis; XV Century, Catalonian.
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
503. Virgin of Mont Serrat (44x25), E. S. Heniot 130
Damme, Frans Van; 1849- , Belgian.
Goossens, March 1, 1921.
35. Le Cimetier des Becassines (21f^x3lM), R- Stillivagen 50
Daniels, Sanford.
F. A. A. R., April 9, 1921.
858. Lady Bountiful (28x36), P. Rinelli $70
Dannat, William T.; 1853- , American.
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
32. The Smuggler (13x9i^), W. T. Heniot 135
D'Arthois, Jacques; 1613-1686, Flemish.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
24. Landscape (30x39^), Chas. Morgan 800
Daublgny, Charles Francois; 1817-1878, French.
AAA Tan 21 1921
"l28. On the' Ois'e (7^x15^), C. W. Kraushaar 925
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
59. Landscape (24x39i^) 390
A. A. A., March 1, 1921.
10. Summei: The Deserted Village (9^x16^4), W. F. Laporte 60
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
300. Landscape and River (9x16^), Tartoue 80
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
135. La Chaumiere (12x20^), Knoedler & Co 3,300
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
River Oise (17x24), J. J. Wilson 125
Taft, Feb. 3, 1921.
44. The Stream in the Meadows (9^x16), Robert Anderson 900
Wasserman, Feb. 3, 1921.
46. The Harbor (11^x24), C. S. Baldwin 1,500
David, Jacques Louis; 1748-1825, French.
Goossens, March 7, 1921.
46. La Duchesse de Rovigo (28x23-K), J- F. McCarthy 55
Davies, Arthur B.; 1862- , American.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
25. In the Wood (10x16), Ferargil Galleries 70
Dearth, Henry Golden, N. A.; 1864-1918, American.
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
81. Grey Twilight (30x40), Folsom Galleries 300
De Bock, Theophile; 1851-1904, Dutch.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
297. Landscape and River (13^x25), P. Tartoue 66
Freeman Gal., Feb. 26, 1921.
765. Fishing Village (15x10) 72
De Braekeieer, Ferdinand, The Elder; 1792-1883, Flemish.
Goossens, Feb. 24, 1921.
45. Antwerp After the Bombardment in 1832 (23^x28^), William F.
Laporte 60
Decamps, Alexandre Gabriel; 1803-1860, French.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
305. The Puppet Show (38x50), P. Tartoue.. 120
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
42. The Bay of Algiers (131^x19^), Prendergast 125
Degas, Hilaire Germain Edgar; 1834-1917, French.
Seligmann, Jan. 27, 1921.
1. Cafe Apres le Bain (42i^x23H) (drawing), Reinhardt & Son 550
2. Studies of the Nude (2354x29) (pastel), Durand-Ruel 800
3. La Toilette Apres le Bain (22^^x25) (pastel), Durand-Ruel 1,100
4. Group of Dancers: A Study (27^x28^) (pastel), Durand-Ruel 650
5. Etude de Danseusr (221^x27^) (pastel), Durand-Ruel 800
6. After the Bath (21^x24^) (pastel), H. Bernheim 1,450
252 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Degas — Continued.
7. Le Bain: Femme, Vue de Dos (25^x32), Durand-Ruel $1,750
8. Danseuse Les Cheveux en Tresse (253/^x201^) (pastel), Durand-Ruel.. 1,550
9. Femme a sa Toilette (23xl8>^) (pastel), Vollard 1,600
10. The Pet (26^x20]^), Mrs. W. B. Force 850
11. Buste de Femme (18^x15), Mrs. Lathrop Brown 1,650
12. Apres le Bain (32i/^x24), C. Daniels 1,650
13. Groupe de Danseuses (25x20) (pastel), Durand-Ruel 850
14. Groupe de Danseuses (22^x16) (pastel), Durand-Ruel 1,600
15. Greenroom Rest (29x23) (pastel), Vollard 1,700
16. Trois Danseuses (26x20^/^) (pastel), Durand-Ruel 1,100
17. Drying Her Hair (19^x28^) (pastel). J. Bernheim 2,200
18. Landscape and Dancers (25^x20) (pastel), H. Reinhardt & Sons 2,250
19. Corsages Violettes, Jupes Bleues (29^x24^4 , Vollard 2,000
20. At the Theatre (93^x12^), C. W. Kraushaar 2,000
21. Deux Femmes et un Homme vus en Buste et de Profil (12^x16), J.
Bernheim 2,300
22. Portrait of a Man (13^x8^^), Durand-Ruel 1,450
23. At the Milliner's (24x29), Mrs. L. Brown 1,750
24. Femme se Coiffant (18^x12^), Vollard 2,850
25. Lovers of Music: The Violinist (18>4x21M), Durand-Ruel 7,700
26. Scene de Ballet (183^x24^), Durand-Ruel 5,600
27. Three Jockeys (19i^x25>^) (pastel), Vollard 1,850
28. The Milliners (23i4x2834), J. Bernheim 2,400
29. Les Corsages Verts (29x23j4) (pastel), Durand-Ruel 3,500
30. Femme S'Epongeant le Dos (27^x2334), Durand-Ruel 1,300
31. Quittant le Cuveau (34^x29^^) (pastel), J. Bernheim 1,600
32. Femme au Tub (28^x28) (pastel), Durand-Ruel 4,500
33. The Chat (27x27) (pastel), J. Bernheim 1,150
34. Femme en Chapeau Rose (33>^x29j4) (pastel), Durand-Ruel 4,500
35. Portrait of a Man (33Hx25>^), Brooklyn Museum 2,750
36. At the Museum (35^x26^^), C. W. Kraushaar 4,850
37. The Morning Hour (29^4x33^) (pastel), Mr. Vollard 1,900
38. Before Breakfast (39^x23^) (pastel), Mr. Vollard 2,700
39. Two Dancers (29x29) (pastel), A. S. Rosenbach 2,000
40. Dancers in the Greenroom (16^x34^), Henry Reinhardt 10,500
41. La Promenade des Chevaux (15^x35^), Miss Lorenz, Agent 11,800
42. At Her Toilette (32^x30), Durand-Ruel 6,100
43. Danseuses: Jupes Saumon (35x25j/2) (pastel), Mr. Vollard 1,900
44. Deux Hommes (36j4x265^), Durand-Ruel 2,500
45. Portrait of a Lady (32x25]^), Scott & Fowles 6,500
46. Quatre Danseuses en Scene (29x36^), Durand-Ruel 7,100
47. Three Dancers (37i^x31^) (pastel), Vollard. 2,300
48. Les Modistes et le Chapeau de Paille d'ltalie (30x32J^), Dundensing
Galleries 1,750
49. Femme s'Epongeant la Poitrine (25x23) (pastel), J. Bernheim 1,000
50. The Ride (28x35>4), Bernet, Agent 3,000
51. Portrait in White (29x36), Knoedler & Co 17,000
52. Danseuses: Decor d'Arbres (42x25) (pastel), Mrs. Lathrop Brown.... 1,300
53. Danseuses a la Barre (43i/^x23^) (pastel), Mr. Vollard 1,650
54. Drying Her Hair After the Bath (33x41 1^) (pastel), Brooklyn Museum 2,250
55. L' Entree en Scene (29^x42^) (pastel), Mr. Vollard 1,050
56. Portrait de Femme (251^x21), Henry Reinhardt 3,050
57. Scene de Ballet (30x43^) (pastel), Scott & Fowles 3,000
58. Le Petit Dejeuner apres le Bain (41i^x27i^) (pastel), Durand-Ruel... 2.500
59. Deux Femmes Assises (32x38), Henry Reinhardt $3,800
60. Danseuses en Repos (30^x42^^) (pastel), Durand-Ruel 2,500
61. Madame est Servie (47x41) (pastel), Mrs. Lathrop Brown 3,200
62. Two Dancers Practicing at the Bar (43^x38) (pastel), Scott & Fowles.. 3,200
63. Le Peignoir Jaune (43^x40) (pastel), Mrs. Lathrop Brown 3.200
64. Children and Ponies in a Park (40x35), Miss Lorenz, Agent 3,200
65. Danseuse a la Barre (51x3834), Miss Lorenz, Agent 2,600
66. Arranging Flowers (39x54) , Vollard 3,600
67. Young Spartans at Wrestling Exercise (43x61), Durand-Ruel 3,300
68. M'lle Fiocre dans le Ballet de la Source (51x57), Durand-Ruel 13,000
69. La Danseuse aux Bouquets (70^4x59), Vollard 7,600
70. Aux Courses: Le Jockey Blesse (71x59i4), Seaman, Agent 3,800
71. La Fille de Jephte (77x118), C. Baca-Flor 17,000
De Haas, M. F. H., N.A.; 1832-1895. American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
270. Cattle (21x27), McDonough 6S
Freeman Gal., Phila., Feb. 26, 1921.
75L. Morning (21x15) 105
Hutchinson, Feb. 14, 1921.
35. Marine: The Storm (27x22) 75
Plaza, Nov. 20, 1920.
Marine, Mrs. Campbell 55
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 253
De Haven, Frank, A, N. A.; 1856- , American.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
44. Landscape at Sunset (28x36]/^), F. Spencer $70
Cumminps, April 29, 1921.
36. Dawn, Coast of Main (24x31) 80
De Hoog, Bernard; 1866- , Dutch.
A. A. A., Tan. 21, 1921.
120. Mother and Child (40x32), Levy Galleries 625
Delort, Charles Edouard; 1814-1894, French.
Kerr, Nov. 26, 1920.
78. The Trysting Place (33x25) , McDonough Galleries 75
Delpy, Hippolyte; 1841-1910, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
56. Bords de Riviere (24x39^), M. B. Bernstein 150
Denner, Balthasar; 1685-1749, German.
Ferlov, April 5, 1921.
44. Portrait of an Elderly Lady (15x11^), A. Pope ISO
Deschamps, Louis; 1846- , French.
F. A. A. R., May 7, 1921.
873. Girl with Basket of Cherries (13x17), S. Heller 52
Dessar, Louis Paul, N. A.; 1867- , American.
Smithers, Jan. 20. 1921.
54. Rising Moon (29x24). W. Stimmel 275
Detaille, Jean Baptiste Edouard; 1848-1912, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
64. Sentry on Patrol (59i^x43), M. B. Bernstein 775
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
269. Ecole de St. Germain, 1st Empire (7x5) (black and white), McDon-
ough 50
Kerr, Nov. 26, 1920.
29. A Hussar (11x8^), G. C. Smith, Jr 200
Smithers, Tan 21, 1921.
87. Soldier at Rest (13x8^), Parke, Agent 210
Detti, Cesare; 1847-1915, Italian.
Taft, Feb. 17, 1921.
74. A Game of Cards (13^x19^^) (water color), Brancoto 100
De Voss, Simon.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
124. Descent from Cross (2.5x3.11), H. L. Brittain 475
Dewey, Charles Melville, N. A.; 1851- , American.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
43. Sunset (29x36), E. A. Seasongood 310
Dewing, Thomas W., N. A.; 1851- , American.
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
31. The Faun (16x10), T. H. Russell 120
Diaz de La Pena, Narcisse Virgile; 1807-1876, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 17, 1921.
52. Still Life: Flowers (16x13), T. E. Finger 55
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
48. Cupid's Festival (23^x29) 1,100
Bostwick, Jan. 21, 1921.
125. Les Smyrniotes (14x11), Seaman, Agent 800
139. A Bather (16^x20^), P. J. Higgs 2,200
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
129. Reverie (105^x8), Mr. Fox 650
130. Girl and Pet (16xl2j4), R. C. Vose 950
Plaza, Nov. 5, 1920.
Landscape. Mrs. D. Aldersen 125
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
184. Barbizon Landscape (13x17), Wm. M. K. Olcott 65
229. Women with Children (12x16), Wm. M. K. Olcott 65
Smithers, Jan. 21, 1921.
133. Moonlight Concert (16x20), G. Fuerth 625
Taft, Feb. 3, 1921.
Zl. Repose in the Forest (12-Kx8^), C. W. Kraushaar Galleries 500
40. The Bohemians (12^x934) 525
43. In the Forest of Fontainebleau (I5i4x21i^) 700
Wasserman, Feb. 3, 1921.
50. Venus and Cupids (39^x32) C. S. Baldwin 1,100
DIeterle, Marie; 1860- , French.
Roebling, Tan. 21, 1921.
160. Cows in Meadow and Stream (31x40), R. C. Vose 1.300
254 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Dodd, Robert; 1748?-1810?, British.
Lehne, April 1, 1921.
916. The Hermione Towed out of the Harbor (17x27), P. M. Hooper $380
917. Admiral Hawkes' Action off Ushant, November 20, 1799 (15x20) 60
Domingo, Jose; 1843- , Spanish.
Bostwick, Jan. 20, 1921.
27. A Cavalier (203^x133^), W. T. Heniot 200
Smithers, Jan. 21, 1921.
143. Spanish Courtyard (15i4x24J4), P. Thompson 450
Dou, Gerard; 1613-1675, Dutch.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
111. Christ Among the Doctors (30x42^), Dr. T. Turck 1,500
Doughty, Thomas, N. A.; 1793-1856, American.
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., Feb. 23, 1921.
140. Hudson River Valley (26x35), Jerome Buck 52
Dougherty, Paul, N. A.; 1877- , American.
Smithers, Jan. 21, 1921.
165. The Breaker (36x48), E. A. Milch 650
Duffill, J.; XVIII Century.
Charles, Nov. 17, 1920.
681. Mademoiselle du Plessis (49^x40), J. Kelekian 290
Dunlap, William; 1766-1839, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
24. John Tylor (2^x2^^) 85
27. William Charles Cole Claiborne (3?4x3) 180
Dupont, Gainsborough; 1767-1797, British.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
66. Lord Kinnaird (30x25), Armstrong 310
Duprat, Alfred G.; 1882-1913, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
44. At Venice (25^x36), M. B. Bernstein 125
Dupre, Jules; 1812-1889, French.
A. A. A., Jan. 21, 1921.
136. The Farm by the River (28^x233^), C. Haskins 1,800
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
39. A Brittany Farm: Isle-Adam (18x15) P. Jackson Higgs 1,900
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
127. Landscape: The Great Oak (8)^x12^), D. Clarence 1,100
Dupre, Julien; 1851-1910.
A. A. A., Feb. 3, 1921.
S3. Harvesters (28x19) C. B. Stevens 400
Dutch School.
A. A. A., Feb. 17, 1921.
56. Portrait of a Gentleman (13^x111^), J. S. Berliner 85
Dutch School, XVII Century.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
859. Vase of Flowers (22^x175^), H. A. James 50
Ruiz, May 21, 1921.
839. Figures and Dogs. J. Thomson 60
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
496. The Senses (273^x41 J/$), (3 panels) 255
Dutch School; Early XVIII Century.
A. A. A., March 7, 1921.
57. Fruit and Flowers (28^^x38), J. Earns 55
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
472. Pair of Landscapes (153^x113/2), Richardson 55
Eaton, Charles Warren; 1857- , American.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
37. Evening: Belgium (24x30), Calo Art Galleries 82
Eck, B.
Freeman Gal., Feb. 26, 1921.
761. The Grand Canal, Venice (65x29) 105
Eicholz, Jacob; 1776-1842, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
91. James P. S-rith (30^x2534) 375
Elserman, H.; Cont.;mporary.
Smithers. Jan. 20, 1921.
2. Portrait of a Lady (9^x7^), R. H. Wallach 150
Eksergian, C.
F. A. A. R., March 18, 1921.
314. The Music Lessons. J. Callahan 52
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 255
Entraygues, Charles Bertrand D'; XIX Century, French.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
272. Address of Welcome (23x33), McDonough $125
Ellinger, Abbe de Tergemsee; 1019-1056, German.
Fifty-seventh 'St. GaL, Feb. 23, 1921.
Still Life (25x181^), W. T. Stern 65
English School; Late XVTI Century.
A. A. A.. March 7, 1921.
60. Fruits and Flowers (49x37i4), B. R. Kittredge 55
English School; Early XVII-XVIII Century.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
882. Still Life (four) (27^x35^), Di Salvo Bros 60
English School; XVIII Century.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
113. Landscape with Figures (33x47), Chas. Oberwalder's Sons 300
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
43. Mrs. Harrison and Child (36x28), Chas. Morgan 950
44. Mr, Harrison (35>^x27^), F. Frazer 950
57. Portrait of a Man (22i^xl7^), Dr. V. G. Simkovitch 110
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
186. Landscape and Cattle (37x45), Noel 80
Smith, Feb. Z, 1921.
72. Portrait of a Girl Leaning on a Basket (30x25) R. A. Reader 275
English School; About 1800.
A. G., Tan. 14, 1921.
59. Portrait of a Boy (17x13^), Miss I. Taylor 150
English School; XIX Century.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
97. Portrait of a Lady (31x25), Chas. Oberwalder's Sons 70
Enneking, John J.; 1841- , American.
Harris, Feb. 24, 1921.
42. Sudden Rain: A Summer Shower (22x30), H. Victor 100
Epp, Rudolph; 1834-1910, German.
Hutchinson, Feb. 14, 1921.
53. The Old Beau (39x32) 155
Ernst, Rudolf; 1854- , German.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
27. Oriental Interior with Figure (24x19), Mrs. Johnson 130
Etty, George, R. A.; 1787-1819, British.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
75. Lady Ellenborough (26x21^^), F. Baumeister 135
Evans, De Scott; Contemporary, American.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
23. The Lamp Glow (24x20) Prendergast 100
Fabbi, F.; 1861- , Italian.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
96. The Dancing Girl (31x22), Chas. Oberwalder's Sons 105
Fabrlanl, Gentile Da; early XV Century, Italian (School of).
A. G., Ian. 28, 1921.
680. Madonna with Saints (20>4x31), Jaxon 1,300
Fath, Rene.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
56. The Path Thro' the Woods (36x26) 65
Field, E. Loyal; 1856-1914, American.
Plaza, Feb. 18, 1921.
211. Landscape (20x30), P. D. Kerriscn 50
Flemish School, Early XVIII Century.
■ Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
892. The Four Seasons (49j^x45H), Lans Co 180
Francken, Jerome.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
143. Transfiguration (42x293^) 130
Escosura, Ignacio Leon Y; Contemporary, Spanish.
Taft, Feb. 17, 1921.
110. Surprised (25 J^ x32 1^ ), Calo Art Galleries SO
Field, Robert; ?-1819, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
29. George Washington (3x2)^) 725
256 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Fichel, Eugene Benjamin; 1826-1895, French.
French^ Tan. 20, 1921.
6. With Pipe and Glass (4^x3%), Rudert, Agent $60
16. An Appreciated Solo (7^x954), J. C. Willever 55
Flameng, Francois; 1856- , French.
Rose,bline, Tan. 20. 1921.
57. The Next Move (15x18), Dr. E. Cadgene 450
Flemisli. School; XV Century.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
248. Madonna and Child (17^x12^), M. J. Rougeron 200
255. Pair of Still Life Pictures (23x19), S. Schepps 100
Ruiz. April 19, 1921.
599. The Annunciation. W. R. Hearst 450
600. Saint Elena Uncovering the Cross. E. K. Brauch 700
Flemish School; Late XV Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1103. Descending of Christ from the Cross (2 ft. 6 in. x 1 ft. 10 in),
H. Burrows 450
Flemish School; Early XVI Century.
Ruiz. April 9, 1921.
1075. St. Jeronime (2 ft. 7 in. x 2 ft. 2 in.), H. H. Plate 70
1125. The Virgin, Christ and St. John (1 ft. 10 in. x 1 ft. 5 in.), H. Fair., 150
1134. Virgin Mary and Christ Baby with a Parrot in His Hand (3 ft. 4 in.
X 2 ft. 6 in.), C. Moran 650
1136. The King's Adoration of Christ (1 ft. x 8 in.) (triptych), J. Torrance 450
1153. Virgin Mary and Child. J. J. Murray 80
Flemish School; XVI Century.
Ruiz. April 9, 1921.
1107. The Shepherd's Adoration (4 ft. x 2 ft. 10 in.), C. Moran 200
Ruiz, May 21, 1921.
883. The Virgin, The Annunciation. J. Bartlett 300
Flemish School; Late XVI Century,
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1076. Portrait of a Young Lady (1 ft. 11 in. x 1 ft. 7 in.), H. H. Plate 85
Flemish School; XVII Century.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
261. Still Life (22x34), S Schepps 90
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
514. Flowers (36^x49), J. F. Carlisle 100
Florentine School; early XV Century.
A. G., Tan. 28, 1921.
678. Head of the Saviour (18^x12), Da Costa 100
Florentine School; about 1450.
A. G., Tan. 28, 1921.
672. Virgin, Child, and Angels (24x14^), Pope 200
673. The Crucifixion (I5i^xl0^), Da Costa 110
Fortuny y Carbo, Mariano; 1838-1874, Spanish.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
30. Figures in Repose (8x10) (water color), Scott & Fowles 55
Fragonard, H.; 1806-1876, French.
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., Feb. 24, 1921.
263. Une Vestale (23J^x30), Eugene Borass 125
Francais
F. A, A. R., Feb. 10, 1921.
106. Italian Ruins with Figures (38x51), W. Randell 100
Fraser, Charles; 1782-1860, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
30. Mr. Strong of New York (3x2^^) 80
31. Captain Charles Bertody (334x3) 85
32. James Knox Polk (25^x254) 70
33. Mr. Schley (23^x2^) 52
French School; XVII Century.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
271. Portrait of a Lady (52x36), M. J. Rougeron ; 125
French School; Late XVII Century.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
7. The Judgment of Paris (Hj^xlSJ^) 60
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 257
French School; XVIII Century.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
57. Portrait of a Bey (18x15), Mrs. J. E. Jenkins $72
93. The Letter (31x25), Chas. Oberwalder's Sons 70
95. Portrait of a Prince (32x26), Chas. Oberwalder's Sons 125
Cattadori, April 15, 1921.
535. (a) Sunset at Venice, (b) 'Storm near a Rocky Coast (overdoor panels)
(40x235^) McCarthy 50
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
893. Flowers (49^x44), Mrs. M. J. SchoUi 150
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., Feb. 24, 1921.
267. Still Life (32x52^), S. G. Rains 70
268. Still Life (32x52^/^), S. G. Rains 70
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
17. La Duchesse de Mcntbazon (14x11), B. R. Kittredge 80
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
467. Six Views of Ruins (MxlSj/^), W. H. Thompson 120
508. View of the Pack of Beagles of Empress Catherine II of Russia
32^x49H), C. Erlanger 125
French School.
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
195. Portrait of a Lady (25x30), Leo Elwyn 50
Frere, Edouard; 1819-1886, French.
Holmes, Jan. 20, 1921.
7. Evening Prayer (14J^xll^) (drawing in chalk), Mr. Fox 1,575
Fromentin, Eugene; 1920-1876, French.
Freeman Gal., Phila., Feb. 26, 1921.
754. Oriental Figures (24x1 7) 60
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
92. Rendezvous of Arabs in Algiers (lO^ixSy^), Mr. Fox 1,575
Goossens, Feb 3, 1921.
7. Environs of Sidi-bel-Abbes (8^4x15^) M. B. Philipp 150
Fuller, George; 1822-1844, American.
F. A. A. R., March 19, 1921.
509. The Field Walk. F. R. Kaldenberg 50
Fungal, Bernardino; 1460-1516, Flcrentine.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
259. Adoration (37x20), McCarthy 400
Fyt, Jan; 1625-1671, Flemish.
Bartlett, March 7, 1921.
18. Fancy Roosters (20x15^), J. C. H. Weldring 65
Herring, J. F., Senior; 1795-1865, British.
Bartlett, March 7, 1921.
3. The Old Barn (1534xl4i^), Mrs. W. K. Dick 140
Gabriel, Paul Joseph Constantine; 1825-1903, Dutch.
Rcebling, Jan. 20, 1921.
68. Landscape with River (15x23). Olivetti 150
Gallait, Louis; French.
Clarke, Ian. 12, 1921.
135. Mother and Child (l5i4xl9H), Brittain 95
Gay, Edward, N. A.; 1837- , American.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
40. Golden Harvest (20^x30^), E. H. Manning 210
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921.
107. Swamp Pasture (24>^x40H), W. Randell 55
109. Pelhamdale (35x59), W. Randell 67
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Landscape (20x25) , J. J. Wilson 72
Geddes, Andrew; XVIII Century, British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
86. Children in the Forest (40x50) C. W. Kraushaar Galleries 400
Gelder, Lucien; XIX Century, German.
A. G., April 5, 1921.
61. Playing Doctor (36x27), Calo 55
Gerard, Francois Pascal; 1770-1837, French.
Henkels, April 11, 1921.
80. Eugene de Beauharnais (28x22), Bert 1,000
81. Hortense Eugenie Beauharnais (25^x21^), Bert 1,000
82. Madame Jeanne Louise Henriette Genest Campan (25^x211/^), Bert.. 1,000
Gerard, Thomas.
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Dutch Interior (31x50), Bernard Devine 70
258 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
German School; XVI Century.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
14. Christ on the Cross (12J4xl0j^) $80
German School; late XVI Century.
A. G., Jan. 28, 1921.
675. The Mocking of Christ (29x41), Weyhe 100
German School; XVIII Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1074. A Young Man (3 ft. 11 in. x 3 ft. 2 in.), C. Thomson 300
Gerome, Jean Leon; 1824-1904, French.
A. A. A., Jan. 20, 1921.
61. The Butcher Boy (13x1 1^), Mrs. C. F. Darlington 500
Ghirlandaio, School of.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
16. Portrait of a Woman (17x1134) M. J. Rougeron 210
Giachi, E.; Contemporary, Italian.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
65. Chant d'Amour (35x51), M. B. Bernstein 120
Gimbrede, Thomas; 1781-1832, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
33. Mr. Schley (2^x2^) 52
GIminez, F. Fernandez; 1891- , Spanish.
Freeman Gal., Phila., Feb. 26, 1921.
756. Mergiate en la Alhambra (50x40) 52
Smith & Jafife, April 1, 1921.
400. Flowers in a Brass Bowl. Kobler 65
Glaize, Pierre Paul Leon; 1842- , French.
Clarke, Tan. 12, 1921.
53. The Swing (4.3x2) 120
Goodridge, Sarah; American,
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
34. Portrait of a Revolutionary Officer (2§'gx2) 75
35. Portrait of a Girl (2^x2) 70
Gordon, Sir John Watson, R. A., P. R. S. A.; 1790-1864, British.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
67. Portrait of a Lady (30^x25), McCarthy 150
Gorter, A. H.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
57. Dutch Sunset (39x28>^) 160
Goya y Lucientes, Francisco Jose de; 1746-1828, Spanish.
Wasserman, Feb. 3, 1921.
79. Portrait of Don Alonso Munoz (2534x21i^) J. C. Heldring 275
Goya y Lucientes, Francisco Jose de; 1716-1828, Spanish (Attributed to).
Ruiz, May 21, 1921.
859. Gentlemen. J. Bartlett 200
Greaves, Walter; Contemporary, British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
21. Portrait of Whistler (20x24), Dr. Rosenbach 45
Greenhlll, John; 1649-1672,. British.
Charles, Nov. 17, 1920.
682. James II (50x40), H. L. Adams, Jr 230
Greuze, Jean Baptiste; 1725-1805, French.
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., Feb. 24, 1921.
295. Portrait of a Young Girl (21^x16-14), C. Mullen 135
Osterreith, Feb. 24, 1921.
16. Portrait Study (10x8^^), O. Bernet, Agent 200
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
23. Head of a Young Girl (16i^xl2K), F. K. Richards 60
Grimaldi, William; 1751-1830, British.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
35a. George Washington (3x2^) 2,600
Groll, Albert F., N. A.; 1866- , American.
A. G., April 5, 1921.
55. Gathering Potatoes (25x35) , Calo 65
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
32. Hilly Country (13x19) 115
Grolleron, Paul Louis Narcisse; 1848 1901, French.
Holmes, Jan. 20, 1921.
8. The Noonday Meal (12i/^x9H), H. Bull 200
F. A. A. R., May 7, 1921.
862. Zouave Soldier Resting (12x9), Arlington Galleries 90
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 259
Qpuppe, Charles P.; 1860- , American,
A. G., April 5, 1921.
56. November Afternoon (2i.r:36), Fenwick $130
Grutzner, E.; 1846-1878, German.
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Lunch Time (9x1 1 ) , Francis Draz 60
Guard!, Francesco; 1712-1792, Venetian.
Cattadori, April 15, 1921.
532. View of San Giorgi Maggiore, Venice (I5x20j^), McCarthy 120
French, Jan. 21. 1921.
111. Venice (llj^xl534), M. Knoedler & Co 1,050
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
244. Ruins (8x7) , Buffardi 50
Guillaumin, Armand; Contemporary, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
36. La Lecture (Madame Cezanne reading) (24x20), Kraushaar Galleries 230
Haquette, Georges; 1854-1906, French.
F. A. A. R., April 9, 1921.
852, French Fisherman (22x28), H. D. G. Rohlfs 80
Hahn, Wilhelm; XIX Century, German.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
120. The Harvest Feast (45x69), W. Wesendonck 200
Hamilton, C. W.; 1675-1751, Flemish,
F, A. A. R, Feb. 10, 1921.
31. Butterflies and Insects (companion to 31a) (15^x12^) SO
31a. Butterfles and Insects (companion to 31) (15^x12^/^) 50
Hanneman, Adreaan; 1601-1671, Dutch.
Charles, Nov. 17, 1920.
654. Lady Cholmely of Whitby (24i,4x20), H. L. Adams 100
Hardime, Pieter; 1678-1758, Flemish.
Charles, Nov. 17, 1920.
858. A Bowl of Flowers (22i^xl8^), Mrs. Band 85
F. A. A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
92. Flower Piece (35x43), Satinover 110
Harding, Chester; 1792-1886, American.
F. A. A. R., Feb. 9, 1921
135. Portrait of Judge Jacon Kent of Newberry, Vermont. Cooper Hewitt 55
Harlamoff, Alexis; 1849- , Russian.
Peckham, March 29, 1921
22. Innocence (18^^x14^ ), Mr. Crooker 150
Harpignies, Henri Joseph; 1819-1916, French.
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
56. Summer (25^x32) Mr. Burtman 1,800
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
151. Environs de Beaucaire (25^^x32), R. C. Vose 1,800
Holmes, Jan. 21, 1921.
148. Evening (20x32), P. J. Higgs 3,600
Robbins, Feb. 24, 1921.
34. A Holiday in the Woods (26x20H), William F. Laporte 120
Roebling, Jan. 21, 1921.
159. Landscape (29x39^), J. M. Heatherton 1,450
Taft, Feb. 3, 1921.
31. Children in the Wood (22xl8J4), Robert Anderson 275
Wasserman, Feb. 3, 1921.
4. Landscape Mxll3/0 C. S. Baldwin 225
Harrison, Alexander; 1853- , American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
260. Marine (19x30). Ellis 125
Harrison, April 19, 1921.
5. Springtime in Brittany (13x16), M. E. 'Sterne 70
8. Backwaters (15-^x231^), M. E. Sterne 55
11. Lever de Lune (18x293/4), H. H. Smith 60
13. Nymph of the Birches (25i^x25H), Dr. C. H. Williams 100
14. Faux et Sables (1734x31 54 ), E. Coykendall 75
15. Vagues Dorees (12x40), M. W. Clepham 80
16. Vagues Bretonnes (12x40), M. W, Clepham 65
17. La Bretagne (12x40), F. J. Deardon 60
18. Les Vagues (16x40), Ellis 65
19. Swimming Girl (17^x2934), F. J. Deardon 60
20. Innocence (193/^x31 1^), F. J. Deardon 60
21. Tidal Inlet (27i4x27i^), Ellis 75
22. Les Cypres (23^x28^), E, Coykendall 125
260 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Harrison — Ccntinwed.
23. Venice by Moonlight (20x30), R. Hyman $70
24. Pleine Mer (20x30), E. E. Rice 55
25. The Lagoon (20x31^), M. W. Clepham 70
27. Midnight (21^x31 M), Ellis 60
29. Alpes du Midi (22i^x31^), M. E. Sterne 90"
30. Olive Trees (23x31 3^), M. W. Clepham 75
31. Sand Prairie (213^x3534), Ellis ' 80
34. Lune Calme (233^x32^^), M. W. Clepham 75
35. Solitude (24x31^), T. Richards 55
37. Alpes Maritimes (22^x32), Ellis 50
38. Le Soir (24x35 H), C. M. Levett 55
39. Venise Doree (30x36) , Arlington Galleries 65
40. Seaweed Boy (313^^x31^), F. J. Deardon 120
41. Nuages-Ecume (21 Hx32) , T. Richards 55
42. Pecheurs de Nuit (21^x32), M. W. Clepham 55
43. Lune Venetienne (20x33^), E. Travis 115
44. Soleil Couchant (20^x36), H. A. Pomeroy 85
45. La Bretagne (24x35>^), Ellis 80
46. Eaux Venetiennes (27i^x39i/$), J. Buck 75
47. Sun Foam (23^x47), M. W. Clepham 120
48. Moon Clouds (23^x47), J. Buck 75
49. La Mer Rose (24x47^^) 55
50. Moonlight at Sea (27^x47)^^) 125
51. Lune-Vagues (29^x47^4), H. A. Pomeroy 55
Robbins, Feb. 24, 1921.
61. Un Naufrage (30x55), S. A. Powell • 230
Harrison, Birge, N. A.; 1854- , American.
Harrison, April 19, 1921. '
9. Golden Haze (18x24), E. Coykendall 55
12. Fifth Avenue in Winter (30x18), C. W. Bull 95
28. On Lake Cayuga (24x30) , R. Hyman 75
32. The Edge of the Park (30x25), T. Richards 90
33. Moonlight (25x30) 65
36. Sunburst at 'Sea (28x30), R. Hyman , 60
Hart, James IVI., N.A.; 1828-1901, American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
283. In the Grove (21x16), Arlington Galleries 130
F. A. A. R., Dec. 11, 1920.
779. Landscape and Cattle (16x12), Holland Art Galleries 50
F. A. A. R., April 9, 1921.
857. Landscape and Cattle (17x22), S. Guardini 60
F. A. A. R., May 7, 1921.
874. Landscape (14x10), W. G. Downie 90
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Landscape and Cattle (20x36), J. J. Wilson 72
Robbins, Feb, 24, 1921.
13. Landscape and Cattle (20x16), E. H. Manning 105
Hartley, IVIarsden; 1877- , American.
Hartley, May 17, 1921.
22. Desertion, Maine, 1909. Daniel Gallery 120
23. Landscape, Maine, 1909. Wertheimer 65
27. Still-Life, 1911. Paul Rosenfeld 100
28. Still-Life, 1911. Florence Cane 90
30. Impression, Maine, 1908. Lindaberg 75
31. The Ice-Hole, Maine, 1908. De Wald 55
35. Autumn, Maine, 1908. A. Mayer 55
43. Pre-War, Pageant, 1913. Daniel Gallery 100
48a. Autumn, Lake and Hills, 1908. O. D. Sterner 200
48b. Storm Clouds, Maine, 1908. O. D. Sterner 200
56. Movement, Bermuda. A. C. Barnes 100
58. Still-Life, 1916. A.Gallatin 50
59. Landscape, New Mexico, 1918. A. Rothbarte 50
65. Hondo Canyon, Valdez, New Mexico, 1918 (pastel), A. Einstein 60
71. New Mexico, 1919 (pastel), A. Leniger 60
87. Painting on glass, 1917. A. Rothbaite 150
88. Painting on glass. C. 'Stetheimer 55
89. Painting on glass, 1917. A. Rothbarte 60
90. Volupte, 1919. A. C. Pellon 55
91. Atlantic Window in the New England Character, 1919. Paul Rosenfeld 65
9Z. Still-Life, 1919. M. Wertheimer SO
95. New Mexico, 1919. Daniel Gallery 50
98. Virgin of Guadaloupe, 1919. A Stieglitz 95
99. Mountain and Cemetery, New Mexico, 1919. A. Stieglitz 85
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 261
Hartley — Continued.
109. Landscape, New Mexico, 1919 (pastel), W. C. Williams $105
113. Landscape, New Mexico, 1919 (pastel), A. Praskauer 50
114. Landscape, New Mexico, 1919 (pastel), A. Stieglitz 160
Harvey, George; 1782-1852, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
36. Daniel Webster (5i4x4) 135
Hasbrouck, Du Bois Fenelon; 1860- , American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
262. Winter (34x45), M. Ready 125
Hassam, Childe, N. A.; 1859- , American.
A. A. A., Jan. 20, 1921.
60. A Spring Morning (27j4x20), E. A. Milch 1,075
Clarke, Jan 12, 1921.
147. Wood Nymphs (42x31 H), Mr. Zoch 200
Haven, Frank De, N. A.; 1856- , American.
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
40. Old Road Near Plymouth (14x20), J. Heatherton 70
Haverman, Marghertha; 1720-1795, Dutch.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
652. Flowers (283/^x23^), Stephen A. Powell 150
871. Flowers and Butterflies (283^x22^), Mrs. Band 55
Hawker, Edward; 1641-1721, British.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
873. Lady Mary Norden (30x25), George Utassy 70
Hawthorne, Charles Webster, N. A.; 1872- , American.
Smithers, Jan. 21, 1921.
96. The Helper (25x20), J. C. Ferguson 190
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
80. The White Shawl (40x30), Mr. Crooker 130
Heem, Jan De; 1650-c;rca 1720, Flemish.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
690. Flowers (52x32), Mrs. James 175
Heere, Lucas De; 1534-1584, Flemish.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
866. The Countess of Pembroke (27x21^), H. L. Adams, Jr 240
Heffner, Professor Karl; 1849- , German.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
65. Landscape (33^x47), William F. Laporte 170
Heist, Bartholomeus Van' Der; 1613(?)-1670, Dutch, (Attributed to).
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
46. Portrait of a Lady (50x40), H. Edwards 600
Henner, Jean Jacques; 1829-1905, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 3, 1921.
25. Lady in Red (21^x15^), Scott and Fowles 625
Aron, Feb. 24, 1921.
7. Reclining Nymph (10x16) 560
Henry, E. L.; 1841-1919, American.
F. A. A. R., Dec. 11, 1920.
783. The Old Homestead (11x22), H. Schultheis 175
tensch, Willem De; Contemporary.
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
34. Travellers on the Road (141/^x18^4), C. Thompson 180
HIghmore, Joseph; 1620-1780, British.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
684. The Hon. Selina Wollaston (50x40), I. Rosenfield 300
Hill, J.; XVIII to XIX Century, British.
Henkel, March 28, 1921.
207. His Excellency, James Sullivan, Esq 105
Hitchcock, George, A. N. A.; 1850-1913, American.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
68. The Flight into Egypt (44x66), Willicomber 350
Hobbema, Meindert; 1638-1709, Dutch.
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
112. Landscape with Mill (9x11), G. Watson 800
Goossens, Feb. 24, 1921.
46. Landscape with Watermill (18x24), Fred Pearson 1,000
Hoeber, Arthur, N. A.; 1854-1915, American.
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., Feb. 24, 1921.
187. Autumn (30x40), Franklin Haines 60
262 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Hoet, Gerard; 1648-1733, Dutch.
French, Tan. 21, 1921.
49. A Roman Festival (20x25), F. Pierson $130
Mogarth, William; 1697-1764, British.
Wasserman, Feb. 3, 1921.
78. Portrait of Mrs. Lucy Weston (30r25H) C. S. Baldwin 175
Holsteyn, Cornelius; ?-1658, Dutch.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
41. Bacchanalia (64-)4x59^), H. Temmer 1,300
Homer, Winslow, N. A.; 1836-1910, American.
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
147. Coast of Maine (20x24) , P. D. Kerrison 65
Hondecoeter, Meichior de; 1636-1695, Dutch.
Fricke, Feb. 14, 1921.
64. Fighting Cocks (29x47) 310
Hoppner, John; 1758-1810, British.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
70. Portrait of a Lady (36x28^), W. E. Segsworth 260
Howe, William H., N. A.; 1846- , American,
A. G., April 5, 1921.
29. The Bull (18x24), Rohlf 55
Huang Ch'uan; 940-1000, Chinese (Attributed to).
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
436. Plum Tree and Birds (64^4x67^^) 325
Hubert-Drouais, Francois; 1727-1775, French.
Charles, Nov, 18, 1920.
674. Madame de Monchablon (22^^x18), I. Rosenfield 475
Hubner, Carl; 1814-1879, German.
F. A. A. R., Feb. 20, 1921.
112. Evening Prayer (41x52), A, Janssen 110
Hudson, Thomas; 1701-1799, British.
A. G., Tan. 14, 1921.
54. Portrait of a Man (30x25), Geo. Mercer 140
Huguet, Victor Pierre; 1835-1902, French.
A. A A.. Feb 24, 1921.
Z7. Desert Encampment (25^4x34), D. J. R. Ushikubo 570
38. Arabian Scene (25^x32), S. A. Powell 475
Hunt, William Morris; 1824-1879, American.
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
41. The Amazon (24x16), C. Thompson 225
Huntington, Daniel, P.N. A.; 1816-1906, American.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
88. Portrait of Guy Richards (29x25), Jas. Miller 80
121. Justice and Peace (80x64), Chas. Oberwalder's Sons 50
Huysum, Jan Van; 1682-1749, Dutch.
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
71. Still Life, Flowers (15x13) 75
Ihlefeld, Henry, Contemporary.
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
43. Girl with Bowl (26x18), Mrs. Coler 60
Indian School; Second Half XVI Century.
A. G., May 14, 1921.
450. An Enthroned Sultan (miniature) (16^4x11) 200
451. Sultan and Retainers (miniature) (7x5) 200
Indian School; XVII-XVIII Century.
A. G., May 14, 1921.
467. Two Dancers (7^x41^) 75
Indian School; XVIII Century.
A. G., May 14, 1921.
464. Night Scene (miniature) (8>^x6) 55
Indian School; Early XIX Century.
A. G., May 14, 1921.
465. Portrait of a Nabob (miniature) (6>2x4J4) 85
Inman, Henry; 1801-1846, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
38. Portrait of a Young Lady (2x2^) 235
97. William Inman (8x9J^) 100
98. Caroline Inman (8>4xll) . . — ; 50
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 263
Inness, George, N. A.; 1825-1894, American.
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
58. Autumn Scene (8x10) $80
61. Italian Landscape (12x17) 230
64. Italian View (12x18) 230
68. Monte Lucia, Perugia (14x19^) 500
F. A. A. R., Dec. 11, 1920.
802. Springtime (30x20), H. Schultheis 150
F. A. A. R., March 19, 1921.
504. A Sunshiny Autumn Landscape. Mrs. Walls 72
Ferlov, April 5. 1921
30. Forest Pool (14x20), Metropolitan Galleries 70
Kerr, Nov. 26, 1920.
54. Landscape (14x12), A. D. Snow 1,225
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
156. Italian Landscape (12x16), J. S. Read 50
Inness, George; 1825-1894, American (Attributed to).
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921.
116. Golden Autumn (52x35), F. M. T. Lane 70
Marks, Feb. 17, 1921.
Landscape (19x13)), Dunlap 425
Isabey, Louis Gabriel Eugene; 1803-1886, French.
A. A. A., Jan. 21, 1921.
109. The Embarkation of William of Orange (16§^x23>4), Seaman Agent,. 475
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
293. On the French Coast (16x30), M. Ready 90
French, Jan 21, 1921.
147. The Departure for the Hunt (29x23M), S. S. Laird 2,000
Goossens, Feb. 3, 1921.
9. Marine with Shipping (13%x9.>^) J. F. Albee 250
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
231. Scene in Spain (9x13), Wm. M. K. Olcott 55
Israels, Josef; 1824-1911, Dutch.
A. A. A., Jan. 21, 1921.
167. The Shoal Fisher (78x55), E. F. Albee 4,600
Holmes, Tan. 21. 1921.
102. At the Window (9^x16) (water color), F. M. Grossman 950
Plaza, Ian. 6, 1921.
Sewing (22x25), Kelly Art Galleries 70
Plaza, June 4, 1921.
376. Peasant Woman (12x16), W. F. Laporte 70
Wasserman, Feb. 3, 1921.
12. Peasant Woman (10^x7^) S. C. Lampert 110
Italian School.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
104. Four copies of Rembrandt (llx8J^ each), Langeman 72
Italian School; About the 1st Century A. D.
Khayat, May 20, 1921.
197. Cupid (6x5), J. Mills 50
198. Landscape (9x6J/^) (wall decoration at Boscoreale) 165
Italian School; XV Century.
Lawrence, Jan, 28, 1921.
2,2,7. Madonna and Saints (37^x20), C. Stephens 1,150
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
268. Madonna and Child (26x18), S. Schepps 200
Weissberger, April 27. 1921.
455. Virgin and Child and St, Francis (7^x6j4), Heckser 200
Italian School; XVI Century,
Orselli, Feb, 16, 1921,
245, Madonna and Child (6i^x8H), Mae Murray 230
247. Holy Family (12x10), M. J. Rougeron 130
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
478. Virgin and Child (18x12), T. Schilling 50
Italian School; Early XVII Century.
Bartlett, March 7, 1921.
16. Madonna and Child (17x13), J. F. McCarthy 95
Italian School; XVII Century.
Cattadori, April 15, 1921.
544. Still Life: Fish (4 ft. 10 in. x 6 ft, 6 in.), O. Ozzoni 60
545, Still Life: Fish (4 ft. 10 in. x 6 ft. 6 in.) O. Ozzoni 60
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
249. Madonna and Child (12x9^), A. Sommers 150
264 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Italian School — Continued.
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
488. Pair of Flower Paintings (23^x16^), Wm. C. Jafifee $170
515. Christ and Saints (cassone front) (19x59), Richardson 70
A. A. A., March 7, 1921.
65. Venus and Cupid (45x58^), R. Glendenning 50
66. A Gardener and a Little Maid (45x58^/^), R. Glendenning.. 50
Italian School; Early XVIII Century.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
881. Flowers (2) (33^x33) ((22^x23), N. J, Deming 70
Italian School; XVIII Century.
Bartlett, March 7, 1921.
53. Belisarius (28Hx32i4), J. F. McCarthy 70
Italian School; Late XVIII Century.
Bartlett, March 7, 1921.
59. Rural Festivities (49x37), J. F. McCarthy 50
Italian School; Sienese.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
21. Adoration of the Magi (9x51), A. Rudert, Agent 350
Jacque, Charles Emile; 1813-1894, French.
A. A. A., Jan. 21, 1921.
132. Shepherdess and Sheep (18x15), Park, Agent 625
A. A. A., Feb. 3, 1921.
38. Sheep Drinking (13^x10^) 1,500
Beck, Feb 3, 1921.
41. Feeding Time (6x9^^) D. J. R. Ushikubo 525
49. A Hillside Pasture (20^x185^) 450
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
17. Shepherdess and Sheep (4^x6), J. C. Willever $210
74. Entering the Pastures (27x39^), E. F. Albee 7,500
126. Landscape and Sheep (Sj^xll), Mrs. G. Stromberg 450
Plaza, June 4, 1921.
382. Barn Interior (12x16), E. Schwerdt. 75
Williams, Feb. 24, 1921.
5. Chickens (4i^x6), Satinover Galleries 270
Jacque, H.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
868. Sheep (9x6), Dr. La Porte 110
Jansen, W. F.; Dutch.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
253. Landscape and Cattle (17x23), Schultheis 51
Janssens, Abraham; 1575-1632, Flemish.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
653. Portrait of a Burgomaster (29x25^4), Mrs. M. Adler 70
Janssens, Cornells; Circa 1593-1664, Dutch.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
52. Jane, Daughter of Henry Skipwith (26x201-0, B. R. Kittredge 240
Charles, Nov, 18, 1921.
659. Lady Dering (30x26), C. B. Wilson 120
661. Lady Ashburnham, Baroness Cramond (28x21J/^), Austin, Agent.... 975
679. Portrait of a Prelate (36x27), Mrs. M. Stewart 350
Japanese School; Kamakura period.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
511. Amida Buddha (44^x24i/^), F. Keally 50
Jiminez, Luis; 1845- , Spanish.
Holmes, Tan. 20, 1921.
62. Farmyard Duties (24J/$xl73^), W. T. Heniot 285
Johnson, Eastman; 1824-1906, American.
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
The Boy Lincoln (22x28), J. J. Wilson 102
Jongkind, Johan Barthold; 1822-1891, Dutch.
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
105. Scene at Delft, Holland (13)4x18^), A. A. Healy 1,100
Goossens, March 7, 1921.
19. Landscape (15x205^), R. Vitole 55
Jordaens, Jacob; 1593-1678, Flemish.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921. ,
38. Bacchus with Faun (52^x40%), J- Temmer 1,300
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
141. Philosopher, Styled Head of Thinker (22x27), Brittain 90
Jungheim, Carl; 1803-1886, German.
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921.
115. Alpine Scene (46x68), A. Janssen 205
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 265
Jurres, Johannes Henricus; 1875- , Dutch.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
3. Asking Alms (8^x7^), Kraushaar Galleries $60
28. Horseman and Attendants (14x18), Kraushaar Galleries 120
43. Spanish Beggars (21xl7>^), A. A. Boom 150
59. Breaking Camp (20x3 1J4), Kraushaar Galleries 390
n. The Prodigal Son (30^x22M), Kraushaar Galleries 300
81. The Attack (29j^x44), W. E. Segsworth 450
93. Peter and the Cripple (47x35^) 210
94. The Halt (403^x58), Kraushaar Galleries 650
95. Don Quixote and Sancho Panza After the Battle (40x29), Kraushaar
Galleries 225
Kaemmerer, F. H.; Contemporary, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
16. Knitting (22xl6J^), R. Ito 65
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
Zl. Sleigh Ride (31x22), H. D. G. Rohlphs 90
F. A. A. R., May 7, 1921.
865. The Fisherwoman (15x24), J. I. Downey 85
Kaltenmoser, Max; 1842-1887, German.
Smith & Jafife, May 21, 1921.
1356. The Visitors 70
Keith, William; 1839-1911, American.
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
62. Landscape: The Passing Storm (18x26) C. J. Wrightsman 475
Plaza, June 4, 1921.
321. Wooded Landscape (19x15), W. V. Goldie 55
Kever, Jacobus Simon Hendrik; 1854- , Dutch.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
58. Mother and Child (30^x22^4), Kraushaar Galleries 375
Kilburne, G. G.; Contemporary, British.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
9. Afternoon Tea (16x12), C. E. Atwood 160
Knaus, Ludwig; 1829-1910, German.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
4. A Poodle Dog (9xl2i^), Seaman, Agent 160
53. Roses and Thorns (31x23), Miss M. H. Dodge 1,000
Kneller, Sir Godfrey; 1646-1723, British.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
S3. Portrait of a Young Lady (29x24^), Miss I. Taylor 100
58. Portrait of a Lady (29x24H), Miss I. Taylor 150
Ramsay, March 9, 1921.
322. Portrait of Lord Peterborough (30x25), A. McCrea 120
Knight, Daniel Ridgway; 1845- , American.
Holmes, Jan. 20, 1921.
83. French Shepherdess (41x32), E. F. Albee 1,700
Roebling, Jan. 21, 1921.
154. Along the River (32x26), Arlington Galleries 725
Kobell, Ferdinand; 1740-1822, Austrian.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
10. Companion Landscapes (14x17) 50
Koopman, Augustus; Contemporary, American.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
71. Hoisting (26^x32^), F. Concklin, Jr 110
Korean School; XII Century.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4. 1921.
423. Buddha (50x19), Miss M. Lane 90
Korean School; XIII Century.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
424. Figure of Hattara Sonja (25^x17), Mr. Ormond 85
Korean School; XV Century.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
461. Figures (28^x33^), L. A. Oliver 55
464. Still Life (50^x18^), Mrs. J. E. Spingarn 50
465. Still Life (50^x18^) 50
Korean School; Ri Dynasty.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
466. Portrait of the Monk Enkaku-Kokushi (45x34), O. F. Roberts 55
Kost, F. W., N. A.; 1861- , American.
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
22. Bleak Morning (13x26) 90
35. Evening Landscape (22x29) 120
266 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Kronbepger; German.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
95. Visiting Grandmother (35x26), Schultheis $51
Kruseman Van Elten, Hendrik, N.A.; 1829-1904, American.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
62. Landscape (2.6x3.2), L. S. Hedrea 100
La Farge, John; 1835-1910, American.
Freeman Gal., Phila., Feb. 26, 1921.
768. Mother and Child (14x12) 140
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
10. The Pied Piper of Hamelintown (water color) (8>^x6^), A. Babcock 70
79. Le Jet d'Eau (42x21 H), A. F. Egner 200
Lagrenee, Francois; 1724-1805, French.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
655. Louis XVI (27x23^), T. L. Wetherhill 140
Landseer, Sir Edwin, R. A.; 1802-1873, British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
87. Boy and Dogs (50x59^) Metropolitan Galleries 275
Lancret, Nicholas; 1690-1743, French.
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
64. Pastoral (19x25j4), Mrs. Mason 1,075
Largilliere, Nicolas De; 1656-1746, French.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
672. Madame de la Suze (34x26M), H. L. Adams, Jr 500
673. Mademoiselle de Scudery (34x2634), Louis Ralston 525
680. Le Due de Nivernas (48J^x41^), George L. Brandon 425
F. A. A. R., March 18, 1921.
316. Portrait of Duchess de Grammont. Van B. Post 90
Laugee, George; 1843- , French.
F. A. A. R.. April 9, 1921.
847. At Rest (18x15), Weitemeyer Bros 72
853. Potato Gatherers (26x32), S. Guardini 150
Lawrence, Sir Thomas, R. A.; 1769-1830, British.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
58. Portrait of Captain Thomas Drake (36x28), Mrs. A. S. Jarvis 350
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
71. Portrait of Master Peters (circular diameter 18) R. A. Reader 1,350
90. "Charity": The Misses Newdigate of Surrey (84x58^) 3.900
Lawson, Ernest, N. A.; 1873- , American.
A. G., April 5, 1921.
58. The Old Fashioned Circus (25x30), F. K. M. Rehn 165
Leader, Sir Benjamin Williams, R. A.; 1831- , British.
Fricke, Feb. 14, 1921.
50. Streatly-on-Thames (23x37^), A. Tooth & Son 105
Leigh, W. R.; 1866- , American.
Fifty-seventh St. Gal, Feb. 24, 1921.
263a. Painting. Babcock Galleries 105
Leiy, Sir Peter; 1610-1680, British.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
657. Mary Harvey, Lady Dering (30x25), H. L. Adams, Jr 90
662. Lady Stroude of Chipstead (30x25), A. J. Kobler 525
683. Portrait of Anne Dering (50x41), Warren Smadbeck 525
685. Portrait of Mr. Southwell (49^^x40), H. L. Adams, Jr 500
688. Lady Lecon (493^x37^), A. J. Kobler 100
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
40. Nell Gwynn (48^x391^) 375
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., Feb. 24, 1921.
288. Portrait Col. Henry Heylyn (30^x24), A. F. De Forest 55
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
76. Portrait of Lord Butler (30x25), Seaman, Agent 400
Goossens, Feb. 24, 1921.
53. Portrait of a Lady (28i^x23^), M. B. Bernstein 110
LeIy, School of.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
887. La Belle Stuart (50x39 J^), Lans Co 75
Le Moyne, Francois; 1688-1737, French.
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
51. Pastoral (22x29J/^), E. F. Albee , 250
Lenbach, Franz; 1836-1904, German.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
96. Portrait of Frau Yost (4234x32), Baumeister 465
97. Portrait of Lady Bateman (44^4x32), Hans Henricks 200
98. Portrait of Bjornsterne Bjornson (29^x25), J. C. Heldring 550
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 267
Lepine, S.; 1836-1892, French.
Burgess, Feb. 3, 1921.
28. Summer Mocn (l5x21->4) M. Knoedler & Co $325
Le Prince, Jean Baptiste; 1733-1781, French.
French, Tan. 20, 1921.
9. Reading the Heavens (8x5f^), L. Biddle 100
123. The Young Musician i22x\8}i) , L. A. Biddle 500
Le Richer; XVIII Century, French.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
888. Still Life: "Flowers" (32^x51^), J. Harris 110
Lhermitte, Leon Augustin; 1844- , French.
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
57. The Gleaners (20i^x383^) 9,400
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
71. Returning from the Fields (22xl7j4), P. T. Higgs 2,150
104. The Faggot Gatherers (HJ^xie), Findlay Galleries 475
Lier, Adolf; 1826-1882, German.
Smith & Jaffe, May 20, 1921.
1201. Moonlight, Coast Scene 155
1233. Landscape 100
Lievens, Jan; 1607-1674, Dutch.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
25. Portrait of a Burgher of Amsterdam (Hj^xlOJ^), F. A. Muschenheim. . 1,400
Lima, Adelaide; Contemporary.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
83. Young Woman Reading (31i^x37i^), Mr. Crocker 55
Lingelbach, Johannes; 1625-1687, Dutch.
Charles, Nov. 20, 1920.
691. The Fish Market, Antwerp (44x72), H. L. Adams, Jr 400
Lin Liang; active circa 1460, Chinese.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
493. Peacocks and Trees (61^2x36) 310
Loeb, Louis, N. A.; 1866-1909, American.
Smithers, Jan. 21, 1921.
95. Jessica (26^xl9j4), J. C. Ferguson 250
166. Joyous Life (32x62), J. C. Leslie 1,150
Lorenzetti, Pietro; 12?-1348, Sienese.
Cattadori, April 16, 1921.
679. Virgin and Child (36x29), J. Satinover 1,000
Loten, Jan; 1618-1680, Dutch.
Osterreith, Feb. 24, 1921.
49. Landscape and Figures (34x2734), Marie Glynn 250
Loutherbourg, Philippe Jacque de; 1740-1812, French.
Lehne, April 1, 1921.
910. Battle of Camperdown, October 11, 1797 (35x48), 'S. G. Mortimer 225
Louyot, Edmond; Contemporary, French.
A. A. A., March 7, 1921.
47. Retour de la Plage (23^x31^), F. A. Lawlor 80
50. Marine (24x31), Rita Louyot 60
55. Winter Landscape (23^x31^), R- Louyot 55
Lu-Chi; Ming, Chinese (Attributed to).
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
481. Ducks (463/4x22^), K. Oshima 60
Lu Sungnien; circa 1190- , Chinese.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
437. Figures in Mountainous Landscape (82^x43j4), J- L. Gilchrist 110
IVIadrazo, Ralmundo de; 1841-1920, Spanish.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
17. Preparing Tea (23^x17^), Calo Art Galleries 55
A. G., April 5, 1921.
18. The Galant (19x26), Calo 62
Roebling. Jan. 21, 1921.
156. The Swing (39^x28), Mrs. Coler 175
Maella, Mariano Salvador; 1739-1819, Spanish.
Ruiz, May 21, 1921.
879. Portrait. J. Delmar 55
Malbone, Edward Green; 1777-1807, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
40. Mrs. Mary D. Harris (354x2>4) 550
41. Mrs. Grimke (2^x2) 325
102. Portrait of Himself (10x13) 200
268 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
ManeschI, Jacopo.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
91. Piazza St. Marks, Venice (24x35), Weidemeyer $60
Map, C; 1657-1724, German.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
13. Bambino on the Cross (20^^x2554) 80
Marchette, L.
Freeman Gal., Phila., Feb. 26, 1921.
787. Spanish Soldier at Arms (14x11) 50
Marcke, Emile Van; 1827-1890, French.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 2, 1920.
299. French Farm (13x16), E. Gruppe 85
Taft, Feb 3, 1921.
67. After the Shower (38^x583^) Holland Galleries 1,700
Marias, A.; Dutch.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
46. Landscape with Cattle at Pool (31x26), S. A. Powel 180
Mariees, Georges Des; 1697-1776, French.
Cattadori, April 15, 1921.
537. Portrait of a Young Prince (32^x25^), McCarthy 85
Marieschl, Jacopo; 1711-1794, Venetian.
Bartlett, March 7, 1921.
36. The Doge's Palace (18x285^), J. F. McCarthy 80
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
668. St. Marks Place, Venice (46^x58), Rosenfield 500
669. The Bridge of Sighs, Venice (46j^x58), I. Rosenfield 475
Martin, Henri Jean Guillaume; Contemporary, French.
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
65. Noonday Rest (22x37^), C. W. Kraushaar 140
Martin, Homer D., N. A.; 1836-1897, American.
Ferlov, April 5, 1921.
26. Autumn in the Catskills (6x10), F. F. Sherman 105
Martinez, Del Mazo; 1610-1687 Spanish.
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
Don Carlos Balthasar (22x18) , Richardson 80
Mauve, Anton, 1838-1888, Dutch.
A. A. A., Jan. 21, 1921.
142, Cows Returning to the Farm (22j^xl7j4), A. A. Healy 3,500
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
11. Feeding Time (13x18), Mrs. Johnson 240
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
301. Sheep in Pasture (14x22), Lounes 125
Max Gabriel Cornelius; 1840- , German.
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
24. "Forgive" (13J^xll) P. Van Veen 175
McEntee, Jervis; 1828-1891, American.
Plaza, Nov. 5, 1920.
Landscape. Dr. J. Dorr 65
McCord, George H., A. N. A.; 1840-1909, American.
A. G., April 5, 1921.
24. Coast Scene (22x27), Calo 57
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
188. Autumn Landscape (18x28), Ellsworth 125
F. A. A. R., April 9, 1921.
841. Sunset, Lake George (19x31), H. D. G. Rohlfs 52
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., May 5, 1921.
35. Dortrecht Harbor. Babcock Galleries 100
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Fishing Village (12x12), J. J. Wilson 57
Landscape (14x22), J. R. Bremner 62
Meissonier, Jean Louis Ernest; 1815-1891, French.
A. A. A., Jan. 20, 1921.
18. Sketch (43/^x9^), Seaman, Agent 85
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
4. An Officer (42x32), F. C. Mortimer SO
Mesdag, Hendrik Willem; 1831-1915, Dutch.
F. A. A. R., March 19, 1921.
494, Starting Out. Weitemeyer Bros 60
Mesgrigny, F.; Contemporary, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 17, 1921.
87, Houseboats on the River (14^x22), A. Zeeber 50
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 269
Mettling, Louis; 1847-1904, German.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
8. Relics of the Past (13x9), J. C. Willever $65
Smithers, March 19, 1921.
98. Polishing the Metals (21xl5j4), G. Utassi 175
Metsu, Gabriel; 1630-1667, Dutch.
French, Ian. 21, 1921.
113. The Musician (7i^x6M), Parke Agent 350
Meyer, Otto; 1825- , German.
Smith & Jaffe, May 21, 1921.
1354. Italian Girl with Fruit 90
Meyeriieim, WilPielm Alexander; 1814-1882, German.
Roebling, Jan. 20, 1921.
11. At the Watering Trough (26J^x38>4), Mrs. Coler 135
78. The Return of the Fisherman (26^x38^), Seaman, Agent 150
Meyerheim, Paul; Contemporary, German.
Peckham, March 28, 1921.
84. At the Seaside (30x39), A. Mayer 70
Meyer Von Bremen, Johann Georg; 1813-1886, German.
Kerr. Nov. 26, 1920.
26. Mother and Child (8x6J^), Hans Mueller 175
Michel, Georges; 1763-1843, French.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
149. Italian Landscape, Coming Storm (33^^x39^/2) 55
MIgnard, Nicholas; French.
Clarke, lau. 12, 1921.
35. Maria Theresa, Wife of Louis XIV (35^x26) 500
Mignard, Pierre; 1612-1695, French.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
656. Queen Maria Theresa of France (27x23^), H. L. Adams, Jr 120
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
38. Anne of Austria, Wife of Louis XIII (39x31), Mrs. J. Welch 375
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., Feb. 24, 1921.
284. Portrait of a Court Beauty (32x24), Metropolitan Galleries 60
Plaza, Oct. 23, 1920.
The Duchess de Montpensier, Mrs. D. H. Carstairs 190
Miller, Alfred J.; 1810-1874, American.
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921
108. Buffalo Hunting (30x41), J. R. Collins 52
Miller, A. T.; 1860-1913, American.
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921
124a. Algerian Fountain (35x41), Voorhees 100
Minor, Robert C, N. A.; 1840-1904, American.
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
158. In Early June (14x20), S. Sprague 65
Molenaer, Jan Miense; 1610(?)-1668, Dutch.
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
114. Cajolery (14j4xl2M), F. Donahue 175
Goossens, Feb. 3, 1921.
14. Motherly Love (14x11), Mr. Klein 100
Monchablon, Ferdinand Jan; 1855-1903, French.
Roebling, Jan. 20, 1921.
70. Le Vallon de I'Apance a Chatillon (Vosges) (21x29), H. Schultheis.. 380
Monaco, Lorenzo; active 1370-1425, Florentine (Attributed to).
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
103. Madonna and Child with Angels and Saints (26 2/5x16), Dr. C. G.
Fenwick 325
Monnoyer, Jean Baptiste; 1634-1699, French.
Bartlett, March 7, 1921.
40. Italian Garden with Flowers (28^x38^), J. F. McCarthy 55
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
665. Flowers (3834x47^), E. F. Abbee 350
Cummings, April 28, 1921.
11. Fruits, Flowers, Rabbits (56x60) 120
Pares, Feb. 5. 1921.
157. Over Hantle Panneau (6 ft. x 3 ft. 6 in.), Geo. Mercer, Jr 300
150. Large Side Panneau: Flower Urn with Architectural Ground (9 ft.
X 5 ft.), Clapp & Graham.. 1,050
151. Large Side Panneau: Flower Urn with Architectural Ground (9 ft.
X 5 ft. 1 in.), Clapp & Graham 1,050
152. Large Centre Panneau: Flower Urn on Balustrade (9 ft. x 5j'^ ft),
Mme. Mercey 1 ,000
270 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Monnoyer^ — Cc-nfinncd.
153. Window Panneau (6 ft. x 3 x 2 ft. 8 in.), G. Mercer, Jr $350
154. Window Panneau (companion to 153), G. Mercer, Jr 350
155. Over Door Panneau (3 ft. x 5 ft.), G. E. Smith 300
156. Over Door Panneau. G. E. Smith 300
157. Over Mantel Panneau (5 ft. x 3 ft. 6), George Mercer 300
Monticelli, Adoipe; 1824-1886, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
24. The Farmyard (15i^x24), C. W. Kraushaar 425
Mora, F. Luis; N. A.; 1874- , American.
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
19. The Mantillas (18x12) 65
Moran, Edward; 1829-1901, American.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
98. Crabbing (21x36), Metropolitan Galleries 65
Moran, Thomas, N.A.; 1837- , American.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
133. Inchhead (21^xl7j^) 62
Moreau, Adrien; 1843-1906, French.
Hutchinson, Feb. 14, 1921.
2>6. Toilet of the Bride (20x253^) 110
43. Coming from the Christening (24x32) 105
Moreau, Charles; 1830- , French.
Holmes, Jan. 20, 1921.
69. The Noonday Meal (23 J^x28M), J- H. Brunell 500
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
41. The Puzzled Grandson (19^x15^), J. C. Willever 80
Moreelse, Paulus; 1571-1638, Dutch.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
56. A Prince of Nassau (25^4x1854), B. R. Kittredge 180
Morse, Samuel F. B.; 1791-1872, American.
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921.
137. Portrait of the Artist and Daughter. A. F. De Forest 85
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
104. Portrait of Himself (9j^xllJ^) 380
Mosler, Henry; 1841-1919, American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
190. Girl Reading (17x12), Mo<=ler 55
232. Coming from the Well (11x14), McDonough 70
Moucheron, Isaac; 1670-1744, Dutch.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
77. Architectural Landscape (11^x14^) (water color) 160
Munsch, Josef; 1832-1896, German,
Smith & Taffee, May 20, 1921.
1232. the Presentation 60
Munger, Gilbert; 1837-1903, American.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
55. Marine (24x42), H. Edge 55
Munkacsy, Mihaly De; 1844-1900, Hungarian, and De Paal.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
757. After the Rain (46x32) 330
Murillo, Bartolome Esteban; 1618-1682, Spanish.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
20. The Little Shepherd (223/^x27) 300
Murphy, J. F.; 1853-1921, American.
F. A. A. R., Dec. 11, 1920.
780. Landscape (12x18), H. Schultheis 430
Nuzzi, Mario; 1603-1673, Italian.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
663. Flowers (53x39), Lenyman and Morant 850
664. Flowers (53x39) , Lenyman and Morant 850
Mytens, Daniel; 1590-1656, Dutch.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
91. Sir William Ruggeley (79x48), R. A. Reader 275
Nattier, Jean Marc; 1685-1766, French.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
32. Marie Lesczynski, Wife of Louis XV ' 500
Nattier, Jean Marc; 1685-1766, French School of.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
277. Portrait of a Lady (31x26), Henderson 110
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 271
Neagle, John; 1799-1865, American.
Henkel, April 12, 1921.
149a. Portrait of W. B. Wetherill. Red $425
149b. Portrait of Mrs. W. B. Wetherill. Red 350
149c. Portrait of Mrs. W. B. Wetherill. Red 350
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
105. George Catlin (5x6) 52
Neapolitan School; XVII Century.
Bartlett, March 7, 1921.
54. Seaport (29^^x44) , J. F. McCarthy 60
Neapolitan School; XVIII Century.
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
505. Four Seasons (4 panels) (39x43), Heckser 400
Peale, Charles Wilson; 1741-1827, American.
Bartlett, March 7, 1921.
51. General Joseph Reed (30^4x25^), Mrs. Sears Ruce 725
Neer, Aert Van der; 1603 or 4-1677, Dutch.
Osterreith, Feb. 24, 1921.
47. The Frozen Canal (19^x32^) 350
Neer, Eglon Hendrik Van Der; 1643-1703, Dutch.
FrencTi, Jan. 28, 1921.
21. The Concert (16x1254), R. H. Wallach 100
Nefs, Peter Senior; circa 1577-1660, Flemish.
French, Tan. 20, 1921.
115. Cathedral Interior (13^x17), Bernet, Agent 115
Netscher, Constantine; 1670-1722, Dutch.
Boossens, Feb. 24, 1921.
20. Soap Bubbles (19x15^^), R. M. Wallach 100
Neuhuys, Albert; 1844-1914, Dutch.
Holmes. Jan. 21, 1921.
110. Mother and Children, Holland (I7^x21i/^), R. Anderson 1,050
Neuville, Alphonse Marie De; 1836-1885, French.
Holmes, Tan. 21, 1921.
88. A French Cavalryman (18x15^), Bernet, Agent 350
NIcol, Erskine, R.S.A., A.R.A.; 1825-1904, British.
Bostwick, Jan. 20, 1921.
33. "Kept in" (26^x20i^), Seaman, Agent 510
45. On the Lookout (20x15), Mrs. Coler 150
85. A Deputation (41x56), C. W. Kraushaar 500
Noel, Achille Jules; 1815-1881, French.
F. A. A. R.. May 7, 1921.
880. Coaching Party (18x28) , Weitemeyer 75
Norton, William E.; 1843- , American.
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
15. Outward Bound (12x16) 51
50. Marine (18x22) 82
Ochtman, Leonard, N. A.; 1854- , American.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
13. Moonlight Landscape (16x22), Hyman 55
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
52. Autumn Sunset (13x16) 90
Offermans, Tony; 1845-1911, Dutch.
Rcebling, Jan. 20, 1921.
56. The Carpenter (24^^x16), Findlay Galleries 110
Opie, John, R. A.; 1761-1807, English.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
18. Portrait of Himself (lSxl434), B. Malone 60
19. The Fortune Teller (18x143/0, J. Aron 80
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
62. Portrait of Miss Montague (30x25), Mr. Brooks 275
88. Lady Caroline Prince (40x29i^), Mr. Firth 610
Ostade, Adriaen Van; 1610-1685, Dutch.
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
19. A Game of Cards (14x12]^) Rudert, Agent • 450
Wasserman, Feb. 3, 1921.
15. An Old Toper (9^x7i.O, Scott & Fowles 400
Outin, Pierre; 1840-1899, French.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 29, 1920.
286. A Modern Cinderella (32x23), McDonough 92
Palmezzano, Niccolo Da; early XVI Centurv, Italian.
A. G., Tan. 28, 1921.
674. the Virgin with Saints (46j4x32), Baer 3,000
272 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Pannlnl, Giovanni Paolo; 1695-1768, Italian.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
137. Roman Fantasy (3.5x2.6), Brittain $110
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
270. Ruins (38x54), M. J. Rougeron 250
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
511. Architectural Ruins (37x52J^), J. Z. Noorian 250
Pannini, Sciiool of; ZVIII Century, Italian.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
39. Architectural Ruins (27^x50), Chas. Morgan 750
Cattadori, April 15, 1921.
540. Architectural Ruins at 'Seaports (2 panels, 55x51), Pope 1,000
541. Architectural Ruins (2 panels, 65x51 each), Mrs. F. Raineri 520
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
876. Architectural Ruins (2) (25x44^^) 100
Parmentier, James; 1658-1730, British.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
686. Queen Mary, Consort of William of Orange (50x39^), A. J. Kobler. . 140
Parton, Arthur, N.A.; 1842-1914, American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
281. A Spring Morning (25x32), M, Ryan 60
Pascuttie, A.; Contemporary, Italian.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
294. A Reception in the Time of Charles II (21x28), P. Tartoue 144
Pasini, Alberto; 1826-1899 Italian.
A. A. A., Jan. 21, 1921.
106. Caravans in the Desert (10^x18), Olivotti 475
A A. A., Feb. 3, 1921.
5. At the Watering Trough (8|4x6:^) 400
Robbins, Feb. 24, 1921.
26. The Court on a Journey (25^/^x19^), Harrison 160
32. Hunting in North Africa (26x21 J/^) 160
Passe, Simon Van Der; circa 1590-1644, Flemish.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
671. Sir Thomas Sutton (39^x295^), M. L. Wetherhill 175
Paton, Richard; 1717-1791, British.
Lehne, April 1, 1921.
909. Engagement of the Monmouth and Faudroyant by Moonlight, 1758
(34x48), S. G. Mortimer 275
Pauii, Richard; 1855-1892, American.
Cummings, April 19, 1921.
31. Near Haverstraw (14x24) 50
Peale, Anna Ciaypoole; XIX Century, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
43. Sophonisba Peale (3x2^^) 90
Peaie, Charies Willson; 1741-1827, American.
Henkel, April 12, 1921.
154. Dr. William A. Patterson (30x24) 150
155. Elizabeth de Puyster Peale (30x24) 300
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
44. Mrs. Knapp (2^/^x1^) 425
44a. Mrs. Peale (2x1^) 90
108. John Bartram (13x10) 190
131. George Washington (11-16x16-16) 9,600
Peale, James; 1749-1831, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
45. Mollie Callahan (2^x2) 130
45a. Anna Ciaypoole Peale (3x2 J4) 250
45b. Johnathan L. Worth (3x2J^) 525
Peale, Rembrandt, N. A.; 1768-1860, American.
A. A. A., Feb. 17, 1921.
105. Erinna (24x18) 410
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
46. Portrait of a Gentleman (2^x2) 80
47. Miss Catherine Melish 145
Peeters, Bonaventura; 1614-1652, Flemish.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
266. View of Harbor (35x52), Leone Ricci 150
Pelxotto, Ernest Clifford, A.N. A.; 1869- , American.
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
24. Suzanne (20x15), M. E. Kein 100
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 273
Pergamini, P.
F. A. A..R., May 7, 1921.
861. Interior of Village School (31x19), J. I. Downey $70
Peters, Charles Rollo; 1862- , American.
A. A. A.„ Feb. 14, 1921.
58. San Juan Mission (36x30), M. B. Bernstein 140
Pettenkofen, Augusta Von; 1832-1889, Austrian.
A A. A., March 7, 1921.
5. Hungarian Peasant Wagon (lOJ^xlS^), R. Glendenning 200
Persian School; XVI Century.
A. G., Feb. 14, 1921.
466. A Dragon (miniature) (3^x5^) 70
Persian School; Middle XVI Century.
A. G., Feb. 14, 1921.
460. Scene of the Shanameh (miniature) (9j4x6 J4) 65
Persian School; Second Half XVI Century.
A. G., Feb. 14, 1921.
452. Preparations for a Royal Feast (miniature) (14x7^) 160
453. The Meeting of Two Enemy Armies, Scene from the Shanameh
(miniature) (10x10) 160
454. Scene from Shenameh (miniature) (9x7^) 110
456. Fight between a Dragon, a Gazelle, and a Lion (6x9^) 120
459. Body of a Dead Hero and His Wife Perishing in the Flames (miniature)
(13i^x8M) 110
461. Divan of a King (miniature) (13^^x7^) 120
462. Illustration of the Shanameh (miniature) (10x7^^) 170
Persian School; Late XVI Century.
A. G., May. 14, 1921.
455. Young Man with Four Young Women Feasting (miniature) (8j4x65^) 300
463. A Page with Elaborate Turban (miniature) (12^x8^) 160
Potter, Paul; 1625-1654, Dutch.
A. A. A., Jan. 21, 1921.
119. Noah Disembarking on Mount Ararat (38x51^), Seaman, Agent 2,300
Philippoteaux, H. F. E.; 1815-1884, French.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
55. Outside the Harem, Horses Drinking (2x3.3), S. A. Powel 125
Plehle, N. (probably a French copy of Peale).
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
109. George Washington (10x13) 85
Pletro, Sano di; 1406-1481, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
107. The Madonna and Child with Saints and Angels (26x19), F. Klein-
berger Galleries 5,600
Plllement, Jean; 1727-1808, French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
78. La Promenade (pencil drawing) (8^x14^^), R. Ederheimer 210
79. Les Blanchiseuse (8/^x14^^) (pencil), R. Ederheimer 190
Pocock, Nicholas; 1741-1820, British.
Lehne, April 1, 1921.
912. Battle of the Nile, August 1, 1798 (20x27), C. F. R. Drake .. 200
915. Battle of the Nile, Midnight (43x54), H. I. Pratt 900
Pond, Arthur; 1705-1758, British.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
687. Lavinia Fenton (50x39^), J. Kelekian 150
Post, William IVIerritt; 1856- , American.
Kerr, Nov. 26, 1920.
49. Autumn Landscape (14x16), E. J. Ellsworth 75
Pourbus, Frans; 1570-1622, Flemish.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
90. Eleonora di Medici (46x37^), B. R. Kittredge 210
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
85. Marchesa de Montecuolli (49>^x35), Mr. M. H. Dodge 850
Poussin, Nicholas; 1594-1665, French.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
872. Landscape and Ruins (31x43i^), Mrs. A. Starr 100
Orselli, Feb. 16. 1921.
253. Adonis (18i^xl3i^), F. Colby 90
Primitive.
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Madonna and Child, M. Toch 65
274 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Pynacker, Adrien; Circa 1618-1663, Dutch.
Osterreith, Feb. 24, 1921.
40. Landscape with Figures, Cattle, Sheep and Goats (44^x36^), Marie
Glynn $135
Quartley, Arthur; 1839-1886, American.
F. A. A. R., Dec. 11, 1920.
782. Calm Morning, "Boer's Head, New Hampshire" (14x24), J. Laubier.. 65
Raeburn, Sir Henry; 1756-1823, Scotch-British.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
42. John Macintosh, Esq., Provost of Inverness, Aberarder, Inverness Shire
(30x25), C. Morgan 900
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
74. James Haig, Esq. (29x24^^), W. H. Philipps 5,100
Raffaelli, Jean Francois; 1850- , French.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
22. On His Way (IS^^xlS^^), P. Thompson 240
Ramage, John.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
37. Portrait of Washington (14J^xl5H), R- Fridenberg 26
Ramsay, Allan; 1713-1784, British.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
65. Lady Ashburton (26^x21^4), F. S. Armstrong 200
Raphael, School of.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
126. Holy Family and Cupids (21x27) 50
132. Religious Subject (2.10^^x5^) 115
Ravesteyn, Jan Van; 1572-1657, Dutch.
Gocssens, Feb. 24, 1921.
17. Portrait of a Woman (18^xl4-K), Robert Glendenning 125
Reid, Robert, N.A.; 1862- . American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
244. Diana (29^x27), Gerard 50
Harris, Feb. 24, 1921.
31. The Brook (26x28>0, M. B. Bernstein 170
Reni, Guido; 1575-1642, Venetian.
A. G., Tan. 14, 1921.
30. The Holy Family (48^x38"^), F. Klein 750
Renoir, Pierre Auguste; 1841-1919, French.
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
242. Place de la Public (16x21), L. A. Biddle 55
Reynolds, Sir Joshua; 1723-1792, British.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
142. Portrait of Mr. Denning, afterward Lord Ashburton (31 3^x26 J^),
Brittain ' 275
Smith, Feb. 3. 1921.
75. The Duchess of Gloucester (30x25), Mrs. Eastman 700
Wasserman, Feb. 3, 1921.
77. Robinetta (29x24), Mr. Guest 150
Ribot, Augustin Theophile; 1823-1891, French.
A. G., April 5, 1921.
62. The Artist's Family (41x36), Mrs. Hinds 95
Richards, William T.; 1833-1905, American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
307. The Valley of the Brandy wine (40x72), McDonough 55
Richards, William T.; 1833-1905, American.
Moore, April 18-25, 1921.
1567. End of a Stormy Day. Hamilton 805
Plaza, June 6, 1921.
374. The Breakers (13x18), H. Kennedy 52
Roebling, Jan. 20, 1921.
55. Landscape with Cattle (24]^x20), F. K. Siegerman 240
RIchet, Leon; 1847-1907, French.
Plaza, Nov. 5, 1920.
On the River Oise. J. Hayes 55
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Solitude (28x34) , Jefferson Seligman 105
Smith & Jaffe, May 21, 1921.
1352. Landscape 72
' Rico, Martin; 1850-1908, Spanish.
A. A. A., Feb. 3, 1921.
27. Venetian Scene (28>4xl8), M. B. Philipp 750
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 275
Rico — Continued.
Bostwick, Jan. 21, 1921.
90. San Vio Venzie (11x14^), Bernet, Agent $500
Hutchinson, Feb. 12, 1921.
6. Venetian Scene (14x8^) 525
Roebling, Tan. 20, 1921.
73. In Venice (28x19), Holland Galleries 575
Smithers, Jan. 21, 1921.
93. Rienzi's House at Rome (6j4xll), J. Woodward 200
Riedel, A.; XIX Century, German,
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
118. Cupid and Psyche (53x55), W. Wesendonck 70
Rigaud, Hyacinthe; 1659-1743, French.
Charles, Nav. 18, 1920.
867. Sieur de Beaupre (29x24), H. L. Adams, Jr 75
874. Due D'Antin (33x27), Dudley D. Sicher 160
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
267. Portrait of a Lady (20x24), Satinover Galleries 50
Medina, April 5, 1921.
85. Portrait of Louis XV (31x24), F. Baumeister 70
Ritschel, William, N. A.; 1864- , American.
A. G., April 5, 1921.
48. Old Mill at Rotterdam (30x25), Calo 120
Riviera School; XVII Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1152. St. Jeronime. J. J. Murray 80
Rix, Julian; 1851-1903, American.
Harris, Feb. 24, 1921.
63. A Black Storm (32x42)), S. A. Powell 80
Plaza, Nov. 5, 1920.
California Landscape. F. Draz 80
Smithers, Tan. 20, 1921.
67. Solitary One (28J^x21i^), Mr. Tod 375
RIzi, Francisco; 1608-1685, Spanish.
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
512. Portrait of the Infanta Maria Louisa (56x44), J. F. Carlisle 150
Robie, Jean; 1821- , Belgian.
Goossens, March 7, 1921.
27. Flowers (18^x27^:^), R. Stillivagon 50
Roebling, Jan. 21, 1921.
146. Still Life: Fruits and Flowers (27^^x20) , W. B. Campe 425
Robinson, Hal; Contemporary, American.
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Winter Landscape (25x30) , John Slattery 110
Robinson, Thomas; 1835-1888, American.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
62. The Watering Place (30x49i^), Thos. Footer 50
Rochettle-Torres, Antonio; 1851- , French.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
264. Ideal Head (24x18), Landeman 50
Rodeltz, A.
Plaza, Feb. 18, 1921.
10. Venetian (23x36), S. Sprague 57
Roegge, Ernst Friederich Wilhelm; 1829- , German.
Smith & Jaffe, May 19, 1921.
1204. Chess Players 65
1228. Interior with Figures 65
Roelofs, Willem; 1822-1897, Dutch and Eugene Joseph Verboeckhoven.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
29. Landscape, Sheep and Shepherd (18^x20), D. J. R. Ushikubo 525
Roland, M.; XIX Century.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
108. Bringing in the Catch (22x36), S. C. Wolmath 52
Romani, Juana; 1869- , Italian.
Baldwin, Feb. 14, 1921.
47. Judith (391^x28), M. B. Bernstein - 330
Romano, Giuiio; 1492-1546, Italian.
Cattadori, April 15, 1921.
538. The Emperor Constantine's Victory over Maxentius (26J/2x64J^),
McCarthy 120
539. The Triumph of Constantine (26J^x64j4), O, Azzoni 150
276 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Romney, George; 1734-1802, British.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
56. Portrait of Lord Devon (30x25), William J. Kain $1000
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., Feb. 24, 1921.
292. Elizabeth Carter, aunt of Henry Heylyn (24x20), F. C. Morton 65
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
11. Thomas Thornhill, Esq. (29x24^), A. J. Kobler 475
Roos, Johann Melchior; 1659-1731, German.
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
20. Hunting the Stag (12^4x14), Mr. Fox. 90
Rottenhammer, Johanna; 1564-1623, German.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
146. Holy Family, Brittain 160
Rousseau, Theodore Pierre Etienne; 1812-1867, French.
French, Tan. 21, 1921.
124. The Outskirts of a Farm (5^x6^), M. Metcalfe, Jr 350
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Pool in the Woods (18x27), J. J. Wilson 210
Roybet, Ferdinand; 1840-1919, French.
A. G., April 5, 1921.
52. Return from the Chase (29x39), Dr. Riefstahl 55
Bostwick. Jan. 20, 1921.
26. The Smoker (23x14), R. H. Wallach 550
French. Tan. 20, 1921.
46. The Rehearsal (24x17^), Dr. E. Cadgene 625
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
35. Gentilhomme Rouge (16x1234), T. Hussa 150
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
35. A Cavalier (32x25^). R. Hyman 80
Rubens, Peter Paul; 1577-1640, Flemish.
A. G., Tan. 14, 1921.
35. Death of Adonis (29x41) (landscape by Jan Wildens), F. I'Clein 1,250
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., Feb. 24. 1921.
286. Portrait of Cadinal Aldobrandt (43x37), Jerome Buck 60
Osterreith, Feb. 24, 1921.
54. Portrait of a Young Page (one of the sons of the artist) (4954x26^). 5,000
Russian School.
Osterreith, Feb. 24, 1921.
21. Le Christ en Croix (18^x14^4) 130
Rustige, H.; 1810- , German.
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921.
113. Emperor Rudolph Subduing the Robber Barons (32x46), J. Beck 65
Ruysch, Rachel; 1664-1750, Dutch.
A. A. A., Feb. 17, 1921.
79. Still Life: Flowers and Fruit (19J^xl4), A. Mayer 90
A G., Tan. 14, 1921.
26. Flowers in a Vase (14J^xll^) 55
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
254. Still Life (17x20^), S. Schepps 70
Ruysdael, Jakob Van; 1628-1682, Dutch.
F. A. A. R. March 19, 1921.
518. Woodland Scene in Holland. Wm. Baltimore 85
Ruysdael, Jacob Van; 1628-1682, Dutch (Attributed to).
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921.
96. Marine. Harrington 70
Sanchez-Perrier, Emilio; 1853-1907, Spanish.
Kerr, Nov. 26, 1920.
92. By the Riverside (22x33), McDonough Galleries 470
Sandor, Mathias; 1857- , American.
A. G., April 5, 1921.
54. In New Mexico (29x36), F. Bianchi 60
Sandart, Joachim Van; 1606-1688, Dutch.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
83. Portrait of a Lady of Holland (36x27^), A. Olivetti & Co 200
Santerre, J. B,; 16581717, French.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
70. Lady Playing Guitar (28x35), ICipps 110
Sartain, William, A. N. A.; 1843- , American.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
12. Landscape (14x17), E. D. Levinson 90
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 277
Sarto, Andrea, del; 1486-1531, Italian.
F A. A. R., March 19, 1921.
511. Early Copy of Madonna de San Francesco. Wm. Lord $75
Sauvage; Early XVIII Century, French.
Pares, Feb. 5, 1921.
149. Amorini, Panneau in Grisaille (4 ft. x 3 ft.), W. R. Hearst 325
Schaffner, Martin; active 1508, German.
Ferlov, April 5, 1921.
45. The Annunciation (32x14), A. Pope 75
46. The Archangel Gabriel (32x14), A. Pope 75
Schalcken, Godfried; 1643-1706, Dutch.
F'erlov, April 5, 1921.
32. Woman Holding a Candle (12^^x9), Detroit Art and Auction Rooms.. 75
33. Her New Chemise (13x10), Detroit Art and Auction Rooms 75
Scharenberg, F.
Smith & Jaffe, May 20, 1921.
1194. Interior with Figures 67
Schenck, August F. A.; 1828-1901, French.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
273. Sheep in Snow (23^x19), Weidemeyer 65
Hutchinson, Feb. 14, 1921.
67. Sheep in a Storm (36x57^), E. D. Levinson 410
Schetky, John Christian; 1778-1874, British.
Lehne, April 1, 1921.
922. Dutch Fleet Raising Anchor oflf Flushing (44x72), Max Williams 675
Schlegei, Carl; Contemporary, German.
Warwick, March 21, 1921.
Z7. Reclining Female (46x50), L. Schlesinger 60
Schmltgen, Georg; 1856- , German.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
285. Winter Morning in the Woods (39x33), Shields 60
Schoevaerdts, Mathys; circa 1665, Belgian.
French, Tan. 20, 1921.
11. Riding Out From Town (7x9), E. L. White 70
Schreyer, Adolf; 1828-1899, German.
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
59. The Reconnoitre (27i^x39j^), R. J. Caldwell 4,900
Bostwick, Jan. 21, 1921.
89. Arab Sheik (7x9^) Bernet, Agent 625
Roebling, Jan. 21, 1921.
157. Arabian Horseman (32x26), E. F. Albee 3,500
Taft, Feb. 3, 1921.
10. A Russian Carter (6^x8j4) 250
Schreyer, Adolph; 1828-1899, German (Attributed to).
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921.
117. Arabian Sheik and His Escort (32x50), F. M. T. Lane 300
Scorel, Jan Van; 1495-1562, Dutch.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
108. Madonna and Child (19i/$xl3J^), Lee Elwyn 1,500
Seghers, Daniel; 1590-1661 Flemish.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
689. Still Life (47^^x61^), Mr. James 175
Selgnac, Paul; 1826-1904, French.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
289. The Card House (21x18), P. Tartoue 60
Seitz, Alexander Maximilian; 1811-1888, German.
Smith & Jafifej May 20, 1921.
1235. Interior with Figures 70
Sene.
Henkels, April 11, 1921.
83. Miniature of Mrs. James Monroe (circular), Bert 950
Serres, J. T.; 1759-1825, British.
Lehne, April 1, 1921.
920. Bombardment of Algiers (33x52), H. O. Pratt 405
Severdonck, F. Van; Contemporary, Belgian.
F. A. A. R.. May 7, 1921.
878. Landscape and 'Sheep, P. Thompson 200
Sharpless, James; 1751-1811, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
113. James McClurg (pastel) 70
114. Portrait from life (probably John Mason (8x10) 60
278 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Sheppard, Warren; 1858- , American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
129. Dario Palace, Venice (19^xlli^), Barnard $55
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., Feb. 23, 1921.
75. Sunlight on the Sea (35x58), Thos. F. Smith 55
Shietz, R.
F. A. A. R., May 7, 1921.
869. Alps, Lake Scene (48x29) , J. Chittick SO
Shurtleff, R. M., N.A.; 1841-1915, American.
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Landscape (11x16), Mr. Wisenberg 55
Sienese School; early XV Century.
A. G., Jan. 28, 1921.
en. Saint Barbara (13^x10^). Collectors Gallery 120
Sienese School; XVI Century.
Cattadori, April 15, 1921.
533. The Holy Family (28x20^), McCarthy 95
Signorlni, G. Giuseppe; 1857- , Italian.
Holmes, Tan. 20, 1921.
15. The Lute Player (13^x954), E. F. Albee 105
Simons, Marcius; Contemporary, American.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
60. "Time is Mine," saith the Lord, "I will repay" (42x26), M. B.
Bernstein 80
Simons, P. Marcius; 1867-1909, American.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
67. The Scribe (28x20), H. Schultheis 55
Simpson, A. B.; Contemporary, British.
Ramsay, March 9, 1921.
324. Song and Dance (30x30), H. C. Mathews 70
Sisley, Alfred; 1840-1899, French.
Piaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
188. River Oise (23x28), L. A. Biddle '. 50
SmIIlie, George H., N.A.; 1840- , American.
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
58. Landscape with Fisherman (16x31^), M. E. Kein 390
Smith, James P.; 1803-1888, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
80. George Washington (2^4x2) 260
Smith, Henry Pember; 1854-1907, American.
A. A. A., F^b. 14, 1921.
8. Study at East Lyme, Connecticut (12x16) 450
F. A. A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
118. Landscape (18x28), W. Terry 107
141. New England Farm (20x28), Schultheis 135
245a. Shores of Lake Como (30x40), Arlington Galleries 320
296. By the Lily Pond (25x35), Arlington Galleries 220
F. A. A. R., April 9, 1921.
840. Road to Old Homestead (20x28), D. H. Dixon 140
843. The Old Homestead, East Lyme, Conn. (20x24), Arlington Galleries.. 150
845. Guidena Canal, Venice (14x22), Arlington Galleries 80
868. New England Landscape (14x18), H. D. G. Rohlfs 61
Fifty-seventh St. Gal. Feb. 24, 1921.
199. New England Homestead (12x16), Jerome Buck 65
Kerr, Nov. 26, 1920.
66. River Scene (20x28) , A. J. Houston 200
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Painting (14x20), Mr. Rolphs 70
Somer, Paul Van; 1576-1621, Flemish.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
670. Lady Harrington (45i^x36), George E. Utassy 60
Sonntag, Wm.; 1822-1900, American.
Plaza, Nov. 5, 1920
Landscape. Mrs. Edgar Ames SO
Sopodukobekini, E.; Late XVIII Century, Russian.
Bartlftt, March 7, 1921.
45. Portrait of a Diplomat (27x22), E. G. O'Reilly 67
Sorgh, Hendrik Maertenz; 1611P-1670, Dutch.
Gcossens, Feb. 17, 1921.
102. Dutch Interior (20^x26^), A. Mayer 90
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 279
Spanish School; Early XV Century.
Ruiz, April 14, 1921.
1034. St. John (3 ft. 5 in. x 1 ft. 11 in.), Mrs. C. Moran $100
1200. St. Martin Sharing His Coat with a Poor Man (4 ft. 3 in. x 3 ft.),
W. R. Hearst 500
1990. The Annunciation. Spanish Antique Shop 170
Spanish School; XV Century.
Ruiz, May 20, 1921.
752. The Birth o<^ Saint Jchn. W.R.Hearst ^ 300
753. Six Apostles. C. Snadeback '. . ISO
798. Our Saviour, 'Saint Barbara, Saint Anne, Saint Catherine, Saint Marta
(5 parts) , J. Thomson 1 ,300
799. The Annunciation, Visitation of Adoration, and The Flight into Egypt,
Jesus Among the Wise Men (5 parts) . ., 1,250
Spanish School; Late XV Century.
Ruiz, May 17, 1921.
1171. Religious Subjects (5 panels) (2 ft. 4 in. x 6 ft. 4 in.), H. H. Plate.. 250
Spanish School; XVI Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1127. Virgin and Christ (2 ft. x 1 ft. 8 in.), C. Munson 200
1101. Two Religious Subjects (5 ft. x 2 ft.), Tompkins 425
Ruiz, May 17, 1921.
■ 133. Virgin and Child. J. Thomson 60
134. Worshipping Jesus. G. Kendall 100
838. St. Jerome and Figures in Landscape. J. Thomson 140
884. The Holy Family. C. Moran 50
Weissberger, April 17, 1921.
477. Virgin and Child (10^4x7^4), G. H Miller 52
Spanish School; XVII Century.
Medina, April 5, 1921.
79. Venus and Adonis (2 panels) (22x28i^), F. S. Goodman 210
87. An Ornate Vase of Flowers (43x23 3^), R. B. Bowler 50
• 88. An Ornate Vase of Flowers (43x23^), R- B. Bowler 50
91. Water Fete, Seville (38k57H), R- Glendenning 50
Spanish School; Early XVII Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1046. Two Paintings of Flowers (3 ft. x 2 ft. 3 in.), Mrs. Ittleson • 130
1105. Four Paintings of Flowers (3 ft. x 2 ft.), J. Thomas 240
Spanish School; Late XVII Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1051. Two Paintings of Flowers. Mrs. C. Morrin 190
Spanish School; XVIII Century.
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
499. Three Panels Hinged (3 ft. x 19 ft. 8 in.), S. 'S. Auchincloss. ; 70
Spanish School.
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
547. St. Veronica and Mary Magdalen (20x12), N. Wood 50
Spanish Primitive.
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
233. Virgin "Immaculate Conception" (32x60) (on panel), Herman L.
Meader 155
Spanish Primitive; XV Century.
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
244. Saint Helen with the Cross (235^x52), L. D. Armstrong 135
Spanish School with Flemish Influence; XVI Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1109. The Immaculate Conception (5 ft. x 2 ft. 1 in.), J. Sterner SO
Spanish with German Influence; XV Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1200b. Christ Carrying His Cross, with Roman Soldiers Scourging Him (4 ft.
10 in. X 2 ft. 5 in.), C. Fair 450
Spanish Valencia School; Late XV Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1115. Two Paintings, Religious Subjects (5 ft. 8 in. x 2 ft. 10 in. each),
Mme. E. Farrara 800
Spark*", A. W.; Contemporary, American.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
61. Pittsburgh (36x40), F. Kelly 75
Stagno, Bernardino di Mariotti della; XVI Century, Florentine.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
250. Madonna and Child (19xl5j^), S. Schepps 37S
280 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
St. Antolin; XV to XVI Century.
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
247. Saint in Costume (2314x52), L. D. Armstrong $160
Stevens, L. Alfred; 1828-1906, Belgian.
Osterreith, Feb. 24, 1921.
9. La Dame au Pigeon (18x15), Harrison 300
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
100. Lady in White (183/^x15), C. W. Kraushaar 950
Steen, Jan; 1626(?)-1679, Dutch.
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
118. The Surprised Husband (21i^x27H), R. Vitolo 400
St. Memin, Charles B. J. F. de; 1770-1852, American,
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
111. Portraits — Mr. and Mrs. Macdonald of Maryland (8^4x11 J4) 80
Stragllati; XIX Century, Italian.
A. G., April 5, 1921.
64. The Leaf Gatherer (77x34), Calo 50
Strozzi, Zanobi di Benedetto; 1412-1468, Florentine.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
105. The Descent from the Cross (245^x17), A. W. Graetz 950
Stry, Jacob Van; 1746-1815, Dutch.
A. G., April 5, 1921.
50. Bringing in the Harvest (30x40), L. Elwyn 60
Tenters, David; 1638-1685, Flemish.
Ferlov, April 5, 1921.
42. Adoration of the Magi (24x18 J4 ) , A. Pope 250
Stuart, Gilbert; 1755-1828, American (Early Copy).
Housman, Oct. 30, 1920.
371. George Washington 66
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
115. Portrait of Hall Harrison (11x13) 1,400
116. George Washington (15x13) 70
Sully, Laurence; 1769-1803, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
55. Thomas West (2J^x2^) $85
Sully, Thomas; 1783-1872, American.
Moore, April 18, 1921.
1555. Henry Robinson of Boston. J. T. Kinsley 240
1556. Mrs. Henry Robinson of Boston. J. T. Kinsley 290
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
56. Edward Drake Jackson (2^x1 ^) 65
123. Portrait of Himself (6^x9) 50
Tamburini, A.; 1843- , Italian.
F. A. A. R., May 7, 1921.
872. Monk Eating (10x14), H. Mays ■ 50
Tapiro, T. ; Contemporary, Italian.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
76. The Pasha (water color) (27j/$xl9^), A. Babcock 130
Taravai, Jean Hugues; 1728-1785, French.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
265. Bacchus and a Nymph (21x16^), S. Schepps 50
T. B.; American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
117. Portrait of a Lady (25x30), Satinover Galleries 50
Teniers, David, The Younger; 1610-1694, Dutch.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
18. A Pleasant Evening (11x15) 80
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
70. Interior with Figures (20x26) 105
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
117. Dutch Interior with Figures (12i4x21^), Bernet, Agent 575
Wasserman, Feb. 3, 1921.
18. A Tavern Scene (17x21), C. S. Baldwin 550
Terburg, Gerard; 1617-1681, Dutch.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
39. The Message (27x23), A. Olivotti & Co 100
Termuhlen, K.; Contemporary, American.
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Moonlight (25x30), J. J. Wilson 110
Plaza, Feb. 18, 1921.
111. Off the Maine Coast (24x38), J. J. Wilson 65
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 281
Thaulow, Frits; 1847-1906, Norwegian.
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
34. Winter Scene (25j^x31M), Louis Ralston $550
Burgess, Feb. 3, 1921.
30. The Mill (25^x32), P. Jackson Higgs 925
Holmes, Jan. 21, 1921.
153. A French Village by Moonlight (25j^x31^), Findlay Galleries 1,650
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
The Windmill (28x32), Kelly Art Galleries 190
Thorns, H. C; British.
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
96. The Wood Gatherers (42x72) 65
Thoren, Otto de; 1828-1889, Austrian.
Hutchinson, Feb. 14, 1921.
18. Horses Turned out to Pasture (21^x17^) 510
59. Coming from the Harvest (29x43) 250
Flaza, Oct. 23, 1920.
The Storm (pastel) 180
Thibetan School; XV Century.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
460. Kuan-yin (30k203^), Ormond 100
Thibetan; XVIII Century.
A. G., May 13, .1921.
298. Four-Armed Divinity in the Attitude of Prayer on a Lotus Throne
(bronze) (10^) SO
Thornhill, Sir James; 1676-1734, British.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
890. An Allegory of Painting (3434x43), A. J. Kobler 250
Tintoretto, Jacopo; 1518-1594, Venetian.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
33. The Last Supper (104x56), J. Temmer 2,400
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
62. Holy Conversation; Group of Saints Seated Upon Clouds (8 3/1 6x
151^), A. W. Graetz 80
Titian, School of; XVI Century.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
274. Venus and Adonis (79x64), S. Schepps 150
Ruiz, May 21, 1921.
870. The Goddess Ceres Gathering Fruit, and Vulcan at the Forge. J. Bartlett 350
Tourmois, Theodore; 1814-1871 and Eugene Verboeckho'ven.
Goossens, Feb. 17, 1921.
99. Landscape, Cattle and Sheep (19^x29^), J. C. Leslie 260
103. Landscape with Watermill and Cattle (21^x28^), Thos. Footer 200
Tournieres, Robert; 1668-1752, French.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
272. Portrait of a Lady (38x30), Mrs. L. D. Armstrong 90
Trott, Benjamin; 1720-?, American.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920.
58. Mrs. Walter Livingstone (3x2j4) 380
Troyon, Constant; 1810-1865, French.
A. A. A., Jan. 21, 1921.
152. The Time of Milking (36J4x38J^), Howard Young 2,000
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
19 Breton Landscape (10J4xl3K), Chas. Morgan 200
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
32. A White and Red Ox (18J4x21J4), J. C. H. Heldring 1,000
Bostwick, Jan. 21, 1921.
138. Cattle and Landscape (29x37^), W. N. Laird 1,300
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
138. Landscape and Cattle, Hedrea 105
F. A. A. R., March 19, 1921.
512. Cows and Sheep in Landscape. J. A. Clark 60
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
131. Brittany Farm Landscape (14^x21 J^), P. E. Higgs 4,200
Goossens, Feb. 3, 1921.
68. The Gamekeeper and His Dogs (63x44>4), John Levy 4,100
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Cutting Wood (13x16), J. J. Wilson ; 120
Trumbull, John; 1756-1843, American.
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921.
131. Portrait of General Bacon Brown 52
282 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Trumbull, John; 1756-1843, American (in the Manner of).
Housman, Oct. 30, 1920.
347. George Washington (miniature) $305
Turner, J. M. W.; 1775-1851, British.
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., Feb. 23, 1921.
135. Italian Scenery (8x9), S. G. Rains 120
Twachtman, John Henry; 1853-1902, American.
A A. A., Feb. 3, 1921.
6. Landscape (17x12), Ferd. Howard 275
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
176. Frozen Brook (20x24), Wm. M. K. Olcott 100
Tyler, James G.; 1855- , American.
F. A. A. R., April 9, 1921.
854. Dangerous Coast (21x30), Arlington Galleries 90
Unknown.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
31. Italian Landscape (22x251^^), C. Schorn 210
49. Dutch Landscape with Figures (25i^x35), A. Olivotti & Co 65
F. A. A. R., Dec. 11, 1920.
800. Rip Van Winkle's Return (40x50), Chas. Oberwalder's Sons 120
F. A. A. R., Dec. 10, 1921
146. Portrait of a Gentleman. J. S. Berliner 75
Fifty-seventh 'St. Gal., Feb. 24, 1921.
289. Portrait of a Lady (30^x24^), A. F. De Forest 50
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., May 6, 1921.
170. The Holy Family. G. Grant 52
173. Virgin and Child 87
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
337a. Painting. R. Pitcairn 800
337b. Painting 575
Plaza, Nov. 20, 1920.
Landscape. M. Frenkel SO
Still Life, fruit. J. B. Donchian 71
Plaza, Dec. 9, 1920.
Dutch Exterior, J. B. Donchian 51
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Portrait of a French Nobleman, Mrs. Bates 50
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1099. Two Paintings Representing Flowers (2 ft. 10 in. x 1 ft. 8 in.),
Mrs. Skinner ISO
Smith & Jaffe, May 20, 1921.
1195. Roman Girl and Pets 60
1357. Portrait of Johann Fust Lodtmann 60
1360. Portrait of Joh. Georg. Friderici, born 1720 40
Unknown; Late XV Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1178. Religious 'Subjects (5 panels) (2 ft. 4 in. x 7 ft. 4 in.), Spanish
Antique Shop 350
1200a. Virgin Mary in Contemplation (5 ft. x 3 ft. 6 in.), W. R. Hearst 300
Unknown; XVI Century, Spanish.
A. G., Tan. 14, 1921.
51. the Infant Saint (31x22) 70
Unknown; XVII Century.
Ruiz, May 21, 1921.
871. Still Life. B. Gallois 200
Valentin, Moise; 1591-1634, French.
Goossens, Feb. 3, 1921.
89. The Backgammon Player (45x66), A. Olivotti & Co 200
Van Boskerck, N. A.; 1855- , American.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
41. River Landscape (24x36), Calo Art Galleries 135
Holmes, Jan. 20, 1921.
42. The Riverside (20x24), J. Woodward. , 225
Plaza, Oct, 23, 1920.
The River of Wakefield, Rhode Island. Dr. V. Pescale 320
Van Croos, Antoine; 1650-?, Dutch.
Goossens, Feb. 17, 1921.
100. The Ferry Boat (15x27^), A. Mayer 55
Vanderbank, John; 1694-1739, British.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
677. Lady Burlington (49x40), Ginsberg and Levy 105
678. Lord Burlington (50x40), Lenyman and Morant 250
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 283
Vanderlyn, John; 1775-1852, American.
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921
152. Portrait of Charles Ewing, Chief Justice of New Jersey. Cooper Hewitt $52
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 192U.
129. Junius Brutus Booth (10x12) ' 65
Van De Velde, Adriaen; 1635-1672, Dutch.
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
n. Horse, Cattle, Sheep and Landscape (193/^x22^), F. Pearson 350
Velde, Willem Van De; 1653-1707, Dutch.
Wasserman, Feb. 3, 1921.
19. Shipping (25x31), C. S. Baldwin 675
Van Dyck, Anthony; 1599-1641, Flemish.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
65. Joseph Revealing His Identity to His Brethren in Egypt (10J^xl4j4)
Dr. Muller 100
Osterreith, Feb. 24, 1921.
55. Portrait of a Gentleman (42^/^x32^), O. Bernet, Agent 4,000
Van Dyck, Sir Anthony, School of.
Goossens, Feb. 24, 1921.
14. Portraits of Saints (12 panels in 1 frame, each 5x4>4) 250
Van Eiven, T.; Contemporary, Belgian.
Robbins, Feb. 24, 1921.
66. The Market Place (59i^x4lH), S. A. Powell ISO
Van Loo, Carle Andre; 1705-1765, French.
Plaza, Tan. 6, 1921.
The Miniature (28x40), H. Rosenberg 92
Van Loo, Jean; 1684-1745, French.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
666. Le Sieur de Brissac (49^^x39^), A. L. Lcewenstein 325
Van Marcke, Emiie; 1827-1890, French.
A. A. A., Jan. 20, 1921.
140. Landscape and Cattle (1234x21), I. Adams 725
French, Jan. 21, 1921.
150. Landscape and Cattle (231^x34), E. F. Albee 4,500
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
173. In the Meadow (10x14), M. Reeves 80
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
47. Cow Walking (153/^x21^), W. F. Heniot 310
Van Vliet, K.
Plaza, Feb. 18, 1921.
1212. Sleighing in Belgium (19x32), J. J. Wilson 50
Vecelli, Francesco; 1473-1560, Italian.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
60. Catarina Cornaro (40x33 J^), A. Olivotti & Co 160
Velasquez, Don Diego Rodriguez de Silva; 1599-1660, Spanish.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
81. Queen Mariana of Spain (28x21) 325
Velasquez, School of; XVI Century, Spanish.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
47. Portrait of a Gentleman (30^x24), Miss I. Taylor 350
Clarke, Tan. 12, 1921.
131. Portrait of a Bishop 80
Vellert, Dierick Jacobsz; active 1511-1544, Flemish.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
n. Adam and Eve (19x15), E. Weyhe 350
Velten, Wilhelm; 1847- , German.
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
5. The Blacksmith (8x10) SO
Venetian School.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
66. Two Senators (61^^x28^), A. Olivotti & Co 100
Venetian School; XIV Century.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
251. St. George and the Dragon (14x1 1^^^), A. Ferraro 75
Venetian School; XVI Century.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
235. Portrait of a Geographer (55x35), Shields 105
Venetian School; XVII Century.
Cattadori, April 15, 1921.
536. (a) The Orchestral Concert (b) The Minuet (overdoor panels, 24^x36
each), C. Erlanger 70
284 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Venetian School; XVIII Century.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
252. Madonna and Child (19x16), S. Schepps $150
Veneziano, Bonifazio; 1487-1553, Italian.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
88. Adoration of the Magi (37j4x5lJ^), A. Olivetti & Co 425
Verbeeck, Cornelius (?); Late XVI Century, Dutch.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
34. The Shipwreck (113^x21) 80
Verboeckhoven, Eugene Joseph; 1799-1881, Belgian.
A. G., April 5, 1921.
49. In the Sheepfold (24x32), M. T. Lane 230
Freeman Gal., Feb. 26, 1921.
752. Cows and Sheep at Pasture (19^x17^^) 70
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
48. Cattle (16^x22^4), Miss M. H. Dodge 300
Verboeckhoven, Eugene Joseph; 1799-1881, Dutch and Willem Roelofs.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
29. Landscape, Sheep and Shepherd (18^x20), D. J. R. Ushikubo 525
Verboeckhoven, Eugene; 1799-1881, Belgian and Theodore Tourmois.
Goossens, Feb. 17, 1921.
99. Landscape, Cattle and Sheep (19^x29^), J. C. Leslie 260
103. Landscape with Watermill and Cattle (21^x28M), Thos. Footer 200
Verboeckhoven, Eugene Joseph; 1799-1881, Belgian and Louis Verwee.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
54. Winter Landscape with Figures (26x36>^), A. Olivotti & Co 105
Verbruggen, Caspar Pieter; 1669-1720. Dutch.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
651. Flowers and Fruit (18^x15^), F. B. Thompson 100
Vernet, Claude; 1714-1789, French.
Cattadori, April 15, 1921.
534. (c) Sunset (d) The Bay of Naples (overdoor panels, 40x23j^ each),
McCarthy 50
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
257. The Great Storm (22x31^/^), S. Schepps 60
258. The Great Shipwreck (22x31>4), S. Schepps 70
Vernon, Paul; Deceased, French.
F. A. A. R., May 7, 1921.
879. Approaching Storm (36x28), Dr. La Porte 145
Verocchio, Andrea; 1435-1488, Italian.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
17. Madonna, Child and St. John (20j4xl4^), D. D. Sicher 375
Verwee, Louis; XIX Century, Belgian and Eugene Joseph Verboeckhoven.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
54. Winter Landscape with Figure (26x36^^), A. Olivotti & Co 105
Vestier, Antoine; 1740-1824, French.
Fifty-seventh St. Gal., Feb. 24, 1921.
274. Mrs. Baillot (36x29), R. W. Lehne 200
Vibert, Jehan Georges; 1840-1902, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
28. Entrance to the Monastery (25>4x21^), Robert Hyman 90
Bostwick, Jan. 20, 1921.
39. The Reprimand (21x26), E. F. Albee 750
Holmes, Jan. 20, 1921.
29. Old Letters (18]^xlS), Dr. E. Cadgene 1,300
Plaza, Nov. 5, 1920.
Painting. Dr. J. Dorr 70
Vlgee le Brun, Madame Marie Louise Elizabeth; 1755-1842, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 3, 1921.
80. Portrait of Queen Marie Antoinette (31i/^x25i4), L. A. Biddle 325
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921;
82. A Young Nobleman (28i^x23^), A. Olivotti 250
Vlllavlcencio, Don Pedro Nunez de; 1635-1700, Spanish.
Clarke, Jan. 12, 1921.
140. The Guardian Angel, Brittain 190
Vincent, C; XVIII Century, French.
Bartlett, March 7, 1921.
49. Madame de Chassanof (31J^x25), B. R. Kittredge 130
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 285
Voiriot, William; active 1759-1791, French.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
48. Portrait of Abbe Charles Pierre Louis Honore (29x23 J^), Miss I. Taylor $325
Vollon, Antoine; 1833-1900, French.
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
25. Violets and Objects of Art (10^^x11^4), A. Harper 400
107. Fruits and Object of Art (24xl9M), Seaman, Agent 475
108. Still Life (28^x21 }4), Mrs. P. Jennings 425
Voltz, Friederich Joiiann; 1817-1886, German.
Smith & Jaffe, May 20, 1921.
1196. Landscape and Cattle .■ 250
VoSj Simon De; 1603-1676, Dutch.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
51. Portrait of a Child (221^x16^), B. R. Kittredge 140
Wagner, ?
F. A. A. R., Dec. 11, 1920.
797. The Abduction (58x82), P. Moscord 95
Walden, Lionel; 1862- , American.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
298. The Ocean (32x46), Ellis 70
Walker, Horatio, N.A.; 1858- , American.
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
97. Milking Time (22x16), C. J. McDonough 625
Walker, Robert; 1600-1658, British.
Charles, Nov. 18, 1920.
660. Sir John Lucas (30x25), H. L. Adams, Jr 350
Walter, E. A.; Contemporary.
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
106. Landscape (24x31), Chas. Oberwalder's Sons. .^ 55
Wanter, Carle.
Smith & Jaffe, May 21, 1921.
1353. Madonna and Child 100
Washington, Georges; 1827-1903, French.
Robbins, Feb. 24, 1921.
23. A Refreshing Drink (18^x15) , J. Aron 60
Watson, Thomas H.; 1839- , British.
A. A. A., Feb. 24, 1921.
39. Mountain Sheep (24x36) , S. A. Powell 220
Watteau, Antoine; 1684-1721, French.
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
13. Young Woman and Man (43^x4), Seaman, Agent 80
Watteau, Antoine; 1684-1721, French (Attributed to).
A. G., Nov. 26, 1920.
47. Nobility at Play (40x52), Metropolitan Galleries 67
Watteau, School of.
Plaza, Jan. 6, 1921.
Fete Champetre, J. J. Wilson 85
Watteau, Louis Joseph; 1758-1813, French.
Charles, Nov. 19, 1920.
658. Portrait of an Actress (30x25), C. B. Wilson 110
Weber, Anton; 1833- , German.
Smith & Jaffe, May 20, 1921.
1197. Portrait of a Lady 65
Weber, H.; German.
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
257. A Difficult Moment (24x30), M. Ready 85
Weckendon, R.
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
166. Sunset (36x50), Weitemeyer Bros ,j
Weele, Herman Johannes Van Der; 1858- , Dutch.
Roebling, Jan. 20, 1921.
75. Sheep and Shepherd (21x26) , Kennedy & Co 270
Weenix, Jan; 1640-1719, Dutch (School of).
Weissbcrger, April 27, 1921.
494. Pair of Still Life Pictures (26x35j4), Max Kuehne 70
Weir, J. Alden, P. N. A.; 1852-1919, American.
Plaza, Feb. 19, 1921.
.248. Spring Landscape (18x22), David Owens SO
Smithers, Jan. 21, 1921.
162. Lengthening Shadows (21J4x26J4), Dudensing Galleries 1.600
286 PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Wcpff, AdPiaan Van Der; 1659-1722, Dutch.
Charles, Nov. 18, 192U.
856. The Huntsman's Surprise (19^x15), Ginsberg and Levy $7'5
West, Benjamin, P. R. A.; 1738-1820, American.
A. A. A., Feb. 14, 1921.
57. The Holy Spirit Descending Upon Christ After His Baptism (36i/2x28),
F. K. Richards 65
Lehne, April 1, 1921.
921. Battle of La Hogue, May, 1692 (44x54), C. L. F. Allen 1,000
Whistler, James Abbott IVIcNeiil; 1834-1903, American.
Newman, Feb. 24, 1921. .
3. Greenwich (6x10), J. Aron 410
Whltcombe, Thomas; 1760-1812, British.
Lehne, April 1, 1921.
911. Battle of Amperdown, October 11, 1797 (19x24), Shoyer 150
914. Battle of the Nile, Aboukir Bay, August 1, 1798 (19x25) 160
Wiggins, Carlton, N. A.; 1848- , American.
A. G., April 5, 1921.
28. Homeward (20x24) 140
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
24. Cow in Pasture (12x16) 50
34. Summer Landscape (17x23) 60
41. Landscape with Sheep (6x8) > . . 65
48. Cattle (14x31) 95
59. On the Way (16x21) 227
Wiggins, Guy C; 1883- , American.
Ferlov, April 5, 1921.
14. Coast Scene (16x12), A. Drake 55
Williams, Frederick, Ballard, N. A.; 1871- , American.
A. G., April 5, 1921.
57. Landscape (25x30), Arlington 330
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
21. The Little Dryad (16x12), Babcock Galleries 90
33. Fantasy (16x12), Babcock Galleries 100
Smithers, Jan. 20, 1921.
66. Golden Days (16x24), T. H. Russell 350
164. Vermont Valley (28x36), Parke, Agent 625
Willems, Florent; 1823-1905, Belgian.
Goossens, Feb. 17, 1921.
107. The Lady of the Manor (30J^x24H), McCarthy 55
Wilson, G. H.
Plaza, Feb. 18, 1921.
106. Highland Cattle (32x48), A. Pearson 65
Wierusz-Kowalski, Alfred Von; 1849- , Polish.
Beck, Feb. 3, 1921.
22. Merrymakers (20x24>^ ) , S. A. Powell 275
63. The Start of the Journey (30^x40>^), E. Takamine 900
Worms, Jules; 1832-1881, French.
Bostwick, Jan. 20, 1921.
84. A Proposal of Marriage (27^x29^), F. H. Brunei 370
F. A. A. R., May 7, 1921.
875. Spanish Peasants (11x16), P. Thompson 135
Wouverman, Philip; 1619-1668, Dutch.
French, Jan. 20, 1921.
22. The Departure (19^4x17), M. E. Kein 340
50. A Hawking Party (21J^x27), F. M. Donohue 325
Wulffaerts, Adriaen; 1804- ., Belgian.
F. A. A. R., Nov. 26, 1920.
71. Collin Maillard (33x48), Benjamin 112
Wyant, Alexander H.; 1836-1892, American.
F. A. A. R., Dec. 11, 1920.
837. Woodland Brook (water color), A. Jensen 90
F. A. A. R., April 9, 1921.
859. Smuggler's Cave, Jones' Wood (9x15), H. D. G. Rohlfs 130
Wyatt, Henry; 1794-1840, British.
A. G., Jan. 14, 1921.
56. Portrait of a Lady (20^x17). F. Frazer 100
Wynants, Jan; 1615-1679, Dutch.
F. A. A. R., March 18, 1921.
309. Castle on Hill, Overlooking Valley. Leopold 50
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 287
Wyrsch, L. M. J.; 1732-1798, French.
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
469. Portraits of Two Children (18^x15) $135
Ximinez, Francesco; XVI Century, Castilian.
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
519. Retablo Mayor (6 panels divided by pilasters) (75x34), S. S. Auchincloss 325
Yates, Cullen, A. N. A.; 1866- , American.
Cummings, April 29, 1921.
33. Moonrise (12x18) 52
65. Autumn Landscape (26x36) 160
67. Meadowland (25x32) 390
Yen Shi- Pin; K'ang-hsi, Chinese.
Yamanaka, Feb. 4, 1921.
506. Willow Tree and Heron (52^x23^), C. F. Meyer 55
Zamacois, Eduardo; 1842-1871, Spanish.
Taft, Feb. 3, 1921.
1. A Gentleman in Waiting (63^x3^), C. W. Kraushaar Galleries 110
Zaragoza, Lorenzo de; XV Century, Italian.
Weissberger, April 27, 1921.
504. Retablo (40^x34), Mrs. E. S. Rothschild 410
Ziem, Felix Francois; 1821-1911, French.
A. A. A., Feb. 3, 1921.
33. Marine (16^x25^), Warren Smadbeck 300
Burgess, Feb. 3, 1921.
54. Scene in the Orient (18x30^^), M. B. Philipp 875
58. Venice (21x33), W. O. Wood 875
F. A. A. G., Nov. 27, 1920.
304. The Market Place, Constantinople (24^x3554), Lounes 205
F. A. A. R., Feb. 10, 1921.
118. Venice (32x50), F. M. T. Lane 250
French, Jan 21, 1921.
103. Venice (10^x16^), Seaman, Agent 1,050
Goossens, Feb. 3, 1921.
11. View of Constantinople (10i/^xl6), Prendergast 275
Zorn, Anders; 1860-1920, Swedish.
F. A. A. R., March 19, 1921.
508. Portrait of a Boy. H. Hendrik 75
Zukuly.
Smith & Jaffe, May 20, 1921.
1234. Italian Interior • 50
Zurbaran, Francisco; 1598-1662, Spanish.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
70. Head of an Elderly Man (29j4x22^).. 175
Zuccarelli, Francesco; 1702-1788, Florentine.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
262. Landscape (32x44), McCarthy 300
Zucchero, F.; 1543-1609, Spanish.
Peckham, March 29, 1921.
89. Isabelle de Valcis (44i^x38^), Baumeister 350
Zuloaga, Juan; 1870 , Spanish.
Medina, April 5. 1921.
72. The Walls of Segovia (painted on 24 faience tiles) (21x56^), H. E.
Farrell 60
Drawings Sold at Auction
Allegri, Antonio (Called Correggio); 1494-1534, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
37. St. Luke and St. Anthony (87/^x11^), (drawing), M. Sloog 260
Baldung, Hans (called Grien); 1475-80-1545.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
39. St. Christopher Carrying the Infant Christ (9^x6^1) (pen drawing),
A. W. Graetz 310
Baroccio, Frederico (Attributed to); 1528-1612, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
102. The Holy Family (chalk), W. C. Dickerman 27
288 DRAWINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
BIgl, Francesco; 1483-1525, Italian (Attributed to Andrea del Sarto).
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
104. Head of a "Woman (crayon and water color), J. P. Sabin $29
Boucher, Francois; 1704-1770, French.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
40. Diana and Endymicn (Ilj4xl5) (chalk), A. W. Graetz 310
Parker, Nov, 9, 1920.
22. L'Amant Ecoute (11x8) (pencil), Agent 415
23. Le Trait Dangereux (sanguine drawing), The Rosenbach Co 760
24. Pastorale (12^x9) (charcoal drawing), M. Sloog 325
Browne, Hablot K.; 1815-1882 British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
3. Three Drawings for "Bleak House," Dr. Rosenbach 95
4. Two Drawings for "Martin Chuzzlewit," A. Jachne 100
5. Drawings for "Nicholas Nickleby," J. F. Drake Yl
6. Drawings for "Nicholas Nickleby," G. Wells 100
Buck, Adam; 1759-1833, British.
Parker, Nov, 9, 1920.
25. Countess of Cavan (15^-^x11^4) (water color), T. J. Gannon 275
26. Portrait of Miss Bloomfield (9x5 H) (pencil), T. J. Gannon 320
Crulkshank, George; 1792-1878, British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
10. Finished drawing for the "Lay of St. Nicholas," G. E. Smith, Jr 110
14. Sketch for "Comic Almanack, 1851," B. Winthrop 55
16. Sketches for "Life in Paris" and "Pilgrims Progress," Dr. Rosenbach.. 220
Du Maurier, George; 1834-1896, British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
17. "Things One Would Rather Have Expressed Differently," Hill 60
Engelbrechtsen, Cornelis; 1468-1533, Dutch.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
45. A King Feasting, While Outside of His Palace a Saint Is Being
Martyred (circular, diameter 9) (ink). Dr. G. F. Muller 175
Flagg, James Montgomery; 1877- , American.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
18. Caricature Portrait of Theodore Roosevelt, Smith 35
Fox, H. C; XIX Century. British.
Henkels, March 28, 1921.
23. Driving Ducks (water color), A. J. Cameron 50
Fragonard, Jean Honore; 1732-1806, French.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
46. Allegorical Composition (7^/^x10), (drawing) 50
47. Two Women Playing with an Infant (6^x8^) 75
Glllray, James; 1757-1815, British.
Smith, Feb. 3. 1921.
20. Introduction of Citizen Volpone and His Suite at Paris, R. Fridenberg 32
Guardi, Francesco; 1712-1793, Venetian.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
50. Group of about Twenty-four People (5?^xll) (pen), M. Sloog 725
51. Three Groups of Venetians (65^x8J^) (pen drawing), M. Sloog 725
52. Group of Three Cavaliers and a Woman (5x5) (Sepia drawing), Mrs.
Bradley-Marten 480
53. Group of Two Men and Two Women (5x5) (pen drawing), Mrs.
Bradley-Marten 480
Howitt, Samuel; 1765-1822, British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
23. A series of Animal Drawings (7j4x5^), G. C. Smith, Jr 80
Huet, J. B.; School of.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
112. Heads of Cattle, Horses( etc. (drawings), I. Varan 30
Jordaens, Jacob; 1593-1678, Flemish.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
49. Christ with the Disciples at Emaus (10x11^) (color sketch), A. W.
Graetz 250
Lawrence, T.; School of.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
114. Head of a Girl (water .color), J. D. Karn 47
Leech, John; 1817-1864, British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
24. Thames Fishing (sketch in oils) (20x16), Dr. Rosenbach 55
25. Very Alarming Indeed (sketch in oils) (15^x21), B. Winthrop 55
26. While They Are at Scarborough (sketch in oils) (29x21), Winthrop 25
DRAWINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 289
Leech — Ccntinucd.
27. The Bishop of Durham (water color) (4x5 1^). J. F. Drake %77
28. The Good Little Boy (water color) (10//^x9i^), J. F. Drake -40
29. Handley Cross (5 water color and pencil drawings), G. C. vSmith, Jr. 220
30. The Race for the Derby, 1851 (water color) (19Mxl2j4), Dr. Rosen-
bach 155
31. Returning from a Fancy Ball (water color) (12^x7^), B. Winthrop 92
33. A Day at Biarritz (water color) (20^x1234) 40
35. Album of Drawings (water color), G. C. Smith, Jr 210
Lombard School; second half of the XV Century.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
57. Altar Composition (6^^x11) (pen drawing), Dr. G. F. MuUer 300
Lorrain, Claude (Gellee); 1600-1682, French.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
48. Classical Landscape (63/1x9]^) (pen), M. Sloog 110
Master of the Amsterdam Cabinet; middle of XV Century, German.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
54. Coronation of a Bishop and the Martyrdom of the Ten Thousand
(8^x5^) (pen). Dr. G. F. Muller 550
Master of the Playing Cards; active 1430-1440, German.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
55. Christ Tied to a Column (73^x5) (pen drawing), A. W. Graetz. . 275
Mesdag, Hendrik Willem; 1831-1915, Dutch.
Fitzgibbons, March 21, 1921.
102. Gathering Potatoes (water color) (13^x20^^) 25
Millet, Jean Francois; 1814-1875, French.
Walpole, April 13, 1921.
193. Woman Pouring Water (drawing) (9x7), Otting 80
Morland, George; 1763-1804, British.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
115. An Episode from "II Pastor Fido" (water color), Dratwood 112
Walpole, April 13, 1921.
199. The Lazy Shepherd (drawing in pencil and chalk) (iSxlSJ^), Otting.. 45
Orley, Barent Van; 1491-1542, Dutch.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
67. The Adoration of the Magi (llj/8x7^) (pen drawing), R. Ederheimer 275
Ostade, Adrian Van; 1610-1685, Dutch.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
68. Interior of a Peasant's House (105^x15) (drawing), M. Sloog 425
69. A Woman (3^/^x2^) (water color), M. Sloog 200
70. Old Woman Combing the Hair of a Little Boy (3^x2^) (water color),
M. Sloog 130
Pyle. Howard; 1853-1911, American.
Moore, Feb. 4, 1921.
120. Scene in New York during the Revolution (drawing), J. F. McCarthy. 40
Reinagle, P.; 1749-1833, British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
38. Woodcock Shooting (sketch in oil) (17^x13), H. J. King 55
Rembrandt, Van Ryn; 1606-1669, Dutch.
A. A. A. March 21, 1921.
109. The Holy Family (drawing in wash) (8i^x7^) 37
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
58. Landscape: Old Farmhouse Surrounded by Trees (3 5/gx634) (pen
and ink) , R. Ederheimer .' 120
Rowlandson, Thomas; 1756-1827, British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
41. Carried in Comfort (water color) (8^x5^), J. F. Drake 30
42. Clapping a Codicil to His Will (water color) (6x7^^), Winthrop 32
43. The Cockney Hunt (S^^xll), J. F. Drake 25
45. The Drinker (water color) (6^4x8), G. C. Smith, Jr 25
47. The Glutton (water color) (1334x954), J. F. Drake 62
48. La Presentation (water color) (834x8), G. C. Smith, Jr 50
49. Land Stores and Sea Stores (water color) (9i4xl2j4), G. C. Smith, Jr. 55
50. Lone Tree Hill (143^x91/^), D. L. Brown 30
51. Man Traps in These Grounds (water color) (10x7M). Browning.. 27
52. My Aunt and Uncle (water color) (M^^xlO), J. F. Drake 52
53. Open Air Preaching (water color) (15x934), G. C. Smith, Tr 85
54. The Pigeon Trap, Covent Garden (water color) (11x17), J. F. Drake 40
55. Sale of Curiosities (water color) (12x9^), G. Wells 42
57. The Wisdom's in the Wig (water ^color) (9^x11^), D. L. Brown 35
58. A Young Spark and the Money Lenders (8^x11), J. F. Drake 40
290 DRAWINGS SOLD AT AUCTION
Rubens, Peter Paul; 1577-1640, Flemish.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
59. Academic Study o£ an Athlete (IIH^^H) (pen drawing) $90
Sanzio, Raphael; 1483-1520, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
121. The Holy Family (chalk), J. F. McCarthy 80
Sarto, Andrea Del; 1486?-1531, Italian, or Francesco Bigi.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
104. Head of a Woman (crayon and water color), J. P. Sabin 29
Seymour, Robert; 1800-1836, British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
60. Will You Have Some Pickle? (water color) (6x6j^), J. F. Drake 52
Sesto, Cesaro da; 1480-1521, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
61. The Holy Family with the Infant St. John and an Angel (6§^x4^)
(sanguine drawing), R. M. Macey 510
Stimmer, Tobias; 1539-1592, Swiss-German.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
60. The Last Judgement (circular, diameter 12>^) (pen drawing touched
with color) 60
Stuart, Gilbert; 1755-1828, American.
Housman, Oct. 30, 1920.
378. George and Martha Washington (pen and ink sketches), J. Larocque. . 25
Tenniel, John; 1820-1914, British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
61. 13 drawings for Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass,
H. J. Hill 140
Thomson, Hugh.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
63. 8 drawings to the Vicar of Wakefield (pen and ink), B. Winthrop... 110
Timoteo, Viti (called delle Vite); 1470-1524, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
63. Full-Length Figure of a Saint in Armour (14^x5^) (charcoal
drawing) , A. W. Graetz 8C
Toorenvliet, Jacob; 1641-1719, Dutch.
Parker, March 9, 1920.
86. Woman Feeding Monkey (9x7^) (pencil), P. Lorillard 90
Turner, J. M. W.; 1775-1851, British.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
128. Architectural Landscape (water-color), J. D. Kern 185
Ucello, Paolo (Pacio di Dono); 1389-1422 Italian (Attributed to).
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
120. Warrior in Fantastic Garb Mounted on a Horse Which Is Rearing
Over a Fallen Fighter (11^x6^4) (ink). Dr. G. F. Muller 120
Unknown.
•Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
99. Pastoral Scenes (2 water colors), N. Cohen 25
Van Dyck, Anthony; 1599-1641, Flemish.-
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
66. The Count of Arenberg on Horseback, an Attendant to the Left
(9x9^) (pen drawing). Dr. G. F. Muller 350
Veronese, Paolo (Paolo Cagliari); 1530-1588, Italian (attributed to).
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
41. Christ Before Caiphas (12j4x8M) (charcoal and ink) 50
Prints Sold at Auction
Affleck, Andrew F.; XIX Century, British.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
131. Interior of the Milan Cathedral (painter etching), C. Klarkner 32
Alix, Pierre Michel; 1762 1817, French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
1. Eugene de Beauharnais (engraving printed in color), The Rosenbach Co. 75
2. Le Tourneur (engraving printed in color), C. F. R. Drake 125
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 291
Aiken, Henry; XIX Century, British.
Cooper, May 19, 1921.
63. Something Slap (colored aquatint), P. Whitney $25
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921. _
70. Fox Hunting (8 engravings), H. J. King 50
American School, Early.
Rosenthal, Dec. 14, 1920. , „ . „.
135. General Washington (mezzotint colored by hand) (12^x8 6-8) 110
136. General Washington (mezzotint colored by hand) (13-9x11-12) 120
Bartolozzi, Francesco; 1725-1815, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921. . . ,. ^ ,, ,
144. Venus Attired by the Graces (stipple printed m red), F. Meder 45
72.' October (after painting by W. Hamilton) (engraving), M. Sloog. . . 210
Bell, April 20, 1921. , . , .
2. The Return from Shooting (printed m colors) ^7
Barton, Loren, R.
Jones, March 28, 1921.
I. George Arliss as Disraeli (etching) ^o
Baumann, I. W.
Housman, Oct. 30, 1920. , „, , . , s tt , t, ■ •
376. (a) George Washington, (b) Death of Washington, (c) Hale Receiving
Instructions from Washington (woodcut) 50
Bell, Edward; XVIII Century, British-American.
Bell, April 21, 1921. . , , • , ,r
10. Mutual Confidence, or, the Sentimental Friends (mezzotint after Mor-
land, printed in colors) •. • 55
11. Delicate Embarrassment, or the Rival Friends (mezzotint printed in
colors, after Morland) 60
13. The Cottage Sty (mezzotint printed in colors, after Morland) 32
Benazech, Charles; 1740-1803. British.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920. . . , . , x tvt -,-
9. Le Couronnement de la Rosiere (engraving printed in colors), N. K.
Landau 10^
Bennett, W. J.; 1787-1844, American.
255.' The Fire of 1835, New York. The Great Fire and the Ruins, New
York (Colored aquatints — after a painting) 55
Bertinot, Gustave Nicholas; 1822- , French.
iV La'Vierge aux Donateurs (engraving, after Van Dyck) SO
Bispham, Henry Collins; 1841-1882, American.
Brewster, May 19, 1921.
7. Coach and Four (47x29)^), J. P. 'Sabin 80
Bone, Muirhead; Contemporary, British.
Jones, March 28, 1921.
3. Great Yarmouth (etching), J. F. Drake 270
4. On the Clyde (set of 6 lithographs) 27
5. Walberswick Ferry (etching), F. Keppel 210
6. Evening, Genoa (etching) , Kennedy & Co 180
Bonington, Richard Parkes; 1801-1828, British.
Jones, March 28, 1921.
7. Rue du Gros Horloge, Rouen (etching) 25
Bonnemaison, Fereol de; P-1827, French.
Brewster, May 19, 1921.
31. Promenade au Bois de Boulogne Attelage a la Daumont (colored
lithograph) , A. B. Maclay 38
Bonnet, Louis Marin; 1743-1793, French.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
74. Offrande a I'Hymen (engraving printed in color), B. L. Hollander.... 150
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
10. Le Dejeune (after J. B. Huet) (engraving printed in color), The Rosen-
bach Co 2,225
II. L'Amant Ecoute (engraving printed in color). The Rosenbach Co 340
12. Bazile et Laurette (engraving), A. J. Brader, Jr 65
13. Head of a Woman (14^x11^) (pastel), Mrs. W. H. Erharat 120
14. Le Pas de Menuet (engraving printed in color) 310
15. The Pleasures of Solitude (engraving printed in color) 85
16. The Woman Taking Coffee (engraving in color with gold border), E. F.
Bonaventure 600
17. The Milk Woman (engraving in color, gold border), E. F. Bonaventure.. 600
18. Vertumnus and Pomone (engraving printed in color, gold border) 170
19. Zephire and Flore (engraving printed in color, gold border) 170
292 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
Brangwyn, Frank; 1867- , British,
A. A. A., Dec. 10, 1920.
11. Cannon St. Station (28x28^) (etching) $27
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
157. The Blacksmiths (etching), F. Suval 40
Hall, March 10, 1921.
21. Hop Pickers (etching) (24)4x37) 35
22. St. Peter's, Genoa (etching) (22^x25>^) 25
26. The Bridge of Sighs, Venice (etching) {27Jixl7H) 80
Breton, Jules Adolphe; 1827-1906, French.
Bcstwick, Dec. 10, 1920.
10. Return from Harvesting (16^x32^) (etched by Charles Walters) 29
11. Eve of St. John (18x31) (etched by Charles Walters) 42
Buhot, Felix; 1847-1898. French.
Hall, March 10, 1921.
41. Une Matinee d'Hiver au Quai de I'Hotel-Dieu (etching) (9^x12^)., 85
A3. L'Hiver a Paris ou la Neige a Paris (etching) (10x135^) 100
44. L'Hiver a Paris ou la Neige a Paris (etching) (10x13^) 85
45. L'Hiver a Paris ou la Neige (etching) (9>4xl4) 55
46. La Place Pigalle (etching) (9?ixl35/^) 50
47. Une Jette en Angleterre (etching) (Il34x7ji) 77
48. La Dame aux Cynes (etching) (5^x7^) 30
50. Le Peintre de Marne (etching) (55^x814) 25
51. Les Voisins de Compagne (etching) (5^4x7) 160
52. Les Petits Chaumieres (etching) (4x5^) 60
55. Westminster Bridge or Westminster Clock Tower (etching) (11^4^15^) 190
56. Les Esprits des Villes Mortes (etching) (12^x1734) 27
57. La Place des Martyres et Taverne du Dagne (etching) (13 J'^xl73^) . . 150
58. La Falaise (etching) (ll.>4xl55^) 70
59. The Marine Painter (etching) (5^x8^4) 25
Walpcle, April 13, 1921.
26. Westminster Palaces (etching) 52
27. Clock Tower Westminster (etching) 55
28. La Taverne du Bagne (1st state) (etching) 37
29. Matinee d'Hiver sur les Quais (etching with dry-point) 42
31. La Place Pigalle (etching) 32
Buncho, Ippitsuai; 1746-1796, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
285. Actor Portrait. A. B. Duel 45
287. Night Scene. A. B. Duel 80
288. The Cake Vendor. H. Mansfield 60
Walpole, Jan. 22, 1921.
634. The 3rd Matsumoto Koshiro (12i/$x5 j/^), Buckingham 210
635. Kikunojo Dancing Shakkyo (12^x6), Manning 110
636. The 2nd Ichiwawa Yaozo (12)4x6), Hume 80
Walpole. March 2, 1921.
23. Actor Onoe Matsusuke as Oiso and a Young Actor 60
24. The Lovers, 0-Hatsu and Tokubei 52
25. Actor Ichikawa Yaozo II as Akaneya Hanshichi 65
26. Actor Ichikawa Danjuro IV as Tenjiki Tokubei 45
27. Actor Sakata -Hongoro as a Wrestler in a Play 32
28. Actors Ichikawa as Kichisaburo and Ichikawa Yaozo II 42
29. Actor Onoe Matsusuke as Torinoumi Yasaburo 40
30. Actor Nakamura Matsue in a Female Role 40
31. Actor Ichikawa Yaozo as Umeomaru in Sugawara 115
32. Actors Ichikawa Komazo as Kuranosuke 55
33. Actor Sakata Hongoro 52
Bunkyo; Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 13, 1921.
823. Matsubaya Tea House. C. H. Chandler 25
Bunro; Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 13, 1921.
827. An Oiran. C. H. Chandler 25
Buttre, J. C. (After Woolaston.)
Housman, Oct. 30. 1920.
381. Martha Washington (mezzotint) 70
Cameron, David Young; 1865- , Scotch.
Hall, March 10, 1921.
61. The Unicorn (77/^x3) 35
62. The Crucifix (etching) (lli^x6^) 110
63. Henry the Seventh's Chapel (etching) (6)4x5)^) 50
64. Siena (etching) (11^x5^) 190
65. Rue Saint Julien le Pauvre (etching) (8?4x64^) 75
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 293
Cameron — Continued.
66. Old Whitby Bridge (77Ax\2H) $100
67. The Boddin (5x6^ (drypoint) 35
68. Dinnetmoor (drypoint) (6^x117^) 110
69. Amboise (etching) (103/^x6i^) 125
70. A Norman Village (etching) (5^4x7) 90
Walpole. April 13, 1921.
41. Hermitage Castle, Liddesdale. Cross 35
Cassatt, Mary; 1855- , American.
Hall, March 10, 1921.
73. Mere et Tentant (drvpoint) (167^x12^) 60
74. Enfant et Fauteuil (drvpoint) {llji^^yj) 75
Walpole, April 13. 1921.
49. The Letter (dry-point, printed in colors), Perkins 100
50. Afternoon Tea (dry-point printed in colors), Perkins 60
51. Before the Looking Glass (dry-point printed in colors), Perkins 65
52. The Fitting (dry-point printed in colors), Keppel 85
53. In the Omnibus (dry-point printed in colors), Harlow 75
54. Waiting (dry-point printed in colors), Perkins 65
55. Baby's Bath (dry-point printed in colors), Harlow 95
56. Mother and Child (dry-point) , Brand 55
57. Children Reading a Paper (dry-point) , Keppel 57
58. The Toilet (dry-point printed in colors), Hartshorne 115
59. Mother and Child (dry-point printed in colors), Harlow IIS
60. Mother and Child (dry-point printed in colors), Harlow 145
61. Before the Fire (aquatint), Harlow 42
Whitney, March 21, 1921.
122. The Bath (drypoint and aquatint) (14i4xl0i^) 52
Charlet, Franz; 1862- , Belgium.
A. G'., Feb. 4, 1921.
164. Grandpapa (original etching printed in colors), A. Pevens 25
Charreyre, E.; Contemporary, French.
Bcstcn Museum. Feb. 4, 1921.
46. Christ Presented to the People (etching, after Rembrandt) SO
Choki, Yeisoai; 1764-1796, Japanese.
Schraubstadter. Feb. 12, 1921.
830. The Black Box. R. A. Bidwell 70
831. The Interesting Letter. A. B. Duel 35
Walpole. Tan. 20, 1921.
126. Walking in New Fallen Snow (143/^x95/^). Ainsworth 80
128. Seiro Kinugino no Ame (14§^x28), Miss Buckingham 1,100
Claessens, Lambert Anton; 1764-1834, French.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
2. La Femme Hydropique (engraving, after G. Dou) 75
Couer, Louis Le; end of XVIII Century, French.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
86. La Viellesse d'Annette et Lubin (engraving printed in color), R. N.
Moore 260
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
69. Le Promenade du Jardin du Palais Royal, 1787 (engraving printed in
color) . M. Sloog 625
Condit, W. J.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
250. The Government House, New York (lithograph in colors), J. M.
Montgomery 32
Coqueret, Pierre Charles; 1761-Circa 1832, French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
28. On Doit a sa Patrie le Sacrifice de s;s plus Cheres Affections (engrav-
ing printed in color) 1 60
Cormack, IVIrs. Minne; 1862- , British.
Hall, March 10, 1921.
76. Miss Farren, Countess of Derby (mezzotint) (24x15^^) 25
Corot, Jean Baptiste Camille; 1796-1875, French.
Boland, Dec. 2, 1920.
35. Souvenir de Toscane (etching) (4^^x7) 25
37. Un Lac du Tyrol (etching) (4i^x6^) 25
Cosway, Richard; 1742-1821, British.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
30. Comtesse de Perigord et ses Filles (8^^3x65/^) (pencil), T. J. Gannon.. 175
31. Duke of Marlborough (9x5i/4) (pencil), R. Ederheimer 300
32. Lady Jersey as Hebe (834-x7^0 (water color), T. J. Gannon 175
33. Madame Recamier (9x5^) (drawing), T. J. Gannon 500
34. Portrait of a Young Man (9x5 K), R. Ederheimer 200
35. Views of London (6) (aquatints), A. Ackerman & Son 3Q0
294 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
Cousins, Samuel; 1801-1887, British.
Walpole, April 13, 1921.
79. Robert Burns (mezzotint after Alexander Nasmyth), McGuire $110
Daubigny, Charles Francois; 1817-1878, French.
Boland, Dec. 2, 1920.
53. L'Automne, Souvenir de Morvan (etching) (45^x7^8) 25
56. La Pecherie (etching) (6^x5^) 25
59. Les Cerfs au Bord de I'eau (etching) (4^x6p^) 25
60. Le Buisson (etching) (13x15^) (after painting by Ruysdael) 37
61. Le Bac de Bezons (etching) i3Hx6V&) 35
62. Les Cerfs Sous Bois (etching) (6^x4^/^) 62
63. Les Vaches au Marais (etching) (4%x8^) 35
67. Le Brintemps (etching) (4f^x95'^) 25
69. Le Chant du Coq (etching) (5)4x4^) 25
85. Voyage en Bateau (etching) (4^x6) 55
41. La Noce de Village (etching) (3x5^-^) 26
45. L'Orage (etching) (4^x8^) 77
Jones, March 28, 1921.
10. Le Petit Pare aux Moutons (etching), A. H. Harlow 310
11. Les Bords du Cousin (etching) 150
Hall, -March 1.0, 1921.
79. Voyage en Bateau (set of 16 etchings) (average size 4J/^x6) 52
Dawe, Philip; active about 1760.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
76. Death of Robin (mezzotint in color), J. F. Drake, Inc 410
77. Robin's Interment (mezzotint in color), J. F. Drake, Inc 410
Debucourt, Philibert Louis; 1755-1852, French.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
78. Le Compliment ou La Matinee du jour de I'an (engraving), J. F.
Drake 610
79. Les Bouquets, ou la Fete de la Grandmaman (engraving printed in
color), J. F. Drake, Inc 590
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
36. La Promenade Publique (engraving). The Rosenbach Co 2,150
37. Promenade de la Galerie du Palais Royal, 1787 (engraving printed in
color) , Paul A. Isler 385
38. La Noce de Village (engraving printed in color), Paul A. Isler 420
39. Le Menuet de la Mariee, 1786 (engraving printed in color), M. Sloog.. 600
Demarteau, Gilles; 1722-1776, French.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
80. Pastorale (engraving printed in .color), J. S. Phipps 250
81. Pastorale (engraving printed in color), J. S. Phipps 240
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
40. Pastorale (engraving in 2 colors) 120
Descourtis, Charles Melchior; 1753-1820, French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
41. Foire de Village (engraving printed in color), Paul A. Isler 400
42. La Rixe (engraving printed in color), Paul A. Isler 375
43. Noce au Chateau, 1789 (engraving printed in color) 450
44. La Tambourin (engraving printed in color) 375
45. L'Amant Surpris (engraving printed in color), T. J. Gannon 890
46. Princess Frederica Louise Wilhelmina, Margravine of Beireuth (engrav-
ing printed in color) 425
Desnoyers, Auguste Boucher; 1779-1857, French.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
4. La Belle Jardiniere (engraving, after Raphael) SO
5. La Belle Jardiniere de Florence (engraving, after Raphael) 50
Desrais, Charles Louis; 1746-1816, French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
47. La Promenade du Boulevard Italian (etching finished with the graver,
colored by hand) 80
Devere; XVIII Century, French (After Trumbull).
Housman, Oct. 30 1920.
383. Battle of Bunker Hill (36x56), A. C. Haight 25
Dickinson, William; 1746-1823, British-French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
48. The Garden of Carleton House (engraving printed in bistre), Mrs.
W. H. Erharat 120
Durer, Albrecht; 1471-1528, German.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
44. The Owl (2^x8^) (wood cut). Agent 1,600
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 295
Durer — Continued.
Hall, March 9, 1921.
86. Virgin with Child in Swaddling Clothes (engraving) (5^x3^) $35
87. The Virgin Crowned by Two Angels (engraving) (5^x3^^) 25
90. The Betrothal of the Virgin (115^x8^0 25
Walpole, April 13, 1921.
97. Jesus Christ Expirant sur la Croix (engraving), Burton 70
98. Christ Descending into Hell (engraved 1512), Skoyles 40
100. La Joueur de Cornemuse (engraving) 35
101, Albert de Mayence (engraving) 30
Duthe; active 1800-1840, French.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
184. The Four seasons (stripple and line engraving after Duvivier), E.
Collins, Agent 41
Edwards, S. Anient; Contemporary, British.
A. A. A., Dec. 10, 1920.
28. The Duchess of Devonshire (15x12) 105
A. A. A., March 21, 1921.
11. Bosom Friends (14^x11^^) 90
15. Duchess of Devonshire and Child (mezzotint after Reynolds)
(14^x1 6H) 60
16. Lady Dudgeon (mezzotint after Raeburn) (20J4xll) 85
20. George Washington (mezzotint after E. Savage) (10x8^) 45
29. Lady Hallett (mezzotint after Gainsborough) (14^x7/>8) 95
30. Lady Sheffield (mezzotint after Gainsborough) (19x11) 85
41. Madame le Brun and Child (mezzotint after Mme. Vigee le Brun)
(13J4xll>4) 135
48. Princess Beaujolais (mezzotint after Nattier) (18^xl3M) 130
54. Sympathy (mezzotint after Greuze) (M^/^xll^^) 145
62. William, Prince of Orange (mezzotint after Van Dyck) (18^x12^).. 150
63. A Lady of Bruges (mezzotint after Van Dyck) (13^x11^) 45
66. Louise de Bourbon (mezzotint after Mignard) (16^x13^) 115
69. The Lute player (mezzotint after Hals) (13^x11^) 40
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
185. Miranda (mezzotint printed in colors, after John Hoppner), J. B. Foley 35
Ely, March 21, 1921.
25. La Belle Ferronniere (mezzotint after Leonardo da Vinci) (HJ^xll^) 125
Fitzgibbons, March 21, 1921.
7. Anne of Cleves (mezzotint after Holbein) (19xl2i^) 55
9. Baptista Tornabucni (mezzotint after Ghirlandaio) (19xl2i/^) 95
10. Beatrice d'Este (mezzotint after Leonardo da Vinci) (23^x9^) 125
14. Duke and Duchess of Cumberland (mezzotint after Gainsborough)
(18x13) 55
23. Joseph Jefferson (mezzotint) (7x5) 32
27. Lady Dudgeon (after Raeburn) (21xlli^) 70
28. Lady Elizabeth Compton (mezzotint after Reynolds) (17^x8^) 45
32. Louise de Bourbon (mezzotint after Mignard) (17x14) 135
35. Ludovica Tornabuoni (mezzotint after Ghirlandaio) (13x9) 105
38. Madonna (mezzotint after F. F. Lippi) (15^x9^) 180
39. Madonna (mezzotint after Botticelli) (16^x10^) 310
45. Nature (mezzotint after T. Lawrence) (13->4xllM) 150
47. Princess Beaujolais (mezzotint after Nattier) (18x14) 130
50. Saskia Van Ulenburg (mezzotint after Rembrandt) (19x13) 100
52. Simonetta Vespucci (mezzotint after Pollajuolo) (15x11) 35
56. The Lute Player (mezzotint after Frans Hals) (ISi^xU^^) 35
60. Visit to the Boarding School (mezzotint after Morland) (18x22) 130
61. William, Prince of Orange (mezzotint after Van Dyck) (19xl2J^) 120
Flanagan, March 21, 1921.
1. Princess Beaujolais (mezzotint after Nattier) (18^x14) 130
2. A Gentleman of Bruges (mezzotint after Memling) (16^x11^) 40
3. A Gentleman of Bruges (mezzotint after Memling) (17^x15) 27
4. A Lady of Bruges (mezzotint after Jan Van Eyck) (ll^^xlQi/g) 45
5. A Lady of Bruges (mezzotint after Jan Van Eyck) (17^x15) 30
6. Anne of Cleves (mezzotint after Holbein) (185/^x12) 60
8, Baptista Tornabuoni (mezzotint after Ghirlandaio) (18J^xll%) 105
12. Countess Grosvenor (mezzotint after Sir T. Lawrence) (Ilj4x8^)... 50
13. Duke and Duchess of Cumberland (mezzotint after Gainsborough)
(173/^x125/^) 55
17. Elvira (mezzotint after Piero della Francesca) (iSYzxlOU) 80
18. Francis II (mezzotint after J. Clouet) (12^x10^4) 40
24. La Belle Ferronniere (mezzotint after Leonardo da Vinci) (H^xllJ^) 135
26. Lady Dudgeon (mezzotint after Raeburn) (20^x11^) 75
31. Louise de Bourbon (mezzotint after Mignard) (17x14) 100
33. Lucrezia Tornabuoni (mezzotint after Betticelli) (12^x9^) 45
40. Madonna (mezzotint after Perugino) (14J4xllJ^) 115
296 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
Edwards — Continued.
46. Patience (mezzotint after ' Romney) (12)4x10) $60
49. Saskia Van Ulenburg (mezzotint after Rembrandt) (18j4xl2^) 100
51. Simonetta Vespucci (mezzotint after Pollajuclo) (15x11^) 30
55. The Lute Player (mezzotint after Frans Hals) (14x12) 40
58. The Young Princess (mezzotint after Netscher) (19^x13^/8) 55
53. Sister Catherine (mezzotint after Van der Weyden) (15x12) 55
70. William, Prince of Orange (mezzotint after Van Dyck) (18J4xl2J4) • • 160
Hall, March 21, 1921.
19. Francois II (mezzotint after Clouet) (lO^/^xS^^) 35
21. Good Night (mezzotint after Henry Hosier) (11^x8%) 45
34. Lucrezia Tornabuoni (mezzotint after Botticelli) (123/^x9^) 45
36. The Lute Player (mezzotint after Frans Hals) (11^x10^) 40
42. Martin van Nieuvenhove (mezzotint after Memling) (13^x10^) 40
44. Nature (mezzotint after T. Lawrence) (1334x11^'^) 160
59. The Young Prin^cess (mezzotint after Netscher) (16^x105^) 50
64. Anne of Cleves (mezzotint after Hans Holbein) (16^x10^) 90
65. Francois II (mezzotint after Clouet) (17x141.-8) 35
67. Princess Beaujolais (mezzotint after Nattier) (15?/8xl2i/^) 120
68. Simonetta Vespucci (mezzotint after Polajuolo) (13J4x10) 35
Ehninger, J. W.; 1827-1889. American (Copy by G. R. Hall).
Housman, Oct. 30, 1920.
380. Washington's First Interview with His Wife (mezzotint) SO
Eiri; Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
813. The Saltmakers. C. H. Chandler 50
814. The Tattooer. Mr. Henderson 32
Eiri, Rekisentei; active circa 1780-1810, Japanese.
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
251. Bust Portrait of Tomimoto Buzendayn II 800
Eisen, Keisai; 1789-1848, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
97. The Sham Battle. A. B. Duel 25
98. The Wrestling Arena. Towne 40
Walpole. Jan. 22, 1921.
552. Chrysanthemums (14^x9%), Mann 110
Walpole, March 2, 1921.
121. A White-headed Bird 55
279. Cormorant Fishing-boats on the Nagara River 25
Eisen and Hirosliige.
Walpole. Jan. 21, 1921.
283. Travellers Plodding Along the Road Through Deep Snow (8^x13^),
Keck 72
387. Karuizawa: View of the Station at Night (8i^xl3i/2), Hall 25
392. Moonlight View of the Station at the Foot of Yatsu-ga-take (8^x13 H),
Mann 27
401. Fishing by Night with Cormorants from Boats on the Nagara River at
Koto, The Kiso Road Station (8i/^xl3^), Spaulding 63
Eishi, Hosoda; 1783-1829, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
309. A. Tayu. Yamanaka & Co 30
311. The Kamuro's Mischief. C. H. Chandler 55
314. In the Salon. C. H. Chandler 100
315. Boating on the Sumida River. Yamanaka & Co 90
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
131. Takihime of Ogi-ya (153^x10^), Nott 175
132. Suzumishi (143^x9^), King SO
133. The Tayu Misyama of Shoji-ya (14i^x95/g), Fuller 505
134. Prince Genji at Suma Beach (15^x10), Miss Buckingham 90
135. A Modern Poet (135^x8^), Le Roy. 50
136. Viewing Her Back Hair (12^^x834), Rogers 50
137. Another Modern Poet (13x8%), Hall $50
138. A Pleasure Party on the River (14><x2854), Yamanaka 100
320. Sotori-hime (14^x9^), Kellogg 310
321. A Modern Komachi (14^x934), Oshima 190
322. The Oiran Kagamiyama (14^x95^), Ainsworth 40
323. Large Head and Bust Portrait of a Woman (15i4xlO^), Oshima 130
324. Ono No Komachi (141^x9^). Rogers 28
619. Ukifune and the Evening Snow (14^x9^/^), Root 80
620. Hashinihime and the Evening Glow (14^x95^), Tetsuka 75
621. Returning Sails at Suma (143/^x9i^). Tetsuka 95
622. Matsukaze and Night Rain (14^x9i/^), Oshima 75
623. Geese Flying Down in the Twilight (143^x9i/2), Metropolitan Museum.. 75
625. The Autumn Moon at Akashi (14^^x91^), Mann 55
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 297
Eishi — Cmtinucd.
626. Singing Insects and the Vesper Bell (14.>^x9H), Oshima $30
624. Usugumo in Clear Weather after a Storm (145/^x9i/^), Metropolitan
Museum 105
627. The Dragon Fountain (15x9^), Duel 50
628. Temptation {lAY^^9y&), Duel 35
629. Applying Rouge to Her Lips (14^8x9^), Hall 35
631. Ogi-ya Mise Ryaku (I5i4x9§^), Carter 250
Walpcle, March 2, 1921.
240. An Oiran (painting) 40
241. Oiran Hinazuru 70
242. Matsukaze: Prince Genji Paying Lady Akashi-no-ue a Visit (triptych). 230
243. Three Groups of Graceful Ladies (triptych) 85
244. Two Under a Parasol 100
247. The Yujo Takigawa of the House of Ogiya 310
248. Butterflies 40
249. A Party of Oiran under Wistaria 45
Eisho; Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
772. The Goldfish. A. B. Duel 150
774. The Two Poets. Yananaka & Co 27
Eisui, Ichirakutei; about 1800, Japanese.
Walpole, Jan. 22. 1921.
632. Large Head and Bust Portrait of the Beauty (15x10), Oshima 50
633. Portrait of Yoshiwara Beauty (1434x9 j^), Oshima 45
Eizan, Kikugawa; 1800-1829, Japanese.
Walpole. Ian. 21, 1921.
364. A 'Geisha Girl Climbing the Stairs (155/^x10^), Manges 32
Enshi; Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
509. Cherry Viewing. J. T. Spaulding 90
Fantin-Latour, Henri; 1836-1905, French.
Jones, March 28, 1921.
18. L'Etoile du Soir (Tannhauser) (etching) 25
Fitton, Hedley; 1859- , British.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
190. The Gateway of Naples (painter etching), Kennedy & Co 40
Hall, March 9, 1921.
94. Chateau de Comtes, Ghent (etching) (14j^xl5j4) SO
95. St. Andrew's Castle (etching) (lli^xll) 70
96. St. Etienne, Beauvais (etching) (17^x11) 55
97. Rue Pirouette, Paris (etching) (IS^^xS^) 35
99. Gateway, Genoa (etching) (13 5^5^) 70
100. Saint Bartholomew the Great, Smithfield (etching) (12x7^4) 80
Walpole, April 13, 1921.
107. The Rose Window, Notre Dame (etching), Schwartz 230
108. Gateway to the Abbey of 'St. Bartholomew (etching), Walton 37
Folo, Pietro; XIX Century, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
7. La Madonna di Foligno (engraving, after Raphael) 50
Freudenberger, Sigismond; 1745-1801, Swiss-French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
49. Le Retour du Soldat Suisse dans le Pays (aquatint), T. J. Gannon.... 125
50. Les Chanteurs du Mois de Mai (aquatint), T. J. Ganncn 120
Gakutei; XIX Century, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
582. The Dance. Yamanaka & Co 30
Gaugain, Thomas; 1748-1805, British-French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
51. An Airing in Hyde Park (engraving printed in 2 tints colored by hand),
The Rosenbach Co 660
Gardiner, William Nelson; 1766-
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
7Z. January (after painting by W. Hamilton) (engraving), M. Sloog. . . 210
Georges, F.
Hall, March 9, 1921.
7Z. Lady Scott (mezzotint after Gainsborough) (1954x15^) 50
Bell, April 21, 1921.
109. Fox Hunting (set of 4 lithographs after J. F. Herring, Sr), (colored
by Hand) 135
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
80. Stable Scenes (4 lithographs), G. C. Smith, Jr 50
298 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
Gogaku; Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
79. Ishibashi at Shinzan. A. B. Duel $25
Gokyo; Japanese.
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
250. The Yujo Hanando of the House Ogiya, with Attendants 32
Grsenhead, H. T,; Contemporary, British.
Hall, March 21, 1921.
75. Peggy (mezzotint after Morland) (13^x11^) 25
Gulland, Elizabeth; Contemporary, British.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
201. Parmela (mezzotint printed in colors, after Lariviere), P. Suval 100
Fitzgibbons, March 21, 1921.
76. Lady Waldgrave and Child (mezzotint after Reynolds) (25x21) 55
11. Mrs. Robinson as Perdita (mezzotint after Romney) (18xl5j4) 55
78. Mrs. Stewart (mezzotint after Raeburn) (8x15^) 120
79. Pamela (mezzotint after Raeburn) (23x18) 100
80. Lavinia Countess Spence (mezzotint after Reynolds) (9^-^x71/^) 150
Haden, Sir Francis Seymour; 1848-1910, British.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
202. Mount's Bay (original etching), M. Goodman 30
204. A Lancashire River (painter etching), Kennedy & Co 30
205. A Lancashire River ( (etching), E. A. Mere 32
206. Breaking Up of the Agamemnon (mezzotint), F. V. Chappell 47
Hall, March 10, 1921.
104. Kensington Gardens (etching) (6^x4^) 95
105. Kensington Gardens (etching) 6^^x45/^) 45
106. Egham Lock (etching) (57^x83^) 60
107. Sub Tegmine or Greenwich Park (etching and drypoint) (6^x5^) 35
108. Out of Study Window (etching) (4^4x10^4) 32
109. On the Test (etching) (6x9) 60
112. The Water Meadow (etching) (6x9) 55
114. Shere Mill Pond (etching) (6^^x13)... 25
116. Whistler's House Old Chelsea (etching) (6^x13^) 70
117. Thames Ditton with a Sail (etching) (6x9^) 30
122. The Three Sisters (etching) (5^x8^^) 85
123. The Three Sisters (etching) (5j^x8^) 60
124. The Island Opposite Boyle's Farm (etching) (7x9^^^) 40
125. A Likely Place for Salmon (etching) (4J4xl0i4) 27
126. The Two Sheep (etching) (4i/^x5%) 25
128. Breaking Up of the Agamemnon (etching) (7^x16^) 100
139. Thames Fisherman (etching) (6x8^) 65
143. Lancashire River (etching) (llxlS^) 50
147. Breaking Up of the Agememnon (etching) (11^x18^) 65
148. Grayling Fishing (mezzotint) (7^x11^) 148
Jones, March 28, 1921.
22. Harry Kelly's Putney (etching) 37
Haig, Axel Herman; 1835- , Swedish.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
209. Tarragona Cathedral (etching), Kennedy & Co 28
Hall, March 9, 1921.
162. Interior, Burgos Cathedral (etching) (27;^xl7^) 250
163. Toledo Cathedral: Interior (etching) (26i^xl734) 90
164. The Basilica St. Giles at Aries (etching) (28^x20^^) 42
173. St. Mark's, Venice (etching) (23^31^) 45
Hankey, W. Lee; XIX Century, British.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
213. The Spinning Wheel (etching), M. Goodman 33
Walpole, April 13, 1921.
128. The Blind Grandmother (etching). Rose 50
Hamamatsu.
Walpole, Jan. 21, 1921.
425. A Storm Approaching Across the Sea (8J^xl3J^), Wright 42
Harunobu, Suzuki; 1703-1770, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
35. The Night Rain. K. Oshima 60
38. Whispering. R. Glendenning 95
39. Daikoku. M. Klein 25
42. On the Porch. A. B. Duel 35
43. The Angler. C. H. Chandler 35
44. Girl and Monkey. K. Oshima 27
46. The Garden. C. H. Chandler 210
49. Narihira. C. H. Chandler 75
50. At the Window. Yamanaka & Co 85
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 299
Harunobu — Continued.
51. The Maple Leaf Fire. S. C. Bosch-Reitz $30
52. The Bird-Seller. K. Oshima 45
54. The Toothpick Store. K. Oshima 75
56. The Toy Rabbit. Yamanaka & Co 100
57. Hide and Seek. T. E, O. Kellogg 35
Walpole, Jan. 21, 1921.
201. A Young Lady Gazing at the Moon 85
203. Two Men Playing with a Tea-House Girl 70
204. The Girl in White 300
205. A Young Man Playing Foootball 55
206. Watching the Sparklers 190
207. A Young Lady Escorted by a Maid near a Stream 80
208. Two Girls in the Snow 310
209. A Woman and Her Girl-Servant 90
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
237. Reading His Letter (10j^x7^^), Buckingham 400
238. Mother and Child (11^x8^), Hilton 42
239. The Going Away of the Bride (8^x11^), Duel 34
240. The Bed-time Sake Cup (8i^xll^), Duel 26
241. Combing His Hair (11^x8^), Metropolitan Museum 210
242. At the Bath Room Door (85^x4^), Miss Buckingham 80
243. An Interview through the Mise-Goshi (11^x8^), Nott 285
244. Onna Azuma Kudari (8x10%), Bassett 85
245. A Young Samurai on Horseback (11^x8^), Mansfield 310
246. The Mouse Toy (10^^x81.^), Hilton 140
247. Dispatching a Love Letter (12^x8!^^), Mann 310
248. Ushiwaka and "Bekel (ll->^x8i^), Hall 35
249. The Clinging Crab (10^x8^), Metropolitan Museum 82
547. Chrysanthemums and Moon (11^x85-^), Miss Buckingham 775
Havell, Daniel; XIX Century, British, and Sutherland, T.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
85. Views of Paris (6) (aquatints) 400
Henderson, Charles Cooper; XIX Century, British (After).
Brewster, May 17, 1921.
43. Fore's Sporting Traps: Going to the Moors; Going to Cover (aquatints
in color) , G. C. Mercer, Jr 60
44. Fore's Sporting Traps (pair) 45
Henderson, Will; Contemporary.
Hall, March 21, 1921.
81. Miss Byng (mezzotint after Hoppner) (10f^x8j4) 25
82. The Love Letter (mezzotint after Greuze) (13^x9^) 45
Hill, I.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
82. Ramsgate with a View of the Lighthouse (2 aquatints), H. J. King. ... 52
112. New York from Weehawken and New York from Heights near Brooklyn
(aquatints after Wm. G. Wall), Agent 120
Walpole, April 11, 1921.
194. New York City from Weehawken (engraving after painting by Wm.
G. Wall), Williams 130
195. New York from Heights near Brooklyn (engraving after painting by
Wm. G. Wall) Williams 130
HIroshlge, Ichiryusai; 1796-1858, Japanese.
Metzgar, April 4, 1921.
31. Fujikawa: A Delicate Snow Scene $27
41 . Numadzu Snow 82
153. Monkey Bridge: SaruHashi: Kahi Province 28
173. Upright Takaido Set (57 prints) 43
188. The Bow Moon 36
265. Kameido Drum Bridge and Wistaria 26
278. Hill of Snow, Drum Bridge, Meguro 32
289. Rain at Ohashi on the Bridge (signed margins) 81
290. Rain at Ohashi 27
466. Fuji Scene from Numazu: Snow Landscape 26
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
132. Yoshiwara. W.Fleischer 25
163. Shono. Edw. W. Root 65
215. The Trout. Horace 35
478. The Snow Rabbit 65
648. The Kiso Snow Gorge. A. B. Duel 100
664. The Bridge in a Storm. Yamanaka & Co 52
Walpole. Jan. 20, 1921.
216. Pines by the Sea (14^x10), Keck 32
217. Fujikawa (13^x8^), Ziegler 29
300 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
H iroshige — Ccntimicd.
218. View of Nippon Bridge in Snow (13?^x4^), Rogers $25
219. The Autumn Moon at Mokuboji (8^xl2j^), Yamanaka 40
220. Evening Snow at Mimeguri (8^xl2§^), Tuttle 60
223. Seve-ri Beach, Province of Soshu, Raymond 42
413. The Autumn Moon at Takanawa (9i4xl35^), Yamanaka 31
459. Mii no Bansho (9^x14^), Bidwell 52
460. A Snowy Evening at the Station (8%xl33.4), Tetsuka 52
461. Travellers Crossing the Tenryu gawa (8%xl3^), Root 27
465. Kameyama (8^x13^), Hall 52
466. Twilight Shower at Tadasu-ga-wara (9^x145^), Ainsworth 87
471. The Gion Yashiro Setchu (8i^xl4^), Mansfield 65
472. Twilight Moon, at Ryogoku Bridge (934x145^), Mann 135
473. Full Moon at Takanawa (10^^x15), Mansfield 300
474. Picture of the Shonbu-ga-oka Lotus Pond (9^x147^), Hall 55
475. Sunrise at Susaki on New Year's Morning After a Snowfall (9j4xl4%),
Mansfield 35
476. View of Massake in Late Spring (10^x15), Van Bleck 125
477. The First Cuckoo of the Year at Esukuda Island (9x14), Yamanaka 55
478. View of Cherry Trees in Leaf on the Bank of the Sumida (9^x14%)
Ainsworth ., 110
479. The Vesper Bell at Ikegami Temple (10x14^^), Carter 85
484. Sudden Shower of Rain at the Big Bridge (14J4x95^), Eli 320
485. Taiko Bridge and the Yuhi Mound at Meguro (14J4x9J^), Rosenzweig. . 77
486. Fukagawa Susaki Ju-man-tsubo. Stillman 25
488. The Raftsman (13^x3), Hall 50
490. Buyp Kanazawa Hassho Yakei (14x29), King ' 520
491. View of the Narut Whirlpool, Province of Awa (13^x28^), Gay 100
492. Mountains and Streams on the Kiso Highway. Hilton 125
527. Roses and Sparrow (14]^x5), Church 40
528. Asters and Crane (14^x4^), Maxwell _ 27
530. Camellia and Sparrows in the Falling Snow (13j4x45^), Bidwell 27
531. Yellow Flowered Water Plant and Kingfisher (13S/^x4^), Mansfield 37
534. Unsevered Tanzaku Triptych (13^x8^), Mansfield 30
535. Maple Tree in Autumnal Foliage, and a Peacock (13J^x5), Mansfield 50
536. Weeping Cherry and Japan Warbler (14^x4^), Smith 80
537. Large-flowered Flat Bell and Susuki Grass (14x43/^), Church 75
538. Mandarin Drake and Duck in the Water (14^x6^), Mansfield 35
539. Chrysanthemums and Peacock on a Projecting Ledge of Rock (15j^x6%)
Duel 55
540. Two Wild Ducks in the Water (14.}4x65^), Tetsuka 120
541. Sakura no Eda ni Kotori (15x6^), Ainsworth 75
542. Dogwood and Kingfisher (14x4i/4), Church 27
543. Peacock and Peonies (28^x9^), Smith 200
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
280. Misty Moonlight 210
283. Weather Hill in the Tobo Harbor 25
285. A Snowstorm on the Sea-Coast 27
286. Vesper Bells at Ikegami 92
287. Alighting Geese at Haneda 130
288. Return Sail Boats at Gyotoku 175
293. The Autumn Moon 75
303. Cherries in Full Bloom 77
307. The Fox-Fires on New Year's Eve by the Isho Enoki at Oji 100
308. Sail Boats along the Sand in the Bay of Myazu 30
310. Fujikawa in Snow 27
Hiroshige and Kunisada.
Metzgar, April 4, 1921.
214. Snow Triptych with Two Figures 40
Hokkei, Aogaoka; 1800-1840, Japanese.
S.chraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
550. The Great Wave. Yamanaka & Co 35
564. The Moon Palace. A. B. Duel 30
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
195. A Ferry Boat Crossing the River. Tuttle 200
196. Going up the Mountain from Omiyaguchi in Sunshu. Spaulding 150
197. The Fudo Protector of the Mikuni Pass. Church 50
198. Mt. Tate in Etchu. Church 45
199. A Village in the Musashi Plain. Church 200
200. Shimotzuke, Nikko-san Urami-ga-taki. Spaulding 75
201. The Big Flume at Chinuki in Izu. Church 159
202. Sesshu, Sumiyosha. Spaulding 170
203. Shinto Ceremony at Makari, Province of Nagato. Spaulding 150
204. Soshu, Hakone no Seki. Church 260
205. The Stone-Horse Mida, Province if Izu. Spaulding 150
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 301
Hokuju, Shotel; active about 1820-1830, Japanese.
\\ alpole, Jan. 21. 1921.
367. View of Tsukuda Island in Edo Bay at the Mouth of the Sumida River
(9^x141^^), Bidwell $30
368. View of Takanawa, the Entrance to Shinigawa Station (lGi4xl4j4).
Coffin 27
371. Picture of the real Floating Monkey-Bridge in the Province of Kai
(lOKxlS), Rogers 30
Hokuju, Shotei; active about 1820-1830, Japanese.
Walpole, March 2, 1921.
103. View of Massaki on the Sumida River " 32
Hokusai, Katsushika; 1760-1849, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
320. Yujcva. A. B. Duel 30
357. The Cranes 30
358. The- Monkey Bridge. A. B. Duel 45
362. Toro No Daijin. A. B. Duel 40
364. Shonenko. A. B. Duel 50
Walpole, Jan. 22, 1921.
507. Illustration of Poem by Chunagon Yakamochi (10x14^4). Buckingham 60
509. Illustration of Poem by Gon-Chunagon Sadaiye (10x14^), Fletcher.... 35
511. Travellers Viewing Fuji (93^x143/^), Mansfield 30
512. The White Cap of Fuji (10x145/^), Ainsworth 425
513. Fuji seen from Koishikawaon a Snowy Morning (9^x145^), Carland.. 85
514. The Cone of Fuji in Fair Weather (95/^x14^), Ainsworth 300
515. Fuji Mirrored in Lake Misaka (9^^x14^), King 100
516. Kajikasawa, Kai (10^x14)4), Lang 35
517. Fuji Seen from the Inume Pass (9?^xl4^), Bidwell 70
518. Fishing from the Rocks at Uraga (674x9^), Gay 170
519. The Bridge of Boats at Sano (6%x9^), Twinny 80
520. The Seven Fortune Gods in a Lion Play (8x20^), Spaulding 30
521. Watching Them Pass (9^x45,^, Duel 35
522. A Day's Outing {95/^x45/^), Twinney 37
523. The Bokudo (9->^xl4i^), Buckingham 60
554. Poppies (9^x14^), Mansfield 500
555. Magnolia Flowers and Unidentified Bird (95/^x7]^), Root 50
556. Thistles and Crossbill (934x7 '4), Mansfield 90
557. Azaleas and Cuckoo (93/^x7'/^), Bidwell 45
558. Peonies and Butterfly (lO^xlSj^), Mansfield 130
Walpole, March 2, 1921.
85. A Party of Four en the Bank of a River 25
86. Ri Haku Gazing at the Waterfall of Lo-Shan 235
88. A Waterfall at Aoigaoka 27
90. Tempozan at the Mouth of the Ajikawa 55
91. Temma Bridge, Settsu Province 32
93. The Suspension Bridge Connecting the Provinces of Hida and Etchu . . 52
94. Mt. Fuji Seen from Sekiya-no-Sato 70
96. Mt. Fuj i Seen from Shimo-Megure 27
101. On New Year's at the Shrine of Mekari Myojin 90
Howarth, Albany E.; Contemporary, British.
Hall, March 9, 1921.
215. St. Mark's, Venice (etching) (21^x31^) 27
Houben, Henri.
Moore, April 18-25, 1921.
1580. At the Well. Col Wigton 200
Huet, Jean Baptiste; 1745-1811, French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
52. Le Gouter de la Bergere (13x17^) (water color), M. Slocg 2,250
53. Le Repos au Crepuscule (13x17^) (water color), M. Slocg 2,350
54. Nymph with Swans (9x6K), N. E. Landau 160
54a. Nymphs au Raisins (engraving printed in 2 colors), N. E. Landau.... 160
Hunt, Charles; XIX Century, British.
Bell, April 21, 1921.
113. a. Start for the Derby, b. Coming in for the Derby (aquatints after
F. C. Turner, colored by hand) 52
115. Read Riders, or Funkers. The Few not Funkers (aquatints after R. B.
Davis, in colors) 60
Israels, Josef, R. I.; 1824-1911, Dutch.
Bostwick, Dec. 10, 1920.
15. Children Sailing a Boat (15x27) (etched by Carl L Dake) 25
Hall, March 10, 1921.
228. Girl with Basket Seated on the Shore (etching) (6x9) ■ 35
Jcnes, March 28, 1921.
27. Girl with Basket Seated on Shore (etching), H. M. Dunbar 52
302 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
Jacque, Charles Emile; 1813-1894, French.
Boland, Dec. 2, 1920.
111. La Bergerie (etching) (11^x17^2) $72
137. La Vachere (etching) (9^x6^) 25
145. La Bergerie Bearnaise (etching) (18xl4j4) 35
Hall, March 10, 1921.
232. La Bergerie (etching) (Il-}4xl7j4) 62
Jakuchu; Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
605. The Cockatoo : 30
James, Clifford R.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
218. The Countess of Westmeath (mezzotint printed in colors, after painting
by Sir Thomas Lawrence) , P. Suval 75
Janinet, Francois; 1752-1813, French.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
82. Mademoiselle du T — , 1779 (engraving printed in color), Agent... 775
83. L'Indiscretion (engraving printed in color), J. F. Drake, Inc 1,600
84. La Crainte Enfantine (engraving printed in color), A. W. Graetz... 325
85. La Confidence (engraving printed in color), A. W. Graetz 310
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
55. Ha! le joli petit Chien (engraving printed in color) 360
56. La Bacchante Enivree (engraving printed in colors), R. Ederheimer. . 95
57. Le Petit Conseil (engraving printed in color) 360
58. Le Satyre Impatient (engraving printed in color), R. Ederheimer 90
59. Les Plaisirs du Jeu (engraving printed in color), C. F. R. Drake 160
60. Les Restes du Palais du Pape Jules (engraving printed in color), The
Rosenbach Co 360
62. L'Indiscretion (engraving printed in color), The Rosenbach Co 1,550
63. Mademoiselle du T , 1779 (engraving printed in color), The Ro-
senbach Co 675
64. Nina or la FoUe par Amour (portrait de Mme. Dugazon) (engraving
printed in color), The Rosenbach Co 600
65. Venus a la Colombe (engraving printed in color), The Rosenbach Co.. 625
66. Le Sommeil de Diane (engraving printed in color). The Rosenbach Co. 610
Jones, John; 1740-1797, British.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
220. Carolina Duchess of Marlborough (mezzotint after the painting by
George Romney), W. C. Dickerman 140
Jones, S. J. E,; XIX Century, British (After).
Brewster, May 17, 1921.
56. Elephant and Castle, Newington (aquatint in colors), G. C. Mercer, Jr. . 67
Kaigetsudo; Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
243. The Beauty (24x12^), E. E. Miller 2,100
Kauffman, Angelica; 1741-1807, Swiss-British.
Bell, April 21, 1921.
61. Cupid and Euphrosyne (stipple by Thos. Burke and Chaillou) 31
Kikumaro; 1789-1829, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
545. Writing Tablets. A. B. Duel : 35
Walpole, Jan. 22, 1921.
553. Cranes (13^x9), Rogers 30
Kiyohiro; Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
27. At the River Side. C. H. Chandler 170
Kinney, Troy; 1871- , American.
Jones, March 28, 1921.
30. Lopkova and Nijinski in les Sylphides (etching) 47
Klyomasa, Torii; 1789-1800, Japanese.
Walpole, Jan. 22, 1921.
638. Kotofif (9^xl4J^), Pepper 35
Kiyomasu; 1700-1750, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
20. Actor Portrait. K. Oshima 80
22. The Little Cobbler. C. H. Chandler 55
Kiyomine; 1786-1868, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
85. The Belle. M. Spaulding 65
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 303
Kiyomitsu, Torii; active about 1735-1785, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
23. Player Portrait (11^x554), A. B. Duel $30
24. Actor Print. F. E. O. Kellogg 50
25. The Flute Player. H. Mansfield 60
26. Urashima. W. D. Stowell 35
Van Caneghem, March 2, 1921.
11. Actor Segawa Kikunojo II as Shosho in a Soga Play 150
12. A Picnic Party Under a Blossoming Cherry Tree 650
13. Actor Bando Hikosaburo as Sanado no Yoichi in Play Ume ya Izu
Irifune 55
15. The Actor Bando Hikosaburo II 60
16. Actor Segawa Kikunojo II as O-Sugi in Edo Murasaki Kcngen Soga. . 170
17. Actor Matsumoto Koshiro III as a Samurai 60
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
18. Plum Blossoms and Beauties (11x17), Ainsworth 110
21. An Actor of Woman's Roles (Ilj4x5^), Buckingham 135
Klyonaga, Torii; active 1789-1800, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
292. Actor Print. A. B. Duel 80
293. Echigoya Emporium on Suruga Street (16j4x27j4), Mrs. J. Takamine 165
299. Mount Fuji. K. Oshima 60
300. Mitate Kojima Takanori. Mrs. W. S. Kellogg 140
301. On the Way to the Picnic. K. Oshima 25
302. Degetari. A. B. Duel 25
303. Sanno Procession. R. Glendenning 50
304. In the Riverside Tea-House. K. Oshima 140
306. The Promenade. C H. Chandler 37
307. Cherry Blossom Picnic. C. H. Chandler ■ 50
308. The Komuso. Mansfield 45
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
61. A Winter Visit to a Shrine (155-^x10^), Miss Buckingham 500
62. The Iris Garden (14i^x9i^), Church 850
63. Out for a Walk (14i/^x95^), Buckingham 310
64. Sports of the Chrysanthemum Fete (15x9^), Spaulding 310
66. At Hagidera (15x10), Ainsworth 625
67. The Botan Show (14i^x9^), Chandler 275
68. Boating Party Under Ryogoku Bridge (143^x95^), Ainsworth 80
69. Scene from a Shosa Act (15^x10^), Yamanaka 55
70. Scene from a Drama (13^x9^2), Miss Buckingham 110
71. A Gay Party in the Southern Quarter (15^x10^), Spaulding 1,500
12. The Shiohumi (15x10), Miss Buckingham 575
- 73. Two Edo Views (5^^x12^), Ainsworth 25
74. Looking at Picture Books (9§^x7^), Carter 80
75. Scene from Shushingura (IS^^sxlO), Carter 25
n. On the Balcony (15^x10), Ainsworth 700
78. Mutsuki (1st month) (10^x7^), Miss Buckingham 325
19. Minatsuki (6th month) (8^x6^), Miss Buckingham 90
80. Shimotsuki Kikuzuki (1014x7^^), Mansfield 360
81. Tsugomori Yukimizuki (12th month) (10^x7^^), Kellogg 110
82. The Fifth Month (10J^x7^), Hilton 50
83. Visitors to Mimeguri Yashiro (14^x10), Smith 475
84. The Hour of the Horse (8^x61^^), Austin 45
85. New Year's Day Sports (15x10^), Rogers 37
264. Under the Maple Trees in Autumn (14^x95^), Miss Buckingham 950
265. Cherry Flower Viewing at Gotenyama (14^x19^), Smith 3,150
266. Tenugui Gake Kiban (8^x6^), Duel 30
267. Ushiwaka Serendaing Joruri-hime (14^x10), Duel 170
268. Ushiwaka Serenading Joruri-hime (15^^x10^), Miss Buckingham 125
269. A Noted Actor in Private Life (14§^^x9M), Spaulding 300
270. The Flower Vendor (15^x10^^), Spaulding 220
271. Scene from a Shosa Act (iSj^xlOJ^), Spaulding 230
272. The Shosa of Musume Dojoji (15^x10^), Miss Buckingham 100
273. New Year's Day in the Yoshiwara (12^x8?^), Ledoux 52
274. Scene from a Drama (15^x19^), Spaulding 150
275. The First Horseback Ride in the New Year (9^x15), Twinny 75
276. New Year's Morning in a Great House (9^x15), Hall 30
277. Actors in a Festival Procession (121.^x534), Fuller 120
278. Picnic in a Nobleman's Garden (145/^x10), Nott 150
279. Another Sheet of the Same. Carter 90
280. Handing Him His Sword (10x754), Ainsworth 430
282. Evening Cooling on the River Bank (14^x10), Hilton 450
284. An Actor's Boating Party (14x28), Mann 230
285. Nippori, Hotel (9^x7^), Ainsworth 65
572. A Popular Actor (14i4x9^), Spaulding 625
573. Scene from a Drama (15j4x10J4). Carter 110
304 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
Kiyonaga — Continued.
574. Women Washing Clothes (14^x9^), Oshima - $110
575. The Passing Fan-mount Vendor (145^x9^), Oshima 60
576. The Dropped Lantern (9f/^x7i^), King 75
577. In the Yoshiwara Parade (14^x10), Yamanaka... 27
578. Geese Flying Down at Mukojima (8^x7^), Colburn 105
579. Overhearing Their Story (10i4x7^), Miss Buckingham 360
580. Michi-yuki Tamagawa no Dan ( 1 0 ^ x7 H ) • Hilton 185
581. Trials of the Newly Wed (95/^x7^), Smith 220
582. Segawa of Matsuba-ya (14x9H), Mann 110
583. Scene from a Soga Play (I5i4xl0^), Carter 110
584. The Pet Kitten (9/^^x7^), King 55
585. Under the Cheery Trees (15x9^), King 90
586. The First Month (10^^x75^), Peters.. 50
587. Respect the Honest Poor (10^x75^), Church 230
588. Tago (95/^x7^), Pepper 30
589. Suruga Cho (9^x7^), Ainsworth 50
590. Mado no Naka (9^x7^), Ledoux 50
591. The Autumn Moon in the Mirror (8^x6^), Duel 27
592. Yoimitsu Hunting Deer (14^x9^), Spaulding 35
593. The Ferry Boat (15x10^), King 460
594. Waiting for the Ferry (14^x10), Miss Buckingham 300
Walpole, March 2, 1921.
34. Actor Segawa Kikunojo II 75
35. A Girl in Black Headdress 30
36. Young Women 45
2>7. Two Yujo en a Veranda 100
38. The Third Month 38
39. Two Salt Maidens on a Shore 125
40. "A Young Woman with a Parasol 100
41. A Geisha with an Umbrella 130
43. A Scene from the Drama Tsuzure Nishiki 52
44. Scene from the Drama Tsuzure Nishiki (a Actors) 40
45. Two Women Approaching the Shinto Shrine 225
46. The Oiran Toji of the Ogiya House and Her Suite 50
47. Viewing the Cherry Blossoms at Gotenyama 410
48. A Young Lady Attended by Two Women 30
49. A Young Lady Attended by Two Women 27
50. The Umbrella 100
51. Before the Shrine of Jizo 70
53. A Young Man and Two Maids of a Tea-House 130
54. The Terrace by the Sea 400
56. A Ycung Man' and Two Girls at a Tea-House overlooking Shinegawa Bay 27
57. A Young Lady and Her Maid in the Garden of Sodegaoka 105
58. Evening Snow in Late Winter 25
59. A Boy "Wearing Hakama," accompanied by Three Women 62
60. A Girl Accompanied by Three Women and a Nursemaid on Her Way to
the Shrine on the Occasion of Her Kamioki 52
61. A Princess of the Green-House 80
63. Nakasu District 35
64. A Party of Oiran 32
65. Scene at a Dyer's Establishment 55
66. Two Salt Maidens on the Shore 30
Kiyonobu, Torii; active about 1740-1756, Japanese.
Van Caneghem, March 2, 1921.
1. Actor Kichikawa Danjuro II as Soga no Goro 62
Walpole, Jan. 20. 1921.
13. Ichikawa Ebizo as Yanone Goro (I5>^x6^), Mann 160
Klyoshige, Torii; active about 1758, Japanese.
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
15. The 4th Ichikawa Danjuro (15^x6-^8), Hilton 200
Kiyotada, Torii; XVIII Century, Japanese.
Van Caneghem, March 2, 1921.
2. Actor Nakamura Kichibei in a Theatrical Role Z7
Kiyotomo, Torii; active about 1739, Japanese.
Walpole. Jan. 20, 1921.
28. Nazuna Uri (11^^x6), Ainsworth $45
Kiyotsune, Torii; active about 1740-1770, Japanese.
Walpole. Tan. 20, 1921.
26. An Actor's Card (llf^xS^^), Ainsworth 25
Kiinger, iVIax; 1857- , German.
Walpole, April 13. 1921.
150. Brahms Phantasy (etching), Meder 52
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 305
Kokon, Shiba; 1747-1818, Japanese.
Walpole, Tan^21, 1921.
251. A Harunobu Forgery (10^^x7^), Miss Buckingham $190
Komatsuken; active 1765-1776, Japanese.
Van Caneghem, March 2, 1921.
20. Young Woman Conversing with Two Nuns 65
Walpcle. Jan. 20, 1921.
252. Oiran and Kamuro (10?'^x7H), Spaulding 300
Koryusai, Isoda; active about 1766-1786, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
263. On the Bridge. T. M. Mathews 25
274. The Letter. H. H. Hall 32
284. An Oiran. A. B. Duel 32
Walpole, Jan. 21, 1921.
42. Nanaaya of Kadokane-ya (15xl0i4), Yamanaka 55
43. Meizan of Choii-ya (I5i.^xl0^), Oshima 55
44. Shioginu of Tsuta-ya {ISYaxIOVa), Oshima 55
45. Takamura of Komatsu-ya (15^x10^), Kellog 70
46. Harukano of Nyka-Tawaraoya (I5i4xl0!/^ ), Yamanaka 35
47. Hayma of Asahi Maru-ya (15x10^), Miss Buckingham 35
48. Kichijuro of Kogemanji-ya (15x105^), Yamanaka 35
50. Painting (10x7 V2), Miss Buckingham 170
236. Musume Dojoji (iS^^xlQi/^), Mann 30
567. Botan ni Shishi (7^x11^), Mann SO
595. Modern Sages of the Bamboo Grove (10^x714), Miss Buckingham 275
596. Chidori no Tamagawa (10^x7i-4), Yamanaka 52
297. Too Much in View (7^xlOi/4). Pepper 25
598. Chusingura Mitate (10K'x7^), Duel 27
599. Toeizan Hanami no Bashc (1054x7§^), Mann 55
601. The Sign of the Horse ilOlix7ys), Duel 32
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
210. Kyo Shi 80
211. The Plum Viewing Month 35
212. The Flower Hat Dance .^ 45
214. A Maiden Leading a Horse en Which Rides a Youth 30
215. A Youth Exchanging a Glance with a Maiden Across a Fence 32
216. A Girl on Horseback Fording a Stream 3C
Kunimasa, Utagawa; about 1810, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
453. Danjuro and Two Other Actors. J. T. Spaulding 130
544. A Player. J. T. Spaulding 70
Walpole, Jan. 21, 1921.
360. The 1st Bando Mitsugoro (14i/4x9?^), Spaulding 125
362. The 2nd Nakamura Ncshio (15x10), Spaulding 250
363. The Sixth Ichikawa Danjuro (15x9^), Hall 45
Kunisada, Utagawa; 1797-1861, Japanese and Hiroshige.
Metzgar, April 4, 1921.
214. Snow Triptych with Two Figures 40
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
366. The Mist. H. Mansfield 90
367. Asazuma Bune. C. H. Chandler 70
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
167. Driving the Dogs Away (9^4x14^), Ely 52
170. View of the Tamura Watashi Ferry on the Road to Oyama (10x14^/^),
Keck 35
Kuniyoshi, Utagawa; 1797-1861, Japanese.
Rockwell, Part V, May 4, 1921.
250. Forty-four sheets from the 100 poets. K. Matsuki 51
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
575-576. Preparing to Wade and Hakone. R. A. Bidwell 100
855. Nichiren in the Snow. Robert Laurent 65
880. The Great Shark. P. Thompson 52
914. Mongaku Shonin. H. H. Hall 32
Walpole. Jan. 20, 1921.
172. Shin Yoshiwara (10x14), Mann 27
175. Yanagi Bridge from Ryogoki (9^x14), Ainsworth 26
176. Rycgoku no Suzumi (10x14^), Bidwell 30
177. Asokusa Imado (9^x13?^), Yamanaka 30
180. Usui Toge Yori Asama o Miru (95^x14^), Bidwell 62
182. A Shinto Festival. Bidwell 36
183. Hara. Ainsworth 34
184. Hara. Ainsworth 31
188. Shono. Bidwell 26
191. Oyama sekison Oudki no zu (10x14^), Bidwell 35
493. Distant view beneath the new great Bridge (9^x135^), Bassett 100
306 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
Kuniyoshi — Continued.
496. The Prayer for Rain Answered (9j^xl4^), Ludlam $50
497. Exile in Sado-ga-shima (91^x141^), Kellogg 200
501. Toto Onmaya-gashi no Zu (10^x14^), Mishil 325
503. Tonase and Kinami Journeying to Yanashina (9§^xl4^), Bidwell 25
504. The Ascension of Toei's Wife (85^x13%), Ledoux 37
505. The Penance of Mongaku Shonin (421^x9^), Bidwell 60
506. Akama No Ura (14^x28^4), Pellen 25
Walpole, March 2, 1921.
104. A Large Sailing Vessel 30
107. An Old Man with a Lantern 35
109. Tiger 35
112. Dog 27
113. View from Under the Bridge Shi-o-hashi 110
114. The Night Attack 75
116. Kato Kiyomasa 60
117. The Urami 85
118. Scene at Hashiba, Edo 75
119. 0-Kane, Stopping a Runaway Horse 100
Klyosai, Shojo; 1831-1889, Japanese.
Sichraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
118. The Two Crows. F. E. O. Kellogg 70
Lalanne, Maxime Francois Antoine; 1827-1886, French.
Boland, Dec. 2, 1920.
161. Bordeaux, Effet de Neige (etching) (5j4x8^) 25
186. Chez Victor Hugo (etching) (set of 12, average size 3^x2^) 37
Laurie, Robert; Circa 1740-1804, British.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
68. The Full Honeymoon (mezzotint after F. Wheatley), F. L. Harrison.. 250
70. Le Bal de la Bastille (engraving printed in color), M. Sloog 110
Leader, Benjamin Wiiiiams, R. A.; 1831- , British.
Bostwick, Dec. 10, 1920.
17. A Wet Roadside (etched by T. N. Chauvel) 30
Legrand, Auguste; 1765-circa 1808, French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
71. Jamais d'Accord (engraving printed in color) 370
Legrand, Louis; 1863- , French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
72. Le Serin Cheri (engraving printed in color) 330
Legros, AipKionse; 1837-1911, French.
Hall, March 10, 1921.
247. Beggar with a Crutch, His Hat in His Hand (etching) (8?^x6^) 25
Jones, March 28, 1921.
36. La Peche au Tambour (etching), Knoedler 55
37. Le Coup de Vent (etching), F. Keppel & Co 50
39. Les Faiseurs de Fagots (etching), W. Cowan 67
42. Bords de la Marne (etching) 30
43. L'Entree du Champ (etching) 29
44. Les Bouleaux au Bord de I'Eau (etching) 50
45. Les Bouleaux: Bord de I'Eau Efifet du Matin (etching) 47
47. Le Petit Bruleur d'Herbe (etching) 27
49. Masure su la Colline (etching), H. G. Cowen 50
50. Chateau des Revenants 27
51. Abbey Farm (etching)^ R. M. Hogue 52
52. Chailli, Efifet d'Orage (etching) 28
53. Souvenir d'ltalia (etching) 34
54. Les Paysage aux Meules (etching) 110
55. Le Petit Lavoir (etching) 40
56. Une Valee en Bourgoyne (etching), M. Ferry 67
57. Repos de Voyage (etching) 35
58. La Mort du Vagebond (etching), H. G. Cowen 65
59. La Ferme du Bienheureux (etching) 40
61. Pecheurs de Truites (etching) 30
62. Paysage aux deux Arbres (etching) 27
63. Les Bords de la Liane (etching) 35
64. Bord de la Venelie (etching) 35
67. Le Paysage a la Mare (etching), A. H. Harlow 105
68. La Mort du Bucheron, No. 2 (etching) 27
69. La Paysage a la Mare (etching), A. H. Harlow 230
Lepere, Louis Auguste; 1849-1918, French.
Jones, March 28, 1921.
70. Promenade du Dimanche Crevecoeur (etching), M. Ferry 54
71. Marche a la Volaille, a St. Jean-de-Mont (etching), H. M. Dunbar 60
72. Toits de mon Atelier a Jouy (etching), Dunbar 65
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 307
Lepere — Continued.
73. Nivellement de la Place Maubert (etching) $45
76. Une Ruelle a Beauvais (etching) 45
77. Chemin de la Briquetrie ■' (etching) 42
78. L'Ondee (etching) , Knoedler & Co 72
79. La Cathedrale de Reims (etching), H. M. Dunbar 450
80. La Chaumiere du Vieux Pecheur (etching) 130
81. Souvenir de St. Denis (etching), H. M. Dunbar 50
82. Pommier Mort (etching) 37
83. Une Rue du Quartier Juif a Amsterdam (etching) 30
84. L'Arrivee au Moulin (etching) 47
85. Haarlem (etching), Dunbar 55
, 86, Vieille Bourrine, Maison du Marais, Vendee (etching) 40
87. Au Bord du Petit-Morin a Verdelot (etching), Knoedler & Co 80
88. Provins (etching), R. M. Hogue 150
89. La Chaumiere a Rousseau (etching), B. D. Eisler 70
90. Juillet en Picardie (etching), M. Ferry 77
92. Dimanche au Cabaret (etching) 35
93. Le Petit Pont (etching) 37
94. L'Arc-en-ciel (etching), H. M. Dunbar 52
96. Decharge Publique, Quai de la Gare (etching) 32
97. Route de la Houssoye (etching) 45
99. Le Remouleur (etching) 45
100. La Croix du Bois-Macon-"Bel Automne" (etching), R. M. Hogue.... 170
101. Vue de St. Jean-de-Mont, Vendee (etching) 40
102. Amsterdam, Vue de Victoria Hotel (etching), H. M. Dunbar 80
103. La Maison du Roi de Pologne, Angers (etching) 45
104. Vue de Jouy-le-Moutier (etching) 32
105. L'Etang St. Nicholas, Angers (etching), H. M. Dunbar 62
106. Les Arbres Tordus (etching) 42
107. Javelles de Seigle (etching) 27
108. La Guinguette, Route de Billancourt (etching), H. M. Dunbar 75
109. Au Puits (etching) 37
110. La Masure Innondee (etching), A. H. Harlow 80
111. La Masure (etching), H. M. Dunbar 60
112. La Grande Maree, Rochers de Sion (etching) 40
113. Demolition de la Maison de Sabra (etching), H. M. Dunbar 62
114. Une Petite Mare (etching), W. H. Soloman lip
117. Chemin dans le Marais (etching), P. Thompson 85
118. Zwanen Burgwall, Amsterdam (etching), Dunbar 85
119. La Mare de la Prairie (etching), Knoedler & Co 80
120. La Vieille Passerelle, Bords du Petit-Morin (etching), A. H. Harlow 85
121. Sur la Seine, la Nuit (etching) 30
123. L'Abreuvoir au Pont Sully (etching), Knoedler & Co 65
125. L'Orage sur la Dune (etching), P. Thompson 60
126. Retour du Troupeau 32
127. Pecheurs de Crevettes (etching) 42
129. Dimanche aux Fortifications (etching), Knoedler & Co 55
130. Procession de la Fete Dieu a Nantes (etching), Knoedler & Co 75
131. Les Fugitives (etching) 45
132. La Seine au Pont d'Austerlitz (etching) 32
134. Y'a un Noye (etching) 32
Levachez, Charles Francois Gabriel; latter half of XVIII Century, French.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
87. Louis Seize (Aquatint), M. Sloog 135
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
73. La Danse des Chiens (engraving printed in color), R. A. Reader 210
Leyden, Lucas Van; 1494-1533, Dutch.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
91. The Musicians (engraving) 45
Longueil, Joseph De; 1730-1792, French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
74. Le Retour de la Vertue (engraving printed in color) 200
Lorraine, Claude (Claude Gelee); 1600-1682, French.
Jones, March 28, 1921.
28. Le Bouvier (etching) , H. M. Dunbar 450
29. Le Soleil Couchant (etching), H. M. Dunbar 625
MacLaughlin, Donald Shaw; 1876- , American.
Hall, March 10, 1921.
283. Sunlight and Shadow (14^x10^) 32
284. House of Ceres (etching) (14^^x10%) 27
285. The Market, Venice (etching) (10^x15) 35
286. Treviso Waters (etching) (10xl2i^) 52
287. Venetian Noontide (etching) (9^x11^^) 102
289. The Forge of the White Horse (6x5^) 32
308 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
McBey, James; Contemporary, British.
Jones, March 28, 1921.
143. Poena Jetty, Aberdeen (etching), P. ^Thompson $60
144. Portsoy Harbor (1903) (etching) 45
145. Cowgate, Edinburgh (1905) (etching) 45
146. Enkhuisen (1910) (etching), H. G. Cowen 55
147. Old Castle (1911) (etching), Knoedler & Co 52
148. Old Castle (1911) (etching), Knoedler & Co 65
149. The Lumber Mill (overrockie, 1813) (etching), H. M. Dunbar 55
150. Sunset, Wadi un Muksheib (1917) (etching) 65
151. Sunset, Wadi un Muksheib (1917-19) (etching), F. Keppel 55
152. Kites (1814) (etching), T. F. Drake 215
153. A Deserted Oasis (Sinai, 1917-19) (etching), P. Thompson 70
154. A Deserted Oasis (Sinai, 1917-19) (etching), F. Meder 65
155. The Mid-day Halt (1917-19) (etching), P. Thompson 80
156. The Mid-day Halt (1917-19) (etching), T. A. Keck 75
157. Penzance (1913) (etching), J. F. Drake 485
158. Strange Signals (Sinai, 1917-19) (etching), T. Hetzler 175
159. Dawn, Camel Patrol Setting Out (Zerapeum, 1917-19) (etching),
F. Keppel 310
160. Desert of Sinai (1917-19) (etching), Knoedler & Co 145
161. Ras-el-ain (1918-19) (etching 40
162. Ras-el-ain (1918-19) (etching), T. Hetzler 50
163. Early Morning, Catterline (1919) (etching), C. E. Milmine 65
164. The Pianist (1920) (etching), R. M. Hogue 120
165. Point Law, Aberdeen (1902) (etching), 30
166. North Bridge, Edinburgh (1904) (etching) 35
167. Warriston Close (1905) (etching), Hildahourne Farms 50
168. Fish Market Close, Edinbourgh (1905) (etching), G. Busse 55
169. Lion Brewery (1914) (etching), R. M. Hogue 475
170. Evening, Port Lethan (etching) 30
171. Plumstone Close, Edinburgh (1905) (etching) 45
172. Logie Buchan Ferry (etching). P. Thompson 55
173. Edinburgh Castle (etching), Hildahourne Farms 55
174. Volendam Girl (etching) 45
175. Runsdorp Church (1910) (etching), Keppel 50
176. Enkhuisen Harbor (1910) (etching). Kennedy & Co 100
177. Enkhuisen Harbour (etching). C. M. Hogue 80
178. Saw-Mill, Monnickendam (etching), P. Thompson 50
179. Saw-Mill Monnickendam (1910) (etching), H. G. Cowen 60
180. The Mill Zanndijk (1910) (etching) 35
181. The Mill, Zanndijk (1910) (etching), P. Thompson 55
182. Benachie (1911) (etching), C. S. Brand 85
183. Burgos (1911) (etching), G. Busse 80
184. Avilla (1911) (etching) 45
185. The Picador Incites the Bull (1911) (etching), De Witt Statten 150
186. Picador Unhorsed (1911) (etching), Keppel 115
187. The Skylark (1912) (etching), T. F. Drake 180
188. Valencia Beach (1911) (etching), P. Thompson 65
189. Carmathan (1911) (etching), Knoedler & Co 65
190. View in Wales (1911) (etching), Keppel 110
191. April in Kent (1912) (etching), A. H. Harlow* 125
192. Ebbesfleet (Sandwich, 1912) (etching), P. Thompson 80
193. Richborough (1912), Keppel 130
194. Benicarlo (1911) 35
195. Thanet from Richborough (1912) (etching), P. Thompson '•. 65
196. The Foveran Burn (1912) (etching) 45
197. 1588 (etching), Knoedler & Co 55
198. 1588 (etching), Knoedler & Co 60
199. The Story Teller (etching), T. Hetzler 200
200. Beggars, Tetuan (1912) (etching), F. Meder 70
201. The Gunsmiths, Tetuan (1912) (etching), Purnell Art Co 50
202. El Soko, Tetuan (1913) (etching), F. Meder 70
203. The Orange Seller, Tetuan (1912) (etching). F. Straus 50
204. The Bread Market, Tetuan (1912) (etching) SO
205. Dispute in the Jewish Quarters, Tetuan (1912) (etching), C. E.
Milmine 65
206. A Moroccan Market (1913) (etching), F. Meder 50
207. The Pool (1914) (etching), J. F. Drake 320
208. Approach to Tetuan (1913) (etching), P. Thompson 65
209. Tetuan (1913) (etching), H. M. Dunbar ^ 65
210. The Ford, Tangiers (1913) (etching), P. Thompson 70
211. Tangiers (1913} (etching), R. M. Hogue 145
212. Grimmessesluis (1913) (etching), H. M. Dunbar 65
213. The Studio (1914) (etching), W. M. Hill 55
214. Newburgh (1914) (etching), R. M. Hogue 130
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 309
McBey — Continued. '
215. Buchan (1914) (etching), P. Thompson $55
216. Sea and Rain (Macduff. 1914) (etching), Dr. P. Bechtel 60
217. Gamrie (etching), J. F. Drake 400
218. A Norfolk Village (1915) (etching), Knoedler & Co 180
219. Ely, Night (1915) (etching), E. D. Levinson 400
220. The Isle of Ely (1915) (etching), Keppel 135
221. Surrey Downs (1915) (etching). R. M. Hogue 60
222. France at the Furnace (1917) (etching), De Wirr Stetten 70
223. Francais Inconnus (1917) (etching), Wallace E. Meyers 50
224. The Carpenter of Hesdin (1917) (etching) 40
225. Albert (1917) (etching) 40
226. The Somme Front (1917) (etching), A. C. Dickens 65
227. Boat Building, Vinaroz (etching) 30
228. Boat Building. Vinaroz (1911) (etching), P. Thompson 55
Walpole, April 13, 1921.
169. Ebbesfleet (etching) 52
170. Spring, 1917 (etching), Keppel 55
171. The Carpenter of Hesden (etching), Thompson 35
Mallet, Jean Baptiste; 1759-1835, French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
75. Ah! qu'il est joli (engraving printed in color) 175
Manet, Edouard; 1832-1883, French.
Jones, March 28 1921.
137. Les Petits Gitancs (etching). H. M. Dunbar 160
141. Le Gamin (etching). J. M. Dunbar 52
142. Le Guitariste (etching) 42
Marchetti, Pietro; XIX Century, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
8. The Holy Family (engraving) 50
Marriot, F.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
232. The Gateway at Bruges (mezzotint printed in colors), R. H. Kieland.. 30
Masonobu, Kitao; 1761-1816, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
848. The Toy Beat (8i/.x6), H. Mansfield 50
832. Looking back at Fuji. C. H. Chandler 25
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
639. Arranging Her Coiffure (9^x7^^), Manning SO
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
238. A Young Lady and Maid 350
Masanobu, Okumura; active about 1685-1768, Japanese.
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
6. Kanzan and Jittoku (12^x554). Ainsworth 300
7. Oiran and Kamuro (12^x6^), Sanborn 80
8. The 2nd Ichikawa Danjure (12^x6^4), Miss Buckingham 140
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
4. Oiran Reading a Letter 160
Masayoshi, Kitao; 1761-1829, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
77. The Pheasants. J. P. Sabin 25
Walpole, March 2, 1921.
7Z. A Pair of Partridges Beside a Waterfall . 32
Masson, Antoine; 1636-1700, French.
Hall, March 10, 1921.
264. Marin Curcau de la Chambre (engraving) (1054x8.}4) 25
Meisho, Toto; Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
692. Fireworks at Ryogoku Bridge. C. H. Chandler 30
Meisho, Yedo.
Metzgar, April 5, 1921.
427. Snow at Ochanomizu 32
Meryon, Charles; 1821-1868, French.
Hall, March 10, 1921.
295. La Galerie Notre-Dame (etching) (9x6§^) 70
297. La Pompe Notre Dame (etching) (6^x9.H) 45
298. Le Grand Chatelet Vers (etching) (6 15/16x9 13/16) 45
Jcnes, March 28, 1921.
229-230. Nouvelle Zelande (etching), original pencil drawing for etching,
J. F. Drake 410
Walpole, April 13, 1921.
178. San Francisco, California (etching, 4th state), Spencer 30
310 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
Melssonler, Jean Louis Ernest; ISIS-ISPI, French.
Bostwick, Dec. 10, 1920.
29. Annibal (height 5) (etched by himself) $32
31. Tavern Exterior with French Soldiers Engaged in Game of Cards (15x12)
(etched by A. Boulard) ^ 72
32. Partie Perdue (13^xl7j^) (etched by Felix Bracquemond) 60
34. Les Amateurs de Peinture (31x10^^2) (etched by Achille Jacquet) 37
35. Chess Players (4^/^x12) (etched by Jules Jacquet) 32
36. The Sargeant's Portrait (1534x13) (etched by Jules Jacquet) 65
ZT. Marshal de Saxe and his Staff (1434v2034) (etched by Jules Jacquet).. 25
38. The Stirrup Cup (16x14) (etched by Jules Jacquet) 30
39. The Stirrup Cup (15^x13^) (etched by L. Marzies) 60
Millet, J. F.; 1814-1875, French.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
233. Peasants Going to Work (original etching), M. Goodman 30
Boland, Dec. 3, 1920.
233. The Churner (etching) (7x4^^), David Keppel $95
234. Peasant with a Wheelbarrow (etching) (6^x5^4) 30
235. The Gleaners (etching) (7^x10), David Keppel 185
236. The Diggers (etching) (9^xl3j4) 50
237. The Wool Carder (etching) 60
239. Shepherdess Knitting (etching) (12i^x9^) 32
240. Peasants Going to Work (etching) (I5j^xl2) 35
242. The Sower (7^x6^4 ) (lithograph) SO
243. Set of wood engravings (subjects drawn by Millet and blocks cut by
Lavieille (5j4x3) 11
Bostwick, Dec. 10, 1920.
41. The Angelus (I7j4xl9^) (etched by Charles A. Walters) 60
Hall, March 10, 1921.
300. La Couseuse (etching) (3 /^x2M) "^^
Jones, March 29, 1921.
231. Peasants Going to Work (etching), J. F. Drake 1,500
Miiner, E. E.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
235. Lady Anne Lambton and Family (mezzotint printed in colors, after the
painting by John Hoppner), P. Suval 25
236. The Tompkison Boys (mezzotint printed in .colors, after the painting by
Gainsborough) , P. Suval 32
IVlinko, Tacliibana; active about 1760-1770, Japanese.
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
29. Benzaiten seen in Incense Smoke (1034x7|^), Miss Buckingham 360
IVloret, Jean Baptiste; XVIII Century, French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
76. Caffee (sic) des Patriotes (engraving printed m color), Mrs. Hugh
Murray 135
IVIorland, George; 1763-1804, British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
85. Fox Hunting (set of 6 engravmgs), H. J. King 130
IVloronobu, Hisliiicawa; active circa 1660-1700, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
701. The Gods of Luck (12x15), A. B. Duel 25
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
1. Ho-o Maru (12^x173,4), Wheeler So
2. A Temple in Kyoto (10x13^4), Smith 105
3. Tengu at Fencing Practice (8?4xl274), Miss Buckingham 40
4. Nio ni Tengu (8i/^xl23/i), Miss Buckingham 30
5. Chinese Soldiers Resting (8^^x12^^), Wheeler 30
Parsons, C.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
108. Panorama of Halifax (after J. W. Hill), Agent 27
Pavon, Ignazio; XIX Century, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921. ,. ^ . ,.
16. The Transfiguration (engraving, after Raphael), with Veduta di Conicoli
in Tivoli (engraving), and another — three pieces, one lot.... 75
Pennell, Josepli; 1860- , American.
Boland, Dec. 3, 1920.
244. Westminster Abbey, London (etching) (12x7^) 32
245. St. Paul's, London from Fleet Street (etching) (10x7^^ 30
247. London Bridge Stairs (etching) (lli/^x7^) 25
252. Rossetti's House, London (etching) (7^x11^) 40
255. The Tower Bridge (etching) (75^x11]^) 27
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 311
Pyall, H.
Brewster, May 17, 1921.
91. Hunters on their Way to the Hunting Stable (colored aquatint after
James Pollard), A. B. Maclay $35
Raffet, Auguste; 1804-1860, French.
Jones, March 29, 1921.
244. La Revue Nocturne (etching), H. M. Dunbar 70
245. Retraite du Bataillon Sacre a Waterloo (etching), E. Weyle 60
Raimundo, Marc Antonio; about 1488-1534, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
88. Dance of Cupids (engraving), J. S. Phipps 175
Reeve, R. G.
Walpole, April 13, 1921.
221. View of the Port of Liverpool (aquatint printed in colors after painting
by Samuel Walters) , Williams 31
Rembrandt, Van Rijn; 1606-1669, Dutch.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
263. Petrus and Johannes (original etching), M. Goodman 45
265. Utenbigardus (original etching), B. Emmett 47
266. Old Man and Child (original etching), Dickerman 80
267. Portrait of a Man (original etching), B. Emmett 45
Hall, March 10, 1921.
308. Adoration of the Shepherds (etching) (434x3^) 52
310. The Great Jewish Bride (8>^x6i^) (etching) 320
Walpole, April 13, 1921.
222. The Pancake Woman (etching, 2 state), Skoyles 11
Revere, Paul; 1735-1818, American.
Housman, Oct. 30, 1920.
321. The Boston Massacre (engraving) 285
Ride; XVIII Century, French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
80. Sainte Madelaine Repoussant les Vanites du Monde (engraving printed
in color), T. J. Gannon , 75
Rissen; Japanese.
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
278. A Goose and Reeds 110
Roberts, P.
Walpole, April 13, 1921.
226. L. G. Otto, Minister from Napoleon I to Great Britain (stipple engrav-
ing printed in colors after painting by Turnbull), Anderson.. 37
Rodin, Auguste; 1840-1917, French.
Jones, March 29, 1921.
246. Portrait of Victor Hugo (etching), A. H. Harlow 110
Rosenberg, F.; 1758-1833, German.
Brewster, May 17, 1921.
98. Opposition Coaches at Speed (colored aquatint after C. Newhouse),
Lagerman 25
Rosenthal, Albert; 1863- , American.
Housman, Oct. 30, 1920.
353. George Washington (etching of Field Miniature) 50
Rousseau, Pierre Etienne Theodore; 1812-1867, French.
Boland, Dec. 3, 1920.
291. Chenes de Roche (etching) (5x65i) 45
Rowlandson, Thomas; 1756-1827, British.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
81. Vauxhall (engraved by R. Pollard and aquatinted by Jukes), The Ro-
senbach Co 925
Sadahide, Utagawa; 1820-1864, Japanese,
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
851. The Combat. A. B. Duel 40
Sadler, W. Dendy; 1824- , British.
A. A. A., Dec. 10, 1920.
Ti. Darby and John (etching) (18x23) 220
74. End of the Skein (18^^x23^) (etched by W. Boucher) 90
Bostwick, Dec. 10, 1920.
48. Darby and Joan (135^x191^) (etched by W. H. Boucher) 48
49. The End of the Skein (133^xl9i^) (etched by W. H. Boucher) 90
50. For Fifty Years (13^^x19^) (etched by W. H. Boucher) 100
51. Home Sweet Home (18x24) (etched by W. H. Boucher) 50
52. Nearing the End (15x20) (etched by W. H. Boucher) 60
53. My Love to You (14^x11) (etched by W. H. Boucher) 205
54. Same to You Dear (14^x21) (cached by W. H. Boucher) 60
312 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
Sadler— Continued.
55. The Widow at Home (14i4x20) (etched by W. H. Boucher) $30
56. At the Wayside Inn (22xl9i^) (etched by Guy Chiquet) 37
57. After Dinner Rest Awhile (etched by James Dobie) (133^x19) 70
58. London to York (18i/^x25) (etched by James Dobie) 35
59. Long-, Long Ago (1154x1434) (etched by James Dobie) 30
60. Long, Long Ago (1134x14^-4) (etched by James Dobie) 27
61. The Old and the Young (13x17^) (etched by E. Gaujean) 45
62. The Widow's Birthday (13x1 7^^) (etched by E. Gaujean) 60
63. Offer of Marriage (17^^x24) (etched by A. Mongin) 35
Saillar, Louis; 1748-1793, French.
Bell, April 21, 1921.
95, William II of Nassau (stipple after painting by Honthurst) 26
Savage, E.; Contemporary, American.
Housman, Oct. 30, 1920.
349. George Washington (mezzotint), Max Williams 100
350. George Washington (engraving), A. C. Haight 70
Schlavonetti, Luigi; 1765-1810, Italian.
Bell, April 21, 1921.
147. Two Bunches a Penny Primroses, Two Bunches a Penny (stipple in
colors after Francis Wheatley) (Plate No. 1 of the Cries of
London) 140
148. Milk Below Maids (stipple printed in colors) (Plate No. 2 of the Cries
of London) 250
Schongauer, Martin; About 1445-1491, German.
Boston Museum, Feb. 4, 1921.
88. Christ on the Cross (engraving), J. F. McCarthy 185
87. Christ on the Cross (engraving), J. F. McCarthy 62
Sergent, Antoine Francois; 1751-1847, French.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
82. General Marceau (engraving printed in coIot) 160
83. Monsieur Frere du Roi (engraving printed in color), A. J, Riddle, Jr... 70
Sharaku, Tosiiusai; active 1790-1795, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
818. Actor Portrait. J. F. Spaulding 370
819. The Actor Ichikawa Danjuro. A. B. Duel 170
820. The Man with the Fan. A. B. Duel 180
821 The Man with the Pipe. Mrs. A. Friedler 110
822. Actor and a Woman. C. H. Chandler 420
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
30. Ichikawa Ebizo as Ko no Moronao (I5j/^x9^), Mann $490
31. Three Actors in a Shosa (8>^xl2), Spaulding 170
32. Scene from a Drama (8^^x12), Spaulding 200
23. Nakajima Wada-emon (12^x5^), Spaulding 350
34. Nakayama Tomisaburo (12^x5^), Spaulding 370
35. The 2nd Ishikawa Komazo (14^x9^), Mansfield 1.200
36. The 4th Matsumoto Koshiro as Banzuin Chobei (14j4x9^), Bassctt 350
27. The 1st Ichikawa Omezo (143^x9^), Yamanaka 370
38. The 2nd Ichikawa Monnosuke (13^x9i4), Mann 280
39. Otani Tokuii (14i^x9^), Yamanaka 300
40. The 3rd Nadno Hikosaburo as Yuranosuke (14J4x9^), Mann 310
41. The 1st Onoe Matsusuke (I5i^xl0), Oshima 825
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
276. Actor Ichikawa Omezo I 310
277. Actor Sawamura Sojuro III 150
Sliauland, E.
Hall, March 10, 1921.
323. Rheims Cathedral (etching) (23^x15^4) 27
Shigemasa: active about 1765, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
493. The Flirtation. B. Matsuki 62
494. Juro and the Maid. B. Matsuki 30
Shigenaga; active about 1743, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
708. Kyoyu. Yamanaka & Co 80
Shigenobu, Yanagawa; 1782-1832, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
482. Actor. A. B. Duel SO
702. The Three Metropoli. Yamanaka & Co 230
Walpole, Jan. 2U, 1921.
224. Hanazono of Nakaori-ya (15x10), Metropolitan Museum 25
225. Konami of Kurahashi-ya (15x10), Metropolitan Museum 25
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 313
Shucho, Tamagawa; active about 1790-1800, Japanese.
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
130. Woman with a Fan (15x9^), Miss Buckingham $750
Shuncho, Katsukawa; active 1775-1800, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
759. In the Parlor. K. Oshima 45
760. A Stage Scene. A. B. Duel 30
762. Shinobazu Fond at Ueno. R. A. Bidwell 32
765 The Gathering. A. B. Duel 95
Walpole, Jan. 21, 1921.
89. The Botan Show (iSj^xlO). Church 325
90. The Votive Offering (14^x19%), Miss Buckingham 80
91. Admiring the Tree Peonies (14^x28^). Buckingham 950
92. A Picnic Party at Hagidero (13i^x29^), Miss Buckingham 300
93. View in Fifth Street (14^x9^), Bassett 65
94. Kyo Shijo Kawara Yuryo (12j4x8M), Bassett ; 25
95. Narcissus (10x7^), Keck 50
257. Famous Actors at a Tea-House (14^x9^), Colburn 500
258. The Little Cascade at Meguro (9^x7^), Ainsworth 90
259. The Inari Festival (15x10^), Miss Buckingham 110
260. Natsu Omoi: A Summer Fantasy (10x7j4), Penner 30
261. The Seventh and Eighth Months (I5j4xl0), Carter 125
262. Visitors to the Sankoim Shrine (15x10), Garland 100
263. Oiran and Attendants (15 J^xlO^^), Mann 160
607. Komazo at the Sea Shore (12%x8M), Garland 120
608. Yoshiwara Beauties (15^x10), Boynton 25
609. Two Popular Favorites (IS^xlOi-^), Oshima ISO
610. On Parade (143^x9%), Mann 45
611. Crossing the Bridge (14j4x9j^), Miss Buckingham 55
Walpole, March 2, 1921.
67. Three Women under a Cherry Tree 180
68. New Year's Promenade ' 230
69. Ryogoku 120
70. The Ins Viewing Party 120
71. Sumidigawa 180
72. Gotenyama 140
Shunei, Katsukawa; 1769-1919, Japanese.
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
233. Actor Sakata Hangoro III 32
234. Actor Sawamura Sojuro III 30
236. Act II from Chushingura 25
Shunjo; XVIII Century, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
67. Two Actors. A. B. Duel 35
68. An Actor. H. Mansfield 40
69. The Awakened Beauty. H. Mansfield 65
Shunko, Katsukawa; active about 1760-1790, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
58. The Court Lady SO
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
51. The 2nd Ishikawa Komazo (llO^xS^)^), Miss Buckingham 65
53. Actor in a Woman's Role (12x53^), Church 185
54. Onoe Matsuke (12^^x5^), Colburn 205
56, The 2nd Ichikawa Monnosuke (12x5j/2), Yamanaka 25
58. The 2nd Nakumaru Nakazo (14>^xl0>^), Mann 100
59. Scene from a Drama (12x55^), Bidwell 35
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
231. Actor once Matsusuke 55
232. Actor Ichimura Uzaemon IX 35
Shunman; XVIII Century, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
767. The Pleasure Party. K. Oshima 250
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
239. Three Women 125
Shunsho, Katsukawa; 1726-1793, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
715. Gion Abura Tori. C. H. Chandler 80
717. Soga no Taimen. H. H. Hall 50
718. Actor as Soga no Juro. A. B. Duel 60
719. Actor Portrait. A. B. Duel 35
720. The Samurai. Yamanaka & Co 75
721. The Hobby Horse. Yamanaka & Co 40
726. Player Portrait. A. B. Duel 55
728. The Man Behind the Gun. Yamanaka & Co 45
729. Actor Portrait. A. B. Duel 40
314 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
Shunsho — Continued.
72,7. In the Shower Bath. Gookin $80
739. The Ghost. A. B. Duel 30
746. The Tayu. H. Mansfield 52
748. Mitate Chushingura. H. H. Hall 30
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
86. The 3rd Segawa Kirkun no Jo (15x6J4), Land 1,350
87. Two Famous Wrestlers (15^x10), Ainsworth 50
88. Two Popular Actors (ll?^xSj4), Gookin 35
253. The 5th Ichikawa Danjuro (125^x55^), Colburn 225
254. The Sth Ichikawa Donjuro. Duel 35
255. The 1st Nakamura Nakazo (12^x5^), Colburn 370
256. The Actor Nakayama Kumetaro (11^x5^), Duel Z7
602. The 3rd Sawamura Sojuro (12j/^x5H), Gookin 70
603. Scene from a Drama (125^x55^), Mann 45
604. The 1st Nakamura Riko (12^x5^4), Duel 70
605. The 4th Ichikawa Danjuro (10x7j^), Gookin 160
Walpole, March 3, 1921. i .
219. Actor Nakamura Nakazo I 125
220. Actor Ichikawa Danjuro V 55
221. Actor Otani Hiroemon III 47
222. Actor Arashi Sangoro 115
223. Actor Ishikawa Monnosuke II 25
224. The Actor Makamura Sukegoro II 32
226. A Pilgrim Offering a Prayer 95
227. A Demon Tugging at the Helmet of Watanabe no Tsuna 35
229. An Oiran and Two Kamura 27
Shuntei, 1769-1820, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
71. The Wrestler. Towne 25
Shunyei, Katsukawa; 1726-1793, Japanese.
S.chraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
503. Actor. Yamanaka & Co 57
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
139. The 2nd Nakum-ura Noshio (14j4x9), Land 510
140. A Noted Actor of Womens Roles (Il%x5j4), Lang 42
141. The 3rd Sawamura Sojuno (125^x5§^), Miss Buckingham 80
144. A Famous Comedian (12x5j^), Gookin 110
325. The 3rd Segawa Kikunojo. Ainsworth 220
327. The 4th Matsumoto Koshiro (11^x5^), Mann 75
328. An Oshi-e Gata (14%x9H), Bruce 270
329. A Noted Actor (12>ix5^i), Hall 30
614. Portrait of a Kojo (11^x5^^), Spaulding 150
615. The Actor Arashi Tyuzo (11^x5^), Duel 25
617. The 4th Iwai Hanshiro (12^x85^), Hall 35
618. Three Actors in a Soga Play (12x5^), Mann 55
Shunzan, Katsukawa; 1776-1800, Japanese.
Walpole, Jan. 22, 1921.
640. Katachi-uchi no Dan (9^x7), Manning 110
Skrimshire, Alfred J.; Contemporary.
Hall, March 21, 1921.
85. Lady Sheffield (mezzotint after Gainsborough) (20^x14^) 35
86. Mrs. Sheridan (mezzotint after Gainsborough) (20J4xl3>^) 75
Smith, John Raphael; 1752-1812, British.
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
95. Peasant and Pigs — A Conversation (mezzotints), E. B. Springs 7C
Soiron, F. D.; active circa 1790, British.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
84. The Promenade in Saint James's Park (engraving printed in 2 colors and
colored by hand), The Rosenbach Co 630
St. Aubin, Augustin de; 1736-1807, French.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
89-90. Le Concert and Le Bal Pare (etching), Mrs. de Bernard 485
Sterner, Albert; 1863- , American.
Walpole, April 11, 1921.
241. Amour Mort (lithograph in red), Read 45
Sutherland, Thomas; circa 1785- , British, and D. Havell.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
85. Views of Paris (6) (aquatints) 400
Taltl, Katsushlka; 1816-1853, Japanese.
Walpole, Jan. 22, 1921.
524. The Monkey Bridge (10^x9 J4), King 240
560. Chrysanthemums and Sparrow (14x4^). Ely 60
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 315
Toshlnobu, Okumura; active about 1725-1742, Japanese.
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
9. Sakata no Kintaro (12^x6^), Hall $35
Taso School; Japanese.
Metzgar, April 5, 1921.
465. The Girl in White 41
Toshinobu, Okumura; active about 1725-1742, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
706. Daikoku. A. B. Duel 30
707. Tenjin. Robert Laurent 50
Toyoharu, Utagawa; 1733-1814, Japanese.
Walpole, Jan. 21, 1921.
335. Ukive Wakoku keideki Shin Yoshiwara Naka no Cho (9j^xl454), Horter 25
Walpole, March 2, 1921.
21. Evening Scene in a Street of the Yoshiwara 27
22. Shogun Yoritomo's Hunting Party at Foot of Mt. Fuji 30
Toyohiro, Utagawa; 1769-1825, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
833. The Shower 35
834. The Cuckoo. A. B. Duel 35
835. In the Palace Grounds 50
837. The Chrysanthemum Garden 110
Walpole, Jan. 21, 1921.
340. The Snow-Laden Chozubachi (13^x9), Colburn 220
341. The Third Month (14^^x9^), Raymond 50
342. Woman Arranging Flowers (14^x9%), King 140
345. The Autumn Moon in the Mirror Pond {7y&x4}i), Pepper 62
544. Flower Arrangement (14^x9^), Mansfield 140
545. Horses (13^x9i^), Mansfield 55
; 546. Cranes and Reeds (13^x93^), Mansfield 140
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
252. A Young Woman Stepping Inside a Boat 585
Toyokuni, Utagawa; 1769-1825, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
512-513. The Lady and the Cranes. The Thread Seller. A. B. Duel 30
519. Snow Scene. A. B. Duel 27
520. Kaomis. G. E. Miller 150
522. The Dyer. Yamanaka & Co 35
526. Actor. J. T. Spaulding 70
530. Actor's Portrait. Edw. H. Root 75
532. Night Scene. J. T. Spaulding 190
534. Danjuro. J. T. Spaulding 85
536. Actor's Bust. J. T. Spaulding 90
538. Peeping at the Star. A. B. Duel 30
542. The Falcon 30
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
146. The 3rd Segawa Kikunii (14^^x10), Hall 75
148. Onua Shichi-fuku-jin (women masquerading as the Fortune Gods)
(15x9^), Bersels 27
149. Amagoi Komachi (14^x95^), Miss Buckingham 105
152. The 3rd Sawamura Sojuro (15x10), Miss Buckingham 130
156. Chofu no Tamagawa (147^x10), Ainsworth 825
157. A Women's Kuokusui Party (14^-29^), Miss Buckingham 250
158. Oiran of Ogi-ya (14>ix28j^), Yamanaka 90
159. The Face in the Mirror (14^x29^), Church 150
341. The 1st Onoe Matsusuke (12x5^4), Duel 37
346. Three Shinagawa Beauties (14^x9 J^), Miss Buckingham 550
347. Scene from a Drama (15x9^), Duel 52
349. The Dream of the Fox's Wedding (15x9^), Yamanaka 40
350. At Shinagawa (13^x10), Miss Buckingham 25
352. The 2nd Ichikawa Romazo (14^x9i^), Spaulding 115
353. The 5th Matsumoto Koshiro as Sadakuro (15J4x10J4), Spaulding 50
357. Boating on Edo Bay (13^x29), Kellogg / 120
358. The Second Floor of Choji-ya (14^x29^). Mann 90
643. Two Distinguished Actors (Mi^xlOi^), Duel 27
649. Early Evening in the Edo Machi (14Mx30j4), Mann 225
650. The Dressmakers (145^x28^), Hilton 210
651. The 2nd Ichikawa Monnosuke (14^x9^), Spaulding 200
652. The 1st Onoe Matsusuke (14j4x9%), Spaulding 200
653. The 4th Matsumoto Koshiro (14^x10^), Spaulding 210
654. The 3rd Segawa Kikuojo (14^x10^^), Duel 125
655. The 3rd Sakata Hangoro (14^x10), Spaulding 775
656. A Famous Actor of Women's Roles (15^x10^), Spaulding 600
316
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
Toyokuni — Continued.
Walpole, March 2, 1921.
74. Actor Matsumoto Koshiro IV $475
75. A Youth and Maiden on a Shore by a Boat 52
76. A Young Lady and a Girl in a Boat 50
77. Narihira's Journey to the East 85
79. The Actor Takinoya 130
80. A Woman Out in the Snow at Night 50
81. Dreaming of Fox Wedding 35
82. A Party of Actors 55
83. An Oiran and Peony Blossoms 40
Toyomassa, Ishiikawa; active 1179-1780, Japanese.
Walpole. Jan. 22, 1921.
569. Cranes by the Sea (lOj^xSJ^), Spaulding 310
Toyonobu, Shikawa; 1769-1825, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 10, 1921.
254. After the Bath. C. H. Chandler 25
256. Taking It Easy. E. E. Miller 55
257. Butai Tobi. A. B. Duel 40
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
25. The Harugoma Odori (16^ixllJ4), Ainsworth 500
Walpole, March 2, 1921.
6. A Girl Walking by a Stream, Apparently in a Pensive Mood 110
8. Actors: Nakamura Kumetaro and Sanokawa Ichimatsu 225
9. Actor Sanokawa Ichimatsu as Young Samurai Riding en Horseback..,. 40
10. A Young Woman After a Bath Tying a Cloth About Her Waist 70
Trenchard, J.
Hcusman, 0.ct. 30, 1920.
362. George Washington framed with portrait of Arthur Y'oung (engraving) . SO
Tresca, Sali; XVIII Century, Italian.
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
87. La Precaution (engraving printed in color), D. O. Brown -100
Turner, F. C. (After).
Brewster, May 17, 1921.
92. The Celebrated Tom Thumb (aquatint in colors), P. Whitney 42
Unknown.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
251. Washington Grays, 8th Regiment, N. Y. S. T. (colored lithograph),
P. Suval 27
288. Portrait of Daniel Webster (chromo) 50
Brewster, May 17, 1921.
35. The Road, 1825 — (Commercial Traveler) (colored aquatint), J. W.
Mettler 25
Housman, Oct. 30, 1920.
356. George Washington with View of New York Harbor (print on cotton,
very scarce) , W. M. Nolen SO
Parker, Nov. 9, 1920.
3. Louis XVIII after the painting by Pasquier (engraving) 25
4. Marie Antoinette after Mme. Vigee le Brun (engraving printed in
colors) 280
Smith, Feb. 3, 1921.
100. Equestrian Portrait of Washington (mezzotint), R. Fridenberg 27
Warwick, March 28, 1921.
82. The Battle (colored aquatint), A. J. Campbell 105
83. His Majesty's Ship Shannon (colored aquatint), A. J. Campbell 105
103. Plan of the Province of Pennsylvania and East and West New Jersey,
showing the operations of the Royal Army, 1777 to 1778, H.
D. Parson S5
Unknown; Japanese.
Walpole, Jan. 21, 1921.
2S0. Love Making in the Air (7^^x10^), Spaulding 105
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
735. Fan Portrait: Actor. Edw. H. Root SS
Utamaro, Kitagawa; 1753-1806, Japanese.
Schraubstadter, Feb. 12, 1921.
777. A Tayu. E. Twinning 32
778. The Oiran. Yamanaka & Co 37
780. An Oiran. R. Glendenning 35
782. Yamamba and Kintoki. Edw. W. Root 50
784. The Two Beauties. A. B. Duel 25
785. A Courtesan. K. Oshima 40
786. The Housewife. Yamanaka & Co 70
787. Amusing the Baby. R. A. Bidwell 50
788. Brocade Portrait of a Young Girl. H. Mansfield 220
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 317
Utamaro—CcntiiiHtd.
789. The Summer Costume. A. B. Duel $3,2
790. Good-bye. H.H.Hall. 27
791. A Tayu. R. Van Iderstine 35
792. Reading the Letter. C. H. Chandler 610
793. The Shadow Lantern. A. B. Duel 30
794. The Snake Hour. Yamanaka & Co 50
796. The Tiger. H. H. Hall 35
799. The Oiran and Her Lover. A. B. Duel 30
807. Viewing the Cherries. Harris 40
808. The Taiko and His Favorites. C. H. Chandler 170
809. A Women's Procession. T. Tryotta 30
810. Flower Arrangement 25
811. The Procession. Yamanaka & Co 45
812. House Cleaning. A. B. Duel 450
Walpole, Jan. 20, 1921.
97. Utamaro's Self Portrait (15x9^4), Spaulding 210
98. Saru No Koku (14x10), Miss Buckingham 975
99. Amusing the Child (10x954), Yamanaka 35
100. At the Naniwa Cha-ya (14^x9^^), Spaulding 100
101. The Seventh Day of the Seventh Month (I5^xl0j4), Spaulding 40
102. An Oiran of Choji-ya (1454x10), Hilton 45
103. Hinazuru of Choji-ya (145^x9)4), Mann 80
105. Painting a Self Portrait (14^x9^), Yamanaka 35
106. The Hairdresser (15^x10^^), Bassett 200
107. Sayonara (15^x10^), Pratt 70
108. The Autumn Moon (15x9M), Mann 110
110. Two House Maids (15^^x10), Spaulding 460
111. A Boating Party on a Moonlight Evening (15J4x10J4)i Spaulding.... 42
112. The Young Married Woman (lSxlO>^), Ely 45
113. Reading It Over (15x10), Carter $65
114. Dojoji (15x9%), Mann 310
lis. The Kawabiraki Bight Festival (143^x29^). King 525
116. Holiday Makers at Enoshima (14%x29i4), King 310
117. Yakusha Rokkasen (125^x554), Boston Museum 90
118. The Susuhaki (14^x2954), Hilton 310
119. A Poet of the Yoshiwara n5x934), Bassett 100
120. Hanashi-zuki (14^x9%), Yamanaka 35
121. Sake-zuki (1454x10), Rowinson 40
122. Sawagi-zuki (14^x9?^), Hilton SO
123. Kodomo-zuki (14^x10), Hilton 70
124. De-zuki (14^x10), Mann 30
125. Making Faces at Him (15x10), Bidwell 70
286. A Yoshiwara Beauty Seated Facing the Left (1454x954), Miss Buck-
ingham 750
287. Picture of the Pleasures of the Taiko and Five Wives at Rakuto
(14^x29), Miss Buckingham 190
288. The Sheltering Tree (15x28-34), Miss Buckingham 425
289. Pleasure Boats under Tyokuku Bridge (15^x10^), Yamanaka 55
290. Okaru Putting on Her Obi (155/^x10^), Miss Buckingham 250
292. Two Women Looking at a Whirling Lantern, a Japanese Moving Picture
Machine (I5^xl0i4), Pepper 30
293. A Bov's Daimvo Procession (15x10), Kellogg 60
294. The Mirror (I5i4xl0>4), Bidwell 45
295. The Owl (15xl0i4), Carter 45
296. The Bath (14^x9%), Pepper 62
299. Tying Her Obi (14i/^x9?-^), Hall 220
300. An Oiran of Shinagawa (13^4x9^), Mann 170
301. Picture of Women Lodgers (13^x9^), Pepper 70
303. Evening Cooling (IS^^xlO^), Peale 25
304. Exorcising the Demons. Hall 25
306. Gompachi and Komurasaki (14^x954), Bruce 30
307. Within and Without (15x103^), Bassett 125
308. The Nightmare (1454x9%) Perrine 50
309. Chushingura Act I (14^x9%), Mann 50
310. Chushingura Act II (14^x9%), Hilton 35
311. Chushingura Act III (14i4x9%), Perrine 40
312. Chushingura Act IV (14^x9%), Miss Buckingham 40
313. Chushingura Act V (14^x9%), Carter 50
314. Chushingura Act VI (14i4x9%), Boston Museum 42
315. Chusingura Act VII (14^x9%), Miss Buckingham 42
316. Chushingura Act VIII (14i4x97/^), Miss Buckingham 60
317. Chusingura Act IX (14^x9%), Miss Buckingham 30
318. Chushingura Act X (14^x9%), Miss Buckingham 25
548. Peonies and Butterfly (13%x3j4), Ainsworth 55
550. Japan Robin and Manchurian Great Tit (9%xl4S^), Duel 32
657. Somenosuke of Matsuba-ya n4%x9%), Spaulding 525
318 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
UtamarO' — Continued.
658. Yamauba and Kintaro (14^xlOJ^), Ainsworth $25
659. Whispered Instructions (12^x9^), Manning 120
660. The Hour of the Monkey (15x10), Spaulding 200
661. The Awabi Shell Divers of the Ise (14^x9^), Hall 110
662. The Boy and the Crab (15^x101-^), Duel 37
663. Kinuta no Tamagawa (13^x97-8), Twinny 25
664. Tokimune and Shoso (14J4x9%), Mann 35
665. Mumegawa and Chubei (15i4xlO), Fuller 230
666. Chushingura Act VI (14^x9^4), Root 50
667. Scene from Act VI (14^x9%), Duel 37
668. Chushingura Act X ilSysxlOVs), Root 80
670. Hana-murasaki o^" Tama-ya (14%xlO>^), Pepper 55
678. On Tyogoku Bridge (15x9^), King 170
679. Yukihira and Matzukaze (15x10^4), Hilton 100
680. A Puppet Show (14J4x9§^), Mann 55
681. Playing Sugoroku (15x10), Oshima 35
682. After the Bath (15x10), Spaulding 160
683. Evening Cooling (14MxlOJ^) Erlanger 30
684. Cherry Flower Viewing on Gotenvama (14^x10), Casey 25
685. Two "Brother Pictures" (13^x9^), Duel 27
686. Shaving the Boy's Head (14^x9->4), Pepper 60
687. Morning at Futami Beach (15x29H), Duel 47
688. Fishing on Edo Bay (13x26K), Carter 130
689. The Awabi Shell Divers at Ise (14^x29^), Carter 135
690. The Hour of the Rat (15xl0K). Duel 35
Walpole, March 3, 1921.
256. The Geisha Group of the Masquerade Fete of the Tea House People.. 120
257. A Mistress at the Hour of Snake 160
258. Omu Komachi: Incident of Komachi's Life 350
259. A Lesson in Penmanship 50
260. A mother Awakening Her Boy from a Bad Dream 35
263. Farmer and Landscape 25
265. Oiran Shizuka of the Tamaya Composing a Line 75
267. A Tea-House Maid 190
269. Awabi-shell Divers of Ise 175
271. A Young Mother Looking at Her Baby 115
272. The Frivolous Type 410
273. The Staying Women Guests 85
274. A Young Woman Playing wi*^h a Pom-Pin 95
275. A Princess Party and Young Falconer 60
Van Leyden, Lucas; 1494-1533, Dutch.
Boston Museum, Feb. 4, 1921.
73. Christ Crowned with Thorns (engraving), J. F. McCarthy 26
Vendramini, Giovanni.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
280. Cupid Refusing Love to Desire (stipple printed in colors, after drawing
by F. Bartolozzi) , Pitcher 25
Viviani, Antonio; 1797-1854, Venetian.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
18. The Pesaro Family in Adoration (engraving, after Titian) 50
19. The Holy Family (engraving, after Veronese) 50
Ward, William; 1766-1826.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
92. The Soliloquy (engraving printed in color), J. F. Drake, Inc 575
93. Alinda (engraving printed in color), A. W. Graetz, Inc 325
Watson, James; 1740?-1790, British.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
284. Barbara, Countess of Coventry (mezzotint, after the painting by Sir
Joshua Reynolds) , J. P. Sabin 55
285. Mrs. Bunbury (mezzotint, after painting by Sir Joshua Reynolds),
J. P. Sabin 47
Webster, Herman A.; 1878- , American.
Hall, March 10, 1921.
343. La Route de Louviers (6x8 J4) (etching) 27
355. Lowenplatzchen, Frankfurt (etching) (8x6j4 ) 27
Jones, March 29, 1921.
247. Old Court Sachsenhausen (etching) 32
Whistler, James Abbott McNeill; 1834-1903, American.
A. G., Feb. 4, 1921.
289. Liverdun (etching), M. Goodman 35
290. The Rag Gatherers (etching), B. Emmett 42
291. Bibi Valentin (etching), Goodman 52
PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION 319
Whistler — Continued.
Hall, March 10, 1921.
364. The Unsafe Tenement (etching) (6^x8^) $32
366. Street at Saverne (etching) (8 J^x6^ ) 50
367. La Marchande de Moutarde (etching) (6^x3^) 25
368. The Rag Gathers (etching) (6x3^) 35
373. Reading by Lamplight (etching) (6%x4ys) 25
374. Landscape with a Horse (etching) (5x8) 25
375. Nursemaid and Child (etching) (3^x5^) 25
376. Eagle Wharf (etching) (53^x7%) 100
377. Black Lion Wharf (etching) (6x8%) 280
378. Black Lion Wharf (etching) (55^xX8^) 160
379. Thames Police (etching) (6x9) 100
380. Longshoremen (etching) (6x9) 35
381. The Lime-Burner (etching) (9^x6^^) 230
382. Billingsgate (etching) (6x8/^) 70
384. Soupe a Trois Sous (etching) (6x9) 32
385. Bibi Lalouette (etching) (9x6) 95
386. Bibi Lalouette (etching) (9x6) 60
387. Becquet, the Fiddler (etching) (10x7^^) 370
388. Rotherhite (etching) (10x7%) 345
389. The Forge (drypoint) (7^x12^) 50
390. Vauxhall Bridge (etching) (4^xx5^) 25
391. Milbank (etching) (4x5) 25
392. Old Hungerford Bridge (etching) (5i^x8^) 85
399. Adam and Eve Tavern, Old Chelsea (etching) (6%xl2) 95
400. Adam and Eve Tavern, Old Chelsea (etching) (7x11%) 25
401. The Adam and Eve Tavern, Old Chelsea (etching) (6%xl2) 110
402. Little Venice (etching) (7^x10%) 1,475
403. Nocturne (etching) (7%xll^). 1,850
404. The Traghetto (etching) (9^x12) 550
405. Long Venice (etching) (5x12^^) 625
406. Wheelright (etching) (4%x6%) 90
408. The Little Putney (etching) (5^x8^^) 27
409. Early Morning Battersea (lithotint) (6!^x10J4) 40
411. Old Battersea Bridge (lithograph) (5^x12) 40
412. Old Battersea Bridge (lithograph) (5^^x13) 45
413. Drury Lane Rags (lithograph) (5%x6^) 50
415. Cants de Suede (lithograph) (8^x4) 25
416. Cocks and Hens (lithograph) (7^^x55^) 40
417. Tete-a-Tete in the Garden (lithograph) (75^x6^) 30
419. Girl with a Bowl (lithograph) (5^x2^) 60
420. The Strong Arm (lithograph) (7H^9%) 25
Jones, March 29, 1921.
248. The Lime Burner (etching), F. Meder 725
249. Nocturne: Palaces (etching), F. Keppel 1,900
250. Weary (etching), J. F. Drake 2,450
Walpole, April 13, 1921.
269. The Lime-Burner (etching, 1859) 190
270. La Marchande de Moutarde (etching, about 1858) Keppel 32
276. Longshoremen (etching, Thames set), Busse 50
280. Soupe a Trois Sous (etching) , Kovach 55
283. Black Lion Wharf (etching, Thames set), Keppel 205
Yoshiiku, Ikkeisai; XVIII Century, Japanese.
Walpole, March 2, 1921.
120. Memorial Portrait of Kuniycshi 85
Zorn, Anders; 1860-1920, Swedish.
Hall, March 10, 1921.
425. Rosita Mauri (etching) (85^x5^) 240
426. John Hay (etching) (7 %x6) 120
427. Portrait of the Artist (etching) (7x5) 50
428. Miss Emma Rasmussen (etching) (7%x5%) 625
429. Dance at Gopsmor (etching) (11^x734) 65
430. The Three Sisters (etching) (934x7) 70
431. Crown Princess of Sweden (etching) (9^x7) 210
432. Bersak (etching) (9^x7) 110
433. Frida (etching) (734x534) 90
434. Self-Portrait with a Fur Cap (etching) (7x4%) 375
436. Bust (etching) (9)4x7) 60
437. Dance at Gopsmor (etching) (11^x7^) 85
438. My Two Models (etching) (73,4x5^) 95
439. Pa Hamso (etching) (7%x5t4).... 90
441. Dalecarlian Peasants (etching) (6^x4-%) 85
442. Pilot (etching) (6%x4/,) 100
443. Balance (etching) (614x4^4) 80
444. Against the Current (etching) (4^x6^) 95
320 PRINTS SOLD AT AUCTION
Zorn — Continued.
Jones, March 29, 1921.
■» 251. Axel Herman Haig (etching^ Knoedler & Co $300
252. Buskage (1911) (etching), Kncedler & Co 95
254. Zorn and His Wife (etching), H. M. Dunbar 2,100
253. Berseck (1914), J. U. Lyne 65
255. Byst (etching) (1916) 80
256. Saint Ives (1991) (etching), H. M. Dunbar 1,500
257. Cercles d'Eau (etching) , Knoedler & Co 325
258. Dal River (1919) (etching), T. Hetzler 235
259. Dans I'Atelier (etching), Knoedler & Co 175
260. Wet (1911) (etching), Keppel 350
261. Delcarlian Peasants (etching), H. A. Schubert 135
262. Early (1914) (etching), T. Hetzler 160
263. Edo (1907) (etching), Knoedler & Co 525
264. Vicki (1918) (etching), F. Keppel 375
265. Eka (1913) (etching), J. C. Willever 85
266. En Omnibus (1891) (etching), A. H. Harlow 2,000
267. Gulli, No. 2 (1917) (etching), A. K. Salamon 230
268. La Guitare ou Souvenir (1898) (etching), Knoedler & Co 850
269. Vallakulla (1912) (etching), T. Hetzler 425
270. Ernest Renan (1892) (etching), T. Hetzler 1,600
271. Ee Matin (etching), Knoedler & Co ■. 875
272. La Petite Brasserie (1890) (etching), Knoedler & Co 225
273. L'Orage (Zorn in a Storm) (1891) (etching), Knoedler & Co 900
274. Mary Olsson (etching), W. E. Meyers 180
275. Mona (1911) (etching), Keppel 675
276. Dagmar (1912) (etching), Knoedler & Co 450
277. Shallow (1913) (etching), T. Hetzler 300
278. The Toast (1892) (etching) , J. F. Drake 2,200
279. The Precipice (1909) (etching), Keppel 375
280. The Swan (1915) (etching), H. M. Dunbar 400
281. The Three Sisters (1913), A. Pincus 160
282. Sappho (1917) (etching), T. Hetzler 335
Walpole, April 13, 1921.
298. Alder (etched, 1919), Steiner 100
299. Frida (etched, 1914), Hetzler 80
300. The Pilot (etched, 1919). Thompson 65
301. Auguste Strindberg (etching, 1910) Cowen 165
302. The Two Bathers (etched, 1910), Keppel 90
303. The Three Sisters (etched, 1913), Hetzler 120
304. Bersek (etched, 1914). Cowen 55
305. The Two (etched, 1916) 100
306. The Dance at Gopsmoor (etched, 1917) 100
307. Against the Current (etched, 1919), Keppel 60
308. The Balance (etched, 1919), Keppel 70
Sculpture Sold at Auction
African, Congo.
A. G., May 12, 1921.
99. Female Nude (wood) (height 10) 50
African; XVII Century.
A. G., May 12, 1921.
100. African Warrior with Shield and Club (copper statue) (height 9)... 52
101. African Warrior with Lance and Shield (copper statue) (height 9)... 50
Alexandrian School; III and II Century B. C.
A. G., Jan. 29, 1921.
790. Marble Statue of a Muse (height 45), Agent 750
793. Marble Torso of Venus (height 14^^ ) , Agent 380
795. Marble Torso of Venus (height 28J^), Hearst 2,000
Aigardi; XVII Century, Roman.
Orselli, Feb. 6, 1921.
219. Muse of History (terra-cotta) (height 28), S. Schepps 80
Assyrian; VIII-VII Century B. C.
A. G., May 14, 1921.
501. Head of a Bull (bronze) (length 4) ■. 1,500
SCULPTURE SOLD AT AUCTION 321
Bandinelli, Baccio; 1487-1559, Italian.
Cattadori, April 16, 1921.
614. Madonna and Child (marble bas-relief, 22x15), L. Periera $1,875
Byzantine Period.
Ruiz, May 17, 1921.
378. Virgin (sculpture), J. Moran..,. 52
Byzantine School; XII Century.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
300. Christ (painted wood) (35x17^4), C. Stephens 1,900
Byzantine School; XIV Century.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
328. Madonna and Child (gold and red stucco) (12x10), Wm. G. Pinchot. . 90
Cellini, Benvenuto; 1500-1571, Italian.
Cattadori, April 16, 1921.
613. Venus Discovered (marble bas-relief, 19x25), Mrs. F. Raineri 950
Chinese School; Ming.
A. G., May 13, 1921.
393. Seated Figure of a Lohan (cast iron) (height 30) 120
Chinese School; Wei.
Yamanaka, Feb, 5, 1921.
576. Head and Bust of Statue (black marble, traces of polychrome) '(height
23^), W. R. Hearst 210
Chinese School; T'ang.
Yamanaka, Feb, 5, 1921.
568. Head of Buddha (creamy patina) (height 18), Goldsmith 120
571. Kuan-yin (stone painted in polychrome) (height AZYz), C. H. Walton. . 425
572. Head of Buddha (black marble painted) (23x46^), E. I. Farmer 200
573. Kuan-yin (stone traces of polychrome) (height 48^), W. R. Hearst 280
574. Kuan-yin (black marble, traces of polychrome) (height 67^), W. R.
Hearst 2,100
575. Kuan-yin Holding a Vase (black marble, trace of polychrome) (height
Zi), W. R. Hearst 270
577. Kuan-yin (stone traces of polychrome) (height 39), W. R. Hearst... 150
Chinese School; Ch'ien-lung.
Yamanaka, Feb, 5, 1921.
622. Buddhist Shrine with Image (teakwocd shrine with jade panel, figure
of lapis lazuli) (height of image 8J4. shrine l^}i), E. I.
Farmer 225
Chinese School; Sung.
Yamanaka, Feb, 5, 1921.
632. Fugen (height 36J4) (wood, polychrome), W. R, Hearst 260
634. Monju, Goddess of Wisdom (wood, polychrome) (height Zl), W. R.
Hearst 275
637. Kuan-yin (wood, polychrome) (height 56^), C. H. Walton 650
Chinese School; Ming.
Yamanaka, Feb, 5, 1921.
578. Buddha Seated (lacquered cast iron) (height 11^), H. Schefifield 50
484. Image of the Buddha (47^^x25^). J- L. Gilchrist 65
Delia Robbia, Luca; 1400-1482, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
99. Virgin and Child (bas-relief), Mrs. F. M. Brand 625
Donatello (Donato di Niccoio di Betto); 1383-1466, Italian (School of).
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
612. Virgin and Child (stucco bas-relief) (34>4x24) 200
Dresden School; XVIII Century.
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
611. Three Children and a Singerie Figure (terra-cotta) (height 313/^),
Ehrich Galleries 120
Egyptian; XVIII Dynasty.
A. G., May 14, 1921.
520. Profile and Shoulder of a Man (limestone with polychrome) (10^x13). 60
English School; XIV Century.
A. G., Jan. 27, 1921.
241. Bust of the Saviour (height 165^), Le Roy 60
Fiesole, Mino Da; 1400-1485, Florentine.
A. G., Jan. 28, 1921.
668. Head of St. John the Baptist (height lOJ'l) (marble), Muller 400
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
613. Virgin and Child with St. John Baptist (stucco bas-relief) (26^x18^),
F. W. French & Co 725
Flemish School; XV Century.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
322. Crucifixion (painted wood) (32x25^4), J. W. Mettler 375
322 SCULPTURE SOLD AT AUCTION
Flemish School; XVI Century.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
287. Saint (painted wood) (height 12), D. D. 'Sicher $60
292. Virgin Kneeling at the Foot of the Cross (painted wood) (height 17),
C. D. Quaw 450
325. Virgin '(painted wood) (height 36), W. R. Hearst 150
Flemish School; XVII Century.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
313. St. Catherine (painted wood) (height 24^/^), Wm. Rothschild 250
314. Saint (painted wood) (height 37^), W. R. Hearst 100
315. St. John (painted wood) (height Z7), W. R. Hearst 100
317. St. Hubert (painted wood) (height 415^), W. R. Hearst 130
Florentine School; XV Century.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
329. Virgin and Child (painted stucco bas-relief) (19^xlU4), W. Seville.. 1,100
330. Virgin and Child (painted stucco bas-relief) (20^^x16), W. R. Hearst 550
334. Virgin and Child (painted stucco bas-relief) (height 19), C. D. Quaw 1,200
OrselH, Feb. 16, 1921.
198. Wisdom (painted wood) (height 39^), W. R. Hearst 400
214. Virgin and Child (colored stucco bas-relief) (18x12), S. Schepps 200
218. Virgin and Child (colored stucco bas-relief) (30x24), S. Schepps 450
Florentine School; XVI Century.
Cattadori, April 16, 1921.
615. Virgin and Child (circular terra cotta bas-relief, diameter 45, frame by
Delia Robbia), L. J. O'Reilly 1,500
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
296. Ecclesiastical Dignitary (painted wood) (height 15), R. Pitcairn 1,800
333. Charity (painted terra-cotta) (height 11^), R. Glendenning 125
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
200. Angels (painted wood) (height 23), E. H. Bondley 60
207. Angels (painted wood) (height 28), W. R. Hearst 60
208. Ceres and Abundantia (painted wood) (height 65), W. R. Hearst.. 240
211. Angels (painted wood) (height 55), McCarthy 400
216. Virgin and Child (colored stucco bas-relief) (29x19), S. Schepps 300
Florentine School; XVII Century.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
206. Two Nymphs (painted wood) (height 59), W. R. Hearst 550
212. Figures (painted wood) (height 27), G. S. Duty 60
232. Sleeping Cupid (marble) (12x23), Henriques 60
Fremiet; French.
Bell, April 21, 1921.
667. Joan of Arc (bronze statuette, height 29^), F. A. Lawlor 135
French School.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
282. St. Clothilde (boxwood) (height 11^) 130
French School; XIV Century.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
324. Five Virgins (oak) (18^x17), C. D. Quaw 725
French School-; XV Century.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
295. Figure of St. Ursula (painted wood) (height 20^), R. Gilchrist 120
298. Episode in the Life of Christ (painted wood) (16x9i^), French & Co. 375
305. Angels (painted wood) (height 15), L. Robert 260
309. St. Bartholomew (wood) (height 24), A. A. Healy 500
310. St. Lawrence in Monk's Robes (gilt wood) (height 25), Wm. O.
Hubbard 400
320. Episode in the Life of a Saint (wood group) (21^x125^), French & Co. 750
323. Saint in Monk's Robes (wood) (height 33^), W. R. Hearst 220
French School; XV Century.
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
559. St. Ursula (painted wood) (height 38), Ehrich Galleries 80
French School; XVI Century.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
285. Virgin (gilt wood statuette) (height 12), R. Ederheimer 270
286, Saint (wood) (height 11^), R- Glendenning 55
293. Saint (painted wood) (height 19^), D. Kelekian 120
294. 'Saint Jerome (painted wood) (height 15), Mcllheney 650
297. Female Saint (painted wood) (height 29), C. Stephens 2,000
299. Adoration (painted wooden group) (20x13), W. O. Hubbard 3,500
301. Virgin (12i/2xl6) (gilt wooden group), S. Bourgeois 700
306. Female Saint (painted wood) (height 22^^), French & Co 2,300
308. St. Florian (painted wood) (height 17) 400
SCULPTURE SOLD AT AUCTION 323
French School; XVI Century — Continued.
311. Saint in Ecclesiastical Robes (wood) (height ISlA), D. Kelekian $300
312. Christ and the Twelve Apostles (painted wood) (height 13^) 1,450
316. Virgin in the Manger (wood bas-relief) (21x22^), W. R. Hearst 1,000
318. Deposition in the Tomb (bas-relief in wood) (25x34), W. R. Hearst.. 350
326. Dedication of a Nun (painted wood bas-relief) (42x315^), W. R. Hearit 750
French School; XVI Century.
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
561. St. Martin of Tours (carved and painted wood) (height 30), Mr«.
Colby 100
French School; XVII Century.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
302. Virgin (wood) (height 16H), Wm. McDonald 325
French School; XIX Century.
Bell, April 21, 1921.
668. Two Amorini (bronze and ormolu statuettes, height 26 J/^), Van Brink. 95
Gaganino of Messina; XV Century, Italian (Attributed to).
A. G., Jan. 28, 1921.
670. Christ on the Cross (wood) (height 4 ft. 5), Cox 1.500
Gambreili, Antonio (Called Rossellino); 1427-1490, Italian.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
332. Virgin and Child (painted stucco bas-relief) (height 25J4), M.cllhcney. 1,050
German School; late XV Century.
A. G., Jan. 28, 1921.
676. Small Reliquary Shrine (8x13), Muller 800
Gothic.
A. G., Jan. 28, 1921.
240. Virgin and Child (height 16^), Mrs. B. Martin 135
Gothic School; XV Century.
Ruiz, April 14, 1921.
1291. Two Limestone Columns with Decorative Figure (height 5 yds. 2 ft.
each), W. R. Hearst 2,200
Greco- Egyptian.
Khayat, May 20, 1921.
150. Hathor (bronze statuette) (height 28), W. R. Hearst 430
Greco- Roman Period.
A. G., Jan. 29, 1921.
798. Large Marble Statue of Paris (height 6 ft. 3), Baer 8,400
Greek School.
A. G., Jan. 26, 1921.
145. Marble Torso (Apollon?) (height 18), Brummer 50
Greek School; III and II Century B. C.
A. G., Jan. 29, 1921.
797. Marble Torso of a Young Man (height 49), Order 3,000
Greek School; XIV Century.
A. G., Jan. 26, 1921.
150. Female Head (height 135^), Brummer 270
Greek School; XV and XVI Century.
A. G., Jan. 28, 1921.
679. Ikon: St. Michael and St. Gabriel (22^x17), Muller 1,300
Greek School; 2nd Century B. C.
Khayat, May 20, 1921.
425.. Cyrian Venus (bronze) (height 8i^), W. R. Hearst 260
Hellenistic School; Alexandria III and II Century B. C.
A. G., Jan. 26, 1921.
151. Male Torso (18^), Cruzat 75
Hellenistic School; III and II Century B. C.
A. G., Jan. 27, 1921.
416. Small Marble Head of a Satyr (height 5), Baer 55
419. Marble Torso of Venus (height 42), Collins 425
Hellenistic School.
A. G., Jan. 27, 1921.
421. Marble Head of a Youth (height 9), Dr. W. S. Russell 175
784. Marble Head of a Female Divinity (height 20), Agent 500
Hispano- Moresque; Late XII Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1183. Carved Marble Column (6 ft. 9 in. height), W. R. Hearst 225
Hispano- Moresque; Late XIV Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1181. Carved Marble Column (7 ft. 4 in. x 6 ft.), W. R. Hearst 250
324 SCULPTURE SOLD AT AUCTION
Indian School; II Century B. C.
A. G., May 14, 1921.
513. Head of a Buddha (limestone) (height 6J/2) $80
Indian School; Gandhara Period (I-IV Century A. D.).
A. G., May 14, 1921.
506. Niche with Buddha (stone) (height 19^) 250
Indian School; IV-VI Century.
A. G., May 14, 1921.
507. Female Divinity (stone) (height 15^^) 100
511. Two Kings and Female Figure (stone) (height 11) 185
Indian School; XI-XII Century.
A. G., May 14, 1921.
504. Male Divinity (limestone) (height 195^) 50
Indian School; XIII-XIV Century.
A. G., May 13, 1921.
505. Bodies of Two Lions and one Head (stone) (height 8>^) 625
Indian School; XV-XVI Century.
A. G., May 13, 1921.
509. Brahma and Figures (carved stone stela) (height 9) 60
Indian School; XVII-XVIII Century.
A. G., May 13, 1921.
445. The Goddess of Destruction (brass figure) (height 13)...,.. 55
Indian School; IX-XI Century.
A. G., May 13, 1921.
515. Indra and His Wife (probably) (stone) (height 11^) 55
Indian School; XI-XIII Centt;ry.
A. G., May 13, 1921.
516. Divinity and Apsara Angels under a Canopy (stone) (height 25) 320
Indian School; XIII-XIV Century.
A. G., May 13, 1921.
514. Demon with the Head of a Boar (slate) (height 16^) SO
Italian Renaissance.
Ruiz, May 21, 1921.
867. The Descent from the Cross (carved and polychromed group), J. Allison 310
Italian School; XV Century.
A. G., Jan. 27, 1921.
669. Bust of Amorino (height 14), Jaxon 650
Italian School; Late XV Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1146. A Virgin (gilt copper bust) (height 1 ft. 6 in.), Spanish Antique Shop 1,800
Italian School; Early XVI Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1049. Virgin and Child (2 ft. 10 in. height) (marble), J. Turnbull 140
Italian School; XVI Century.
Cattadori. April 16, 1921.
612. Christ Risen from the Tomb (gilded bronze bas-relief, 4^x12^) 150
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
281. Kneeling Woman (painted wooden statue) (height 14) 130
327. Virgin (stucco painted bas-relief) (12J^xll), R. Ederheimer 200
331. The Virgin and St. Joseph (painted bas-relief) (20^x15^), Mrs.
H. W. Sibley 300
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
209. Angels (painted wood) (height 35), W. R. Hearst 150
210. St. Catherine (painted wood) (height 43), W. R. Hearst 180
234. Philip II of Spain (marble bust) (height 26), W. R. Hearst 250
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
557. St. Zeno, Bishop of Verona (painted and gilt wood) (height 44),
York and Sawyer 105
Italian School; XVII Century.
A. G., Jan. 27,' 1921.
236. Marble Fountain (statue of a little boy) (height 33), Hearst 110
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
319. Lion (painted wood panel) (12x21), D. Kelekian 120
Italian School; X-XI Century.
A. G., Jan. 27, 1921.
243. Relief Frieze (11^x331/^), Metropolitan Museum of Art 145
244. Relief Frieze (Ui/^x38). Metropolitan Museum of Art 150
SCULPTURE SOLD AT AUCTION 325
Japanese School; Ashikaga Period.
Yamanaka, Feb. 5, 1921.
625. Kwanncn Seated (wood, traces of lacquer gilding) (height with
pedestal 16^), W. James $55
635. Dainichi Nyorai (lacquered and painted wood) (height 49 1^), W. R.
Hearst 175
Japanese; Kamakura Period.
Yamanaka, Feb. 5, 1921.
631. Seated Figure of Buddha (36^) (wood), P. J. Higgs 160
636. Jikoku-ten (wood, traces of poly,chrcme) (height SG]/^), W. S.
Simpkins, Agent 275
Juni, Juan de; P-1614, Spanish.
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
560. St. John (painted and gilt wood) (height iZ^^) 50
562. Madonna (painted wood) (height iZY^) 125
Korean; XIII Century.
Yamanaka, Feb. 5, 1921.
627. A Deity (wood traces of polychrome) (height 25^^), S. H. Krees. . . . 60
Korean School; XIV Century.
Yamanaka, Feb. 5, 1921.
623. Two Standing Figures of Buddhistic Attendants (wood) (height 13^
and 133/4), S. H. Krees 70
633. Buddha Seated (geld lacquered wood) (height 36^), W. R. Hearst.. 150
Li Fu; Sung, Chinese.
Yamanaka, Feb. 5, 1921.
569. Lohan and Lion (marble) (height 36) 725
Malano, Bendetto da; 1442-1498, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
97. Virgin and Child (Polychrome Terra Cotta Group) (height 18), Mrs.
J. C. M. Bartel 500
101. Virgin and Child (Polychromed stucco bas-relief) (50x28), J. F'.
Drake, Inc 850
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
336. Virgin and Child (painted stucco bas-relief) (37x25i/^), S. Bourgeois.. 2,600
Mesopotamian ; Sassanian period or later.
A. G., May 12, 1921.
114. Man Seated on a Hippogryph (bronze) (4^) 77
Montanes, Martinez; ?-1649, Spanish.
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
571. Head of Christ (painted wood) (height 17), Ehrich Galleries 275
Paduan School; XV Century.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
202. Angels (painted wood) (height 36), W. R. Hearst 140
Renaissance Period; XVI Century.
Ruiz, May 17, 1921.
379. Roman Warrier (sculpture), J. Thomson 130
887. A Courier (marble), W. R. Hearst 900
Rodin, Auguste; 1840-1917, French.
Harrison, April 19, 1921.
52. Le Baiser (marble, height 15, width 15^^, length 265^) 3,000
Roman School; Circa 125 A. D.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
231. Emperor Hadrian (marble) (height 20), W. R. Hearst 55
Roman School; XVII Century.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
233. Figure of a Woman (marble) (height 25), S. Schepps 70
240. Abundantia (marble) (height 60), W. R. Hearst 230
Roman School; Early Imperial Period.
A. G., Jan. 29, 1921.
143. Marble Head, Female (height 7^), Lithander 75
144. Marble Bust of a Lady (height 15i^), I. Brummer . 95
146. Two Fragments of Friezes (length about 20-15), Stevens 55
148. Marble Slab (11 square), Baer 170
149. Marble Torso of a Youth (14i^), Agent 100
412. Marble Head of Paris (height 22), A. K. Kuhn 750
418. Marble Group (height 15), Kouchakji Freres 190
785. Marble Head of Silenus (height 20), Lithander 350
786. Marble Candelabrum (5 ft. 2), Hearst 575
787. Head of a Roman Emperor (height 17), Jaxon 400
788. Hermes (marble) (height 21), Hearst 550
789. Hermes (marble) (height 21), Hearst 525
791. Statue of a Young Woman (5 ft. 9), Guest 2,200
792. Statue of a Ram, Pope 2.700
793. Marble Torso of a Young Man (height 20^), Jaxon 300
326 SCULPTURE SOLD AT AUCTION
Roman School; Early Imperial Period.
A. G., May 14, 1921.
517. Roman Lady (marble bust) (height 15) $145
519. An Amorino (stone) (height 18) 95
527. Head of a Young Woman (marble) (height 6^^) SO
Roman School; I and II Century A. D.
A. G., Jan. 29, 1921.
415. Marble Bust of a Roman Emperor (height 16), Bassett 60
417. Marble Bust of a Woman (height 16), Pope 60
Roman School; IV and V Centuries A. D.
A. G., Jan. 29, 1921.
796. Marble Sarcophagus (height 24, length 47, depth 34), Hearst 3,880
Roman, Period of the Antonines.
A. G., Jan. 29, 1921.
Statue of a Young Woman (white marble) (6 ft. 6), Guest 3,200
Rossellino; 1427-1490, Italian.
A. G., Jan. 28, 1921.
671. Marble Relief Placque of Virgin and Child (26^x19), Agent 3,000
Rossellino, Bernardo; 1409-1464, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
102. Virgin and Child (marble relief) (23^x175^), J. F. Drake, Inc 4,000
Settignano, Desiderio Da; 1457-1485, Italian.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
335. Virgin and Child (painted stucco bas-relief) (33x21i^). Mcllheney 800
Siamese School; XVII-XVIII Century.
A. G., May 13, 1921.
293. Buddha (bronze studded with precious stones) (height 13J/2) ... 105
Sienese School; XV Century.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
100. Virgin and Child (Polychromed stucco bas-relief) (36x19), J. F.
Drake, Inc 575
Spanish Gothic Style.
Medina, April 5, 1921.
20. The Madonna and Child (ivory statuette) (height 11), R. E. Biazat.. 65
32. Madonna and Child (polychrome wood) (height 19J^), R. E. Biazat.. 75
Spanish School.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
290. St. Luke (painted wood) (height 16), D. Kelekian 100
Spanish School; Early XV Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1162. The Adoration of Child Jesus (round carved limestone), H. H. Plate. . 180
Spanish School; XV Century.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
304. Virgin (painted wood) (height 22^), French & Co 800
Medina, April 5, 1921.
31. Madonna and Child (sculptured walnut) (height 29), R. H. Tannahill. 50
Ruiz, May 17, 1921.
180. Sculpture. A. Smith 60
Spanish School; Late XV Century.
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
563. Virgin and Child (painted wood) (height 43), E. Staab 110
Spanish School; XVI Century.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921.
283. Saint in Monk's Robes (painted wood) (height 10), Mrs. Leyht 55
Medina, April 5, 1921. .
24. The Meeting of St. Anne and the Virgin (polychrome bas-relief)
(20x21), J. Masind 75
34. St. Jerome (walnut) (height 40^/^), R. E. Biazat 200
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
191. Virgin and Child (painted wood) (height l5i^), S. Schepps 100
193. Angels (painted wood) (height 16), W. R. Hearst 80
195. Young Saint (painted wood) (height 18^^), W. R. Hearst 280
Ruiz, April 14, 1921. ^ ^ .
1994. St. John (carved limestone figure) (height 31 in), C. Fair 150
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
542. Christ (walnut) (12x11), Mrs. T. A. Ferguson 50
544. Figure of Christ (walnut) (8^x7), Mrs. J. A. Ferguson 55
558. Virgin and Child (painted and gilt wood) (height 40) 50
Spanish School; XVII Century.
Lawrence, Jan. 28, 1921. , „ ^
303. St. John (painted wood) (height 16), French & Co 225
SCULPTURE SOLD AT AUCTION
327
Spanish School; XVII Century— Continued.
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
546. Female Saint (painted plaster) (height 17), Mrs. M. Ferry $90
464. Christ (carved walnut panels) (ll>^xlO>l), E. T. Hargrove 55
568. Two Figures of Kneeling Angels (painted and gilt wood) (height 12) 70
Spanish School; XII Century, Byzantine.
Weissberger, April 28, 1921.
573. God the Father and Apostles (retablo of four carved panels, 40x68
each) , Geo. Gray Barnard 500
Spanish Renaissance Style.
Medina, April 5, 1921.
37. St. John (polychrome wood) (54J4), Klein 50
Suslnl; XVI CenUiry, Florentine.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
94. Bronze Figure of Atlas (height 16) 75
Syrian School; IV-V Century.
A. G., May 14, 1921.
523. Frieze of Acanthus Leaves (marble) (height 8) 50
Syrian School; VI-VII Century.
A. G., May 14, 1921.
521. Acanthus Leaves (marble) (height 10) 50
Torrigiano, Piero; 1472-1522, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
96. Martyrdom of St. Sebastian (Polychromed Terra Cotta statue) (height
26), Dr. G. F. Muller 95
Unknown; XVIII Century.
Ruiz, April 9, 1921.
1159. Limestone Column (3 ft. height), H. H. Plate 160
Venetian School; XVI Century.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
187. Angels (painted wood) (height 9J^), Mae Murray 55
188. Angels (painted wood) (height 9^/2), VV. R. Hearst 70
190. Angels (painted wood) (height 14^), Ruth Teschner 130
196. Virgin and St. Joseph (painted wood) (height 17), S. F. Canavan. . . 300
Venetian School; XVII Century.
Orselli, Feb. 16, 1921.
217. Virgin and Child (colored terra-cotta) (height 28), S. Schepps 100
Volterra, Zaccaria da; XVI Century, Italian.
A. G., Feb. 18, 1921.
95. The Calvary (Group in Bronze) (height 31^), T. F. Casey 110
Edward W. Redfield, N.A. By Wayman Adams
LoRADO Taft, N.A. By Ralph Clarkson
WHO'S WHO
IN ART
ELEVENTH ISSUE OF THE DIRECTORY
SECTION OF THE AMERICAN ART ANNUAL
CONTAINING NAMES, ADDRESSES,
AND BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES OF
5,459 PAINTERS, SCULPTORS AND ILLUS-
TRATORS
1921
Who's Who in Art
Publisher's Note
"Who's Who in Art" is the directory section of the ''American
Art Annual." As heretofore, the directory has been compiled chiefly
from the membership lists of the leading art societies in the United
States and exhibitors at same. Data blanks were sent out in the
early spring and the information thus received, with that sent by
the artists for previous volumes, has formed the basis of the bio-
graphical notes.
This volume contains 5,459 names and addresses of painters,
sculptors and illustrators ; the last issue of this directory, that in
Volume XVI, 1919, contained 5,043 names. Twelve hundred and
one (1,201) names appear here for the first time; these are new ex-
hibitors who have been represented in the current exhibitions during
the past two years. Seven hundred and eighty-five (785) names have
been dropped because no answer has been received to our request
for present address, the artist has not exhibited since 1919; is not a
member of a recognized art society, or has died during the two-year
period.
When two addresses are given and the second one is preceded
by "h," it indicates that the first address is the studio, the second
is the home. The artist's medium, whether painter, sculptor, illus-
trator, or craftsman, is indicated by letters at the beginning of the
biographical note ; when no biographical information was obtainable,
the letters are used in parentheses after the address. The date
after the abbreviation of a society of which an artist is a member,
refers to the time of election.
The lists of ''Work" under the names are limited to paintings
in public galleries, monumental sculpture, and published illustra-
tions.
The names of married women include the maiden name ; they
are preceded by "Mrs." or followed by the husband's name in
parentheses. The maiden name is also entered in alphabetical order,
with a cross reference. All names of women without title are
"Miss."
The Publishers.
330
WHO'S WHO IN ART
Abbreviations
p.— painter; S.— sculptor; L— illustrator ; E.— etcher ; Engr.— engraver ; C—
craftsman ; D.— designer ; L.— lecturer ; Ldscp. P.— landscape painter ;
Min. P. — miniature painter; Mural P.— mural painter; Port. P.— portrait
painter; Arch.— architect ; T.— teacher; W.— writer.
SOCIETIES
Alliance — Art Alliance of America.
Allied AA. — Allied Artists of America.
Am. Acad. A. L. — American Academy of Arts and Letters.
AAS. — American Art Society, Philadelphia.
A. Aid S. — Artists' Aid Society of New York.
AFAS — American Fine Arts Society, New York.
A. Fund S. — Artists' Fund Society, New York.
AIA — American Institute of Architects.
AIC— Art Institute of Chicago.
AI Graphic A — American Institute of Graphic Arts.
ANA — Associate National Academy of Design, New York.
Am. PS — American Painters and Sculptors, New York.
A. S. Min. P. — American Society of Miniature Painters, New York.
ASL of N. Y.— Art Students' League of New York.
AWCS — American Water Color Society, New York.
Boston AC — Boston Art Club.
Boston GA. — Guild of Boston Artists.
Boston WCC — Boston Water Color Club.
Boston SA — Boston Society of Architects (Chapter AIA).
Boston SWCP — Boston Society of Water Color Painters.
Boston SAC — Boston Society of Arts and Crafts.
Brooklyn AC— Brooklyn Art Club.
Buffalo SA — Buffalo Society of Artists.
Calif. AC. — California Art Club.
Calif. PM. — Print Makers' Society of California.
Calif. SE. — California Society of Etchers.
C. I. Pittsburgh — Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh.
Century Assoc. — Century Association, New York.
Char.C. — Charcoal Club, Baltimore.
Chicago AC. — Arts Club of Chicago,
Chicago AD. — Chicago Academy of Design,
Chicago AG. — Artists' Guild of Chicago.
Chicago SA — Chicago Society of Artists.
Chicago SAC— Chicago Society of Arts and Crafts.
331
332 ABBREVIATIONS
Chicago SE — Chicago Society of Etchers.
Chicago S. Min.P. — Chicago Society of Miniature Painters.
Chicago WCC. — Chicago Water Color Club.
Cincinnati AC — Cincinnati Art Club.
Cleveland Arch. C— Cleveland Architectural Club.
College AA. — College Art Association.
Conn. AFA — Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts, Hartford.
Contemporary — Contemporary Group.
Copley S. — Copley Society of Boston.
Corcoran AG — Corcoran Art Gallery, Washington, D. C.
Denver AA. — Denver Art Association.
E.A. and M.T. Teacher — Eastern Art and Manual Training Teachers' Asso-
ciation.
Fellowship PAFA — Fellowship of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
Hartford ACC— Hartford Arts and Crafts Club.
Inter. Soc. A. L. — International Society of Arts and Letters (also given as
Soc. Inter, des Beaux Arts et des Lettres).
Int. Soc. SPG — International Society of Sculptors, Painters and Gravers,
London.
Lg. of N.Y.A. — League of New York Artists.
MacD. C— MacDowell Club, New York.
Minneapolis AL. — Minneapolis Artists' League.
Municipal AS — Municipal Art Society (preceded by name of city).
Mural P. — National Society of Mural Painters, New York.
Nat. Inst. A. L. — National Institute of Arts and Letters.
NA — National Academy of Design, New York (Academicians).
NAC— National Arts Club, New York.
NAD — National Academy of Design, New York (used chiefly for school).
Nat. Gal. — National Gallery, Washington, D. C.
N. A. Women PS. — National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors,
New York.
NYSC — New York Society of Craftsmen
NSS — National Sculpture Society, New York.
New Haven PCC — New Haven Paint and Clay Club.
NOAA — Art Association of New Orleans.
N. Y. Arch. Lg. — Architectural League of New York.
N. Y. SE— New York Society of Etchers.
NYWCC— New York Water Color Club.
Newport AA — Art Association of Newport.
PBC— Pen and Brush Club of New York.
P-G. — Painter-Gravers of America.
PAFA — Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia.
Pa. S. Min. P. — Pennsylvania Society of Miniature Painters.
Paris AAA — American Art Association of Paris.
Paris Women's AAA — Paris American Women's Art Association.
Paris SAP — Paris Society of American Painters.
Pastelists — Society of Pastelists, New York.
ABBREVIATIONS 333
Phila. A A — Associated Artists of Pliiladelphia.
Phila. Alliance — Art Alliance of Philadelphia.
Phila. AC— Philadelphia Art Club (also AC Phila.).
Phila. SA — Philadelphia Society of Artists.
Phila. Soc. AL. — Philadelphia Society of Arts and Letters.
Phila. Sketch C— Philadelphia Sketch Club.
Phila. WCC— Philadelphia Water Color Club.
Photo. Sec. — Photo-Secession, New York.
Pittsburgh AA— Associated Artists of Pittsburgh.
Pittsburgh AS— Pittsburgh Art Society.
Plastic C— Plastic Club of Philadelphia.
Port. P. — National Association of Portrait Painters, New York.
Providence AC — Providence Art Club.
Providence HC — Providence Handicraft Club.
Provincetown AA — Provincetown Art Association.
Rome Acad. Alumni. — Alumni Association American Academy in Rome.
SAA — Society of American Artists, New York.
SI — Society of Illustrators, New York.
Salma. C. — Salmagundi Club, New York.
San F. AA. — San Francisco Art Association.
SMPF West— Society of Men who Paint the Far West.
S. Indp. A. — Society of Independent Artists.
SPNY. — Society of Painters of New York.
SW Sc. — Society of Western Sculptors.
St. Louis AG — St. Louis Artists' Guild.
Ten Am. P. — Ten American Painters.
Wash. AC — Washington Arts Club.
Wash. WCC-^Washington (D. C.) Water Color Club.
Wash. SA.— Society of Washington (D. C.) Artists (also S. Wash. A.).
Wilmington SFA — Wilmington Society of Fine Arts.
Wis. PS. — Wisconsin Painters and Sculptors.
Woman's AC — Woman's Art Club (preceded by name of city).
2x4 Soc. — Two by Four Society, St. Louis.
YS — American League of Young Sculptors.
WHO'S WHO IN ART
AMERICAN PAINTERS, SCULPTORS AND ILLUSTRATORS
ABBATTE, Paolo S., 131 Broadway, New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Pittsfield, Mass.
S., W., L. — Born Villarosa, Italy, April
12, 1884.
ABBOTT, Anne Fuller, McLean Bldg.,
1517 H St., N.W.; h. 1828 I St., N.W.,
Washington, D. C.
P. — Born Brandon, Vt. Pupil of Chase
and NAD. Member: AVash. AC.
ABBOTT, Elenore Plaisted (Mrs. C. Yar-
nall Abbott), The Gladstone, 11th and
Pine Sts., Philadelphia, Pa.; and Rose
Valley, Moylan, Pa.
P., I.— Born Lincoln, Me., 1875. Pupil
of PAFA; Phila. School of Design;
Simon and Cottet in Paris. M e m b e x .
Phil.WCC; Plastic C; Fellowship PAFA.
ABBOTT, Francis R., 514 Walnut St.;
and the Art Club, 220 S. Broad St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia. Pupil of PAFA;
Julian Academy in Paris. Member:
Fellowship PAFA; ACPhila; Phila.
Sketch C.
ABBOTT, S. N., 725 Lexington Ave.; h.
140 Claremont Ave., New York, N. Y.
I. — Born 1874. Pupil of Laurens and
Constant. Member: SI 1913.
ABBOTT, W. H., 46 Greenwich Ave., New
York, N. Y. (S.)
ABBOTT, Yarnall, 1711 Chestnut St.; h.
The Gladstone, Philadelphia, Pa.; sum-
mer, Rockport, Mass.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 23,
1870. Pupil of Thomas Anschutz in
Philadelphia; Collin and Courtois in
Paris. Member: Phila. Sketch C. ;
Salma.C; Fellowship PAFA.
ABDY, Mrs. Rowena Meeks, 1050 Lom-
bard St., Russian Hill, San Francisco,
Calif.
P., I. — Born Vienna, Austria, April 24,
1887; of American parents. Pupil of
Arthur F. Mathews in San Francisco.
Member : San F. AA; S. Monterey A,
Award : Silver medal, California
Museum of Art, San Francisco, 1920.
Illustrated "On the Ohio."
ABEL, Louise, North Bend Road, Box
106, R. F. D. 15, Mt. Healthy, O.
S.— Born Sept. 7, 1894. Pupil of Barn-
horn, Meakin, Wessel. Member: Cin-
cinnati Woman's AC.
ABRAHAMSEN, Christian, Tree Studio
Bldg., State and Ohio Sts., Chicago, 111.
I. — Born Bergen, Norway, July 20, 1887.
Pupil of Koren K. Wilberg and Asor
Hanson in Norway; AIC. Member:
ASL of Chicago; Artists Guild.
Work: "Winter," Chicago Art Inst.
ABRAMOVITZ, ALBERT, 336 East 17th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
ABRAMS, Eleanor, 10 East 9th St., New
York, N. Y., h. Butler, Pa.
P.— Born Karns City, Pa. Pupil of
Elliott Daingerfield and Henry B. Snell.
ABRAMS, Lucian, Lyme, Conn.
P. — Born Lawrence, Kan. Pupil of
Laurens, Constant, Collin and Whistler
in Paris. Member: Lyme Art
Assoc; Society du Salon d'Automne;
Society des Artists Independants; S.
Indp.A. Work: "Sandy Bay," Dallas
Art Assoc.
ACHERT, Fred, 8-10 East 3d St., Cincin-
nati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati AC.
ACKER, Herbert V(an Blarcom), 138
West 65th St., New York, N. Y. ; sum-
mer, 2205 West 6th St., Los Angeles,
Calif.
P.— Born Pasadena, Calif., Oct. 4, 1895.
Pupil of Cecilia Beaux, Frank V. Du
Mond. M ember: S.Indp.A.
ACKERSON, F(loyd) G(arrison), 731 Re-
becca St., Wilkinsburg, Pa.
P. — ^Born Portage, Kalamazoo Co.,
Mich., Jan. 1, 1883. Pupil Carnegie
Tech. Art School. Member: Pitts-
burg AA. Award : 2nd prize Pitts-
burgh AA., 1920.
ADAM, David Livingston, 1012 North
Dearborn St., Chicago, 111.
Port. P. — Born Glasgow, Scotland, No-
vember, 1883. Pupil of Jean Delville;
Maurice Greiffenhagen; Glasgow School
of Art; AIC; Royal Academy of Brus-
sels. Member: Palette and Chisel
C; Chicago SA; Alumni AIC. Award :
Gold medal, Palette and Chisel C, 1920.
ADAM, Wilbur, 3033 Highland Ave., Cin-
cinnati, O. (P.)
ADAM, William, 450 Central Ave., Pacific
Grove, Cal.
P., L., T. — Born Tweedmouth, Eng-
land, Aug. 29, 1846. Pupil of Delecluee,
Paris; Greenlees and Robert Brydall in
Glasgow. Member: Boston AC. and
Glasgow AC. Award : Gold medal,
Sacramento State Fair. Work: "Sundry
Old California Gardens," Del Monte
(Cal.) Gallery.
ADAMS, Cliarles Partridge, 3935 Dalton
Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.; summer,
"The Sketch Box," Estes Park, Colo.
Ldscp.P.,T. — Born Franklin, Mass., Jan.
12, 1858, Self-taught. Member:
Denver AC. Awards: Gold medal.
National Mining and Industrial Exp.,
Denver; hon. mention, Pan-Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901. Work: In State Uni-
versity, Boulder, Colo.; Normal School,
Greeley, Colo.; Kansas City, Mo.; San
Diego, Cal.; Woman's Club, and Denver
Art Association, Denver, Colo.
334
ADAMS
WHO*S WHO IN ART
AHL
ADAMS, Herbert, 131 West 11th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Cornish,
N. H.
S.— Born Concord, Vt., Jan. 2d, 1858.
Pupil of Mass. Normal Art School;
MerciS in Paris. Member: ANA
1898, NA 1899 (pres. 1917); SAA 1891;
NSS 1893 (ex-pres.); N.Y.Arch.Lg.l896;
N.Y.Municipal AS; NAC; Century As-
soc. ; A.Acad.AL. ; Salma. C. Awards:
Hon. mention, Salon, 1888 and 1889;
medal, ACPhila., 1892; Columbian Exp.,
Chicag-o, 1893; gold medal, Charleston
Exp., 1902; gold medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904; medal of honor, P.-P. Exp.. San F.,
1915; Watrous gold mpdnl. NAD. 1916.
Work: Fountain, Fitchburg, Mass.;
bronze doors and several statues for
liibrary of Congress, Washington, D. C;
bronze doors of St. Bartholomew's
Church, New York; "Bust of a Young
Woman," Metropolitan Museum. New
York; McMillan Fountain, Washington,
D. C; William Cullen Bryant, Bryant
Park, New York City; Chief Justice
Marshall, Cleveland, O. "Infant Bur-
bank," Newark Museum.
ADAMS, J. Howard, 1217 Turks Head
Bldg., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
ADAMS, John Ottis, The Hermitage,
Brookville, Ind.; summer, Leland, Mich.
Ldscp.P.,T.— Born Amity, Ind., July 8,
1851. Pupil of John Parker in London;
Benczur and LoefCtz in Munich.
Member: Indianapolis Art Assoc.
(hon.). Award: Bronze medal. St.
Louis Exp., 1904; Fine Arts Bldg.
prize, Chicago, 1907; hon. mention, Bue-
nos Aires Exp., 1910. Work : "A
Summer Afternoon," Richmond, Ind.,
Art Assoc; "Late Autumn," Her-
ron Art Institute, Indianapolis; "Win-
ter Morning" and "Road to Town," Art
Assoc, Muncie, Ind.; "The Pool," Art
Assoc, Cedar Rapids, Iowa; "Irides-
cence," Public Library, Terre Haute,
Ind.; and pictures in public libraries of
Anderson, Brookville, Bluffton, Evans-
ville. Fort Wayne, and Marion, Ind.,
and in Bay City, Mich.; decorations in
City Hospital, Indianapolis.
ADAMS, Katharine Langhorne (Mrs.
Benjamin P. Adams), 354 Fourth Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Sneden's
Landing, Palisades, N. Y.
P.— Born Plainfield, N. J. Pupil of ASL
of N.Y. and DuMond. Member:
N.A. Women PS.
ADAMS. Philip, 1310 Massachusetts Ave.,
N. W. ; University Club, Washington,
D. C; h. care of Mrs. Ellen Adams,
Warp Hall. Cambridge. Mass.
P. — Born Honolulu, T. H., June 26, 1881.
Pupil of Bridgman, Paxton, Hale, Ben-
son and Woodbury in Boston. Mem-
ber: Copley S.
ADAMS, Wayman, Sherwood Studios, 58
West 57th St.; h. 51 West 87th St.,
New York. N. Y.
P.— Born Muncie, Ind., Sept. 23, 1883,
Pupil of Chase and Henri. Mem-
ber: Port. P.; Phila. Sketch C;
Phila. AC; Ind. AC; Allied AA.
Award: Proctor prize, NAD, 1914;
Foulke prize, Richmond (Ind.) AA,
1915; Holcomb prize, Herron Art Inst.,
1916; Logan medal and $1,500, AIC,
1918; Newport AA prize, 1918. Work :
"Charles Dennis," Herron Art Institute,
Indianapolis; "Joseph Pennell," Chicago
Art Institute; "Samuel M. Ralston" and
"Thomas R. Marshall," State Library,
Indianapolis.
ADAMS, Mrs. Winifred Brady, The Her-
mitage, Brookville, Ind.; summer, Le-
land, Mich.
P. — Born Muncie, Ind., May 8, 1871.
Pupil of Drexel Inst., Phila.; ASL of
N. Y. Member: Cincinnati Wom-
an's AC. Work: "Marigolds,"
Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis;
"Still Life," Richmond (Ind.) Art As-
soc; "Still Life," Muncie (Ind.) Art
Assoc.
ADAMS, Woodhuii, Lyme, Conn.
P. — M ember: Salma C
ADAMSON, Penrhyn Stanley. See Stan-
laws.
ADDAMS, Clifford, Two Gables, 8 Med-
way, Hendon, London, England.
P., Etcher. — M ember: Chicago SE,
Award: Bronze Medal, P.-P. Exp.,
San. F.. 1915; Logan prize ($25), Chi-
cago SE, 1917. Work: "Portrait of
the Artist's Wife" and "Decoration."
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Philadelphia; represented in the Chicago
Art Institute.
ADDAMS, Inez (Mrs. Clifford Addams), 8
Medway, Hendon, London, England.
P. — A ward: Silver medal, P.-P.Exp.,
San F., 1915.
ADOLPHE, Albert J(ean), 2616 Mont-
gomery Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
P., C, T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Feb.
17, 1865. Pupil of Gerome and Whistler
in Paris; De Vriendt, Antwerp;
Eakins, Phila. School of Ind. A.
Member: Alumni Asso. School of Ind.
A., Phila. Awards : Hon. mention,
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1894; Hon.
mention, Paris Salon, 1899; gold
medal, Phila. AC. 1904; Stotesbury
Prize. Phila., 1916, "Americanization
Through Art" Exhibition. Work: Dec-
orations in Marlborough -Blenheim Ho-
tel, Atlantic City, N. J., and for steam-
ships "St. Louis" and "St. Paul"; scen-
ic artist for the Phila. Academy of
Music.
ADRIANCE, Minnie H., 51 East 53rd St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
AHL, Henry Hammond, 12 Harcourt St.,
Boston, Mass.; h. Newburyport, Mass.
P. — Born East Hartford, Conn., Dec.
20, 1869. Pupil of Alexander Wagner,
Gerome and Franz Stiick. Member:
Boston AC; Copley S.; Conn. AFA;
Salma. C Awards: Hon. mention,
Munich Royal Academy. Work: "In
the Shadow of the Cross," Washington;
"Sunset Glow." Art Museum, Spring-
field, Mass.; "The Sunset Hour." Port-
land CMe.) Society of Art; "The An-
cient Oak," Boston Art Club; "Sunset,"
TVorcester Art Museum; mural, "The
Crucifixion," and fourteen panels,
335
AHL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
ALBRIGHT
Church of Blessed Sacrament, Jamaica
Plain, Boston; fourteen panels, "The
Way of the Cross," 'St. Michael's
Church, Providence, R. I.
AHL, Mrs. Henry Hammond, 12 Harcourt
St., Boston, Mass. (P.)
AHRENS, Ellen Wetherald, Lansdowne,
Pa.
P., I. — Born Baltimore, Md., June 6,
1859. Pupil of Boston Museum School
under Grundmann; PAPA under Eak-
1ns; Drexel Inst, under Pyle. Mem-
ber: Plastic C; Phila.WCC. Pa.S.
Min.P. Awards : Silver medal and
prize, C. 1.1901; bronze medals for oil
painting and miniatures, St. Louis Exp.,
1904.
AID, George C(harles), 3660 Blaine Ave.,
St. Louis, Mo.
I., P., Engr. — Born Quincy, 111., Aug. 26,
1872. Pupil of St. Louis School of Fine
Arts; Julian Academy under Laurens
and Benjamin-Constant, and with Si-
mon and Cottet in Paris. Member:
Chicago SE; St. Louis AG; Paris
AAA; Soc.des Peintres-Graveurs Fran-
cals. Award: Silver medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904. Work in: Library of Con-
gress, Washington, D. C; New York
Public Library; Luxembourg, Paris;
Royal Gallery, Dresden, Germany.
AIKEN, Charles A., 28 West 63rd St.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. Wellesley Hills.
Mural P. — Born Georgia, Vt., Sept.
29, 1872. Pupil of Boston Museum
School. Member: Boston AC; Cop-
ley S.; Salma.C; New Haven PCC;
Wash. AC; NAC. Work: Chancel dec-
oration Church of the Good Shepherd,
Waban, Mass.; Steinert Hall, Boston;
"Head of a Girl," Boston Art Club;
"Battle of Dogger Bank," National
Gallery War Memorial Collection.
AIKMAN, Walter M(ontelth), 133 Macon
St., Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
Wood Engr., P.— Born New York, 1857.
Studied engraving under Frank French
and J. G. Smlthwick in New York:
drawing and painting under Boulanger
and Lefebvre in Paris. Awards :
Bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1889; medal,
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; silver
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
Work: Wood and copper engravings
at Carnegie Inst., Pittsburgh; Public
Library, New York City; Brooklyn In-
stitute of Arts and Sciences.
A I MAN, Pearl, East Willow Grove, Chest-
nut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
AITKEN, Robert Kngersoll), 154 West
55th St.; h. 162 West 11th Ct., New
York. N. Y.
S. — Born San Francisco, Calif., May 8,
1878. Pupil of Mark Hopkins Inst.,
under Arthur F. Mathews and Douglas
Tilden in San Francisco. Member:
ANA 1909, NA 1914; NSS 1902; N.Y.
Arch. I^s:. 1909. Awards: Barnett prize,
NAD 1908; medal of honor, N.Y. Arch.
Lg. 1915; silver medal, P. -P.Exp., San
F., 1915. Work: McKinley monument,
Golden Gate Park, San Francisco; Mon-
ument to the American Navy in Com-
memoration of Admiral Dewey's Vic-
tory at Manila Bay, San Francisco;
"The Flame," Metropolitan Museum,
New York; commemorative medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915; commemorative $50
coin for U.S.A., 1915; Elihu Burritt
Memorial, New Britain, Conn.
AKELEY, Carl E., American Museum of
Natural History, West 77th St.; h. 1
West 89th St., New York, N. Y.
S., C, W., L. — Born Clarenden, Orleans
Co., N. Y., May 19, 1864. Member:
NSS 1914. Work: Two animal stud-
ies in Brooklyn Institute Museum; nu-
merous groups in American Museum of
Natural History, New York.
AKERS, v., Norway, Oxford Co., Me.
(P.)
ALBEE, Percy F., 235 Benefit St., Provi-
dence, R. I.
P. — Born Bridgeport, Conn., 1883. Pu-
pil of PAFA and R.L School of Design.
Member: Providence AC; Provi-
dence WCC; NAC. Work: Decora-
tion in Memorial Hall, and altar curtain
in St. Paul's Chapel, Providence.
ALBERT, Ernest, New Canaan, Conn.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Aug. 15, 1857.
Pupil of Brooklyn Art School. Mem-
ber: Allied AA (pres.); SalmaC;
Players'; Conn. AFA; AWCS.
ALBERT, Ernest, Jr., New Canaan,
Conn.
P. — M ember: Allied AA.; Salma.C.
ALBERTS, J(ohn) Bernhard, 416 So. 1st
St.; h. 129 North Gait Ave., Louisville,
Ky.
P. — Born Louisville, Ky., July 9, 1886.
Pupil of Cincinnati Academy under Du-
veneck and Meakin; Tarbell and Ben-
son in Boston. Member: Louisville
Artists' Lg.
ALBRECHT, C. J., State Museum, Uni-
versity of Washington, Seattle, Wash.
(S.)
ALBRIGHT, Adam Emory, Hubbard
Woods, 111.
P.— Born Monroe, Wis., Aug. 15, 1862.
Pupil of AIC; PAFA; studied in Munich
and Paris. Member: AWCS; Chi-
cago SA (pres., 1915); Chicago WCC
(ex-pres.); Fellowship PAFA; AIC
Alumnae; Chicago AD; Chicago AC;
Salma.C; NYWCC (life). Awards:
Grower prize ($100), AIC 1907 and 1914;
Cahn prize, AIC 1908. Work in: City
Art Museum, St. Louis; Museum of Art,
Toledo; Municipal A. Lg., Chicago;
Laguna Beach AA. ; Public Library
Cedar Rapids, la. ; Library, Topeka,
Kan.; public schools, clubs, etc. Spe-
cialty, child life.
ALBRIGHT, Mrs. Gertrude Partington,
737 Buena Vista Ave., San Francisco,
Calif.
P., E., T.— Born Heysham, England.
Pupil of J. H. E. Partington and G.
X. Prinet. Member: San F. AA;
Calif. SE. Award: Bronze medal,
P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915. Work:
"Portrait of an Actress," owned by
the City of San Francisco.
336
ALBRIGHT
WHO'S WHO IN ART
ALLEN
ALBRIGHT, Henry James, Glenmont, Al-
bany Co., N. Y.
P.,C.,S.— Born Albany, N. Y., July 16.
1887. Pupil of S. L. Huntley, William
St. John Harper, Charles L. Hinton,
John F. Carlson and C. W. Hawthorne.
Director Troy Art Institute. Member:
S.Indp.A.
ALBRIGHT, H. O (liver), 737 Buena Vista
Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
P. — Born Mannheim, Germany, Jan. 29,
1876. Member: San Francisco AA.
Award : Bronze Medal, San F. AA.,
1920.
ALDRICH, Mrs. Cornelia Ward, "Blad-
ensfield," Richmond Co., Va. (P., I.)
ALDRICH, G(eorge) Ames, 155 East
Ohio St., Chicago, 111.; h. Montreuil sur
mer, France.
P., E. — Born Worcester, Mass., June 3,
1872. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. ; Mass.
Inst, of Technology. Pupil of Julian
and Colarossi Academies, Aman-Jean,
Whistler, Collin and Thaulow. M e m-
b e r: Chicago SA; Palette and Chisel
C; 'Societe des Artistes Francais.
Work: In Elks Club, Sioux City; and
Sioux City Art Society, Musee de
Rouen, France.
ALDRICH, Talbot Bailey, 34 Fairfield St.,
.Boston, Mass.
P. — M ember: Boston AC.
ALEXANDER, Clifford Grear, 6 Upland
Rd., Faneuil Station, Brighton, Mass.
P.,I.,C.,T. — Born Springfield, Mass.,
Aug. 15, 1870. Pupil of Boston Museum
School. Member : Boston AC;
S.Indp.A.
ALEXANDER, Jacques, 500 West 171st
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Soc. of Deaf Artists
(sec); S.Indp.A.
ALEXANDER, Julia Standish, 976 An-
derson Ave., New York, N. Y.
S., C, W.. T.— Born Springfield, Mass.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Victor Brenner.
Member: Alliance; PBC.
ALEXANDER, Mrs. Mary L., 28 Alexan-
der Bldg., Cincinnati. O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
ALGER, John, 210 East 17th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Born Boston, Mass., Feb. 25, 1879.
Pupil of Massachusetts Inst, of Tech-
nology. Member: S. Indp. A. ; Lg. of
N. Y. A.
ALKE, Mrs. Elizabeth Heil, R. F. D. No.
2. New Richmond, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
ALLAN, Mrs. Charles Beach, 542 Park
Ave., Kansas City, Mo.; summer. Long
Beach. Calif.
P.— Born Detroit. Mich.. Oct. 9, 1874.
Pupil of AIC and Birger Sandzen; Sout-
ter in Paris. Member: Laguna
Beach Art Association.
ALLEN, Anne Huntington (Mrs. Thomas
Woodruff Allen), 230 Southern Ave.,
Mt. Auburn, Cincinnati, O.
P.— Born New York, 1858. Pupil of
Cooper Institute and of Wyatt Eaton,
New York; Frank Duveneck, Cincin-
nati; Carolus Duran, Henner, and Acad-
emy Colarossi, Paris. Member: Cin-
cinnati Woman's AC (treas.).
ALLEN, Charles Curtis, 454 Wolcott St.,
Auburn dale, Mass.
P.. T.— Born Dec. 13, 1886. Pupil of
Worcester Art Museum School, Philip
Hale, H. D. Murphy, and Henry W.
Rice. Instructor in water color at the
Art Students' League, Worcester, Mass.
Work: "Black Mountain," Worcester
Art Museum; "Tuckerman's Ravine,"
Leominster Public Library; "Mt. Mo-
nadnock," Woman's College, Brown
University, Providence, R. I.
ALLEN, Frank, 220A Willoughby Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y. (P.)
ALLEN, Frederick Warren, 1126 Boyl-
ston St., Fenway Bldg., Boston; h. Co-
lumbia Terrace, Brookline, Mass.; sum-
mer, Bartlett's Harbor, North Haven,
Me.
S., T. — Born North Attleboro, Mass.,
May 5, 1888. Pupil of Bela Pratt;
Landuski; Paul Bartlett. Member:
Boston GA. Instructor, Museum of Fine
Arts School, Boston. Work: In Bos-
ton Museum of Fine Arts and Boston
City Hospital; Boston AC; Metropolitan
Museum, New York; "Memorial to Sol-
diers of Revolution," Attleboro Chap-
ter D. A. R.
ALLEN, Gregory S(eymour), Harriet
Ave., Morsemere, N. J.
S.— Born Orange, N. J., July 8, 1884.
Pupil of Gutzon Borglum, H. K. Bush-
Brown, Philip Martini.
ALLEN, Greta, 755 Boylston St.; h. 34
Wales St., Boston, Mass.; summer.
Provincetown, Mass.
Port. P.— Born Boston. Pupil of De
Camp, Benson. Member: Copley S.
ALLEN, J. E., Interlaken, N. J. (I.)
ALLEN, Louise (Mrs. Louise Allen
Hobbs), Trinity Court, Boston, Mass.;
summer. East Gloucester, Mass.
S. — Born Lowell, Mass. Pupil of R. I.
School of Design in Providence; School
of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
Member: N.A. Women PS.; Copley
S. Work in Cleveland Museum; war
memorial at East Greenwich, R. I.
ALLEN, Marion Boyd (Mrs. William A.
Allen). Fenway Studios; h. 477 Com-
monwealth Ave., Boston, Mass.
P.— Born Boston, Oct. 23, 1862. Pupil
of Tarbell and Benson at School of
Boston Museum of Fine Arts. Mem-
ber: Copley S.; Conn.AFA; NAC;.
Wash. A. C; N. A. Women PS, PBC;
Buffalo SA; Lg. of N.Y.A. Awards:
Hon. mention Conn. AFA, 1915 and
1921; People's prize, Newport AA. 1919;
Hudson prize. Conn. AFA, 1920; Fellow-
ship prize, Buffalo SAC, 1920; prize
French Inst., New York, 1920. Work
in Public Library, Barre, Mass. ; College
Tjibrary, Brunswick, Me. ; Harvard
Club, Boston. Specialty: Portraits.
ALLEN, Mary Coleman, 125 East 10th St.,
New York. N. Y.
Min. P.— M ember: A. S. MIn. P.
337
ALLEN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
ANDERSON
ALLEN, Orville S., 452 West 153rd St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
ALLEN, Thomas, 12 Commonwealth Ave.,
Boston, Mass.; summer, Princeton,
Worcester Co., Mass.
P.— Born St. Louis, Mo., Oct. 19, 1849.
Pupil of Royal Academy, Diisseldorf.
Member: ANA 1884; SAA 1880;
Boston AC; Paint and Clay Club of
Boston (pres.); Boston SWCP (pres.);
Copley S. 1892 (v.-pres.). Trustee Bos-
ton Museum of Fine Arts; Chairman of
Council and Faculty. Boston Museum
School of Drawing and Painting-; Pres.
International Jury of Award, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; chairman, since 1910, Art
Commission of the City of Boston. Rep-
resented in Museum of Fine Arts. Bos-
ton; City Art Museum, St. Louis; Berk-
shire Athenaeum and Museum.
ALLEN, Willard. Woodstock, N. Y.
P.^ T. — Born Oberlin, O., Aug. 15, 1860.
Pupil of Chase, Carlsen, Ahrens.
ALLENDER, Mrs. Nina E., 1315 Clifton
St., Washington, D. C.
P., L, T. — Born Auburn, Kan. Pupil of
PAFA under Chase and Henri; Bran-
gwyn in London. Member: Wash.
SA.
ALLIS, C. Harry, 24 West 8th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
ALLISON, F. D., 214 West 70th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
ALLISON, Merle, 118 East 28th St., New
York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: SI.
ALLMOND, Katherine. See Mrs. Charles
A. Hulbert.
ALTEN, Mathias J., 1593 E. Fulton St.,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
P.,T. — Born Gusenburg, Germany, Feb.
13, 1871. Pupil of Constant, Laurens,
Prinet, Girrardo and Whistler in
Paris. Member: Grand Rapids AA.
Awards : Detroit A.I. second prize,
1919; Scarab Club gold medal, 1920.
Work: In collection of Grand Rapids
Art Association; Syracuse Museum of
Fine Arts.
ALTEN BURG, Alexander, 75 Washington
Place, New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
ALTMANN, Aaron, 2298 Green St., San
Francisco, Calif.
P., W., L., T.— Born San Francisco,
Calif., Oct. 28, 1872. Pupil of A. F.
Matthews, San Francisco; Constant,
Laurens and Gerome, Paris. M e ra -
• b e r : San F. AA.
ALVAREZ, Mabel, 2180 West 25th St.,
Los Angeles. Calif.
P. — Born Waiahua, Oahu, Hawaii.
Pupil W. V. Cahill. Member: Calif.
AC, Laguna Beach Asso. Awards :
Silver Medal, Panama-Calif. Exp., San
Diego, 1916; 3rd Black prize, Calif. AC,
1918, 1919.
AMATEIS, Edmond R., 126 East 75th St.,
New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Rome, Italy, Feb. 7. 1897.
Pupil Beaux-Arts Inst, of Design.
Award : Honorable Mention-Prix de
Rome, 1921.
AMENT, R(obert) S(elfe), 2380 Grand
Ave., New York, N. Y.
P., E., C, W., T.— Born Brooklyn. Oct.
3, 1879. Pupil of Ward, Chase and
Henri. Me m b e r : Penguins.
AMES, Frances (Mrs. Linwood P. Ames),
"The Twinpike," Fort Plain, N. Y.
P.— Born Massina, N. Y., 1868. Pupil
of Chase in New York; Collin. Cour-
tois and Renvir in Paris. Work:
Portrait of C K. Gaines in St. Law-
rence University; President, Wisconsin
University; J. A. Blan chard, Republi-
can Club, New York City.
AMES, May, 9315 Miles Ave., Cleveland,
Ohio.
P., L., T.— Born Cleveland, Ohio. Pupil
Cleveland School of Art; R. I. School of
Design. Member: Women's Art
Club of Cleveland; N.A. Women PS.
Award : $25 by Independent Society
of N. Y.
AMICK, Robert Wesley, 63 Washington
Sq., New York, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Canon City, Colo., Oct. 15,
1879. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: SI 1913.
ANDERSEN, Hendrik Christian, 3 Piaz-
za del Popolo, Roine, Italy.
S. — Born Bergen, Norway, Apr. 17, 1872;
brought to the United States in Infancy
and settled at Newport 1873. Studied
in Boston, Paris, Naples, Rome.
Work: "Fountain of Life"; "Jacob
Wrestling with the Angel"; "Study of
an Athlete," "Fountain of Immortality."
etc. Author of "Creation of a World
Centre of Communication"; "Legal and
Economic Advantages of a World Cen-
tre of Communication"; "League of
Nations."
ANDERSEN, Martinus, 135 West 44th
St.; 402 West 22nd St., New York, N. Y.
P.. I.— Born Peru, Ind., Aug. 13, 1878.
Pupil of Herron Art Inst., Indian-
apolis, under J. O. Adams and Forsyth.
Member: S.Indp.A. Awards:
Hon. mention, Richmond, Ind., 1913,
1914 and 1915.' Work: Mural decora-
tions. City Hospital, Indianapolis.
ANDERSON, A(bram) A(rchlbald), 80
West 40th St.; h. 6 East 38th St., New
York, N. Y.
Port.P.— Born New York, 1847. Pupil
of Bonnat, Cabanel, Cormon and Collin
in Paris. Member: AWCS; founder
and hon. pres. Paris AAA.
ANDERSON, Dorothy VIsJu, 3130 Palmer
Sq., Chicago, 111.
P., T. — Born Christiania, Norway.
Pupil of AIC, ^V. M. Chase. Member:
AIC Alumni: Chicago AG; Chicago AC;
S. Indp.A. Award : Fine Arts Build-
ing Prize, Chicago AG, 1918.
ANDERSON. E(llen) Graham, 39 Charles
St., New York, N. Y.
P., I., E. — Born Lexington, Va. Pupil
of Charles Guerin, "Academic Moderne"
and E. A. Taylor in Paris.
ANDERSON. Elmer G., 2545 North Chad-
wick St., Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
338
ANDERSON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
APPEL
ANDERSON, Frederic A., Baker Bldg.,
1520 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa, (I.)
ANDERSON, G. Adolph, 522 Franklin
Ave., Ridgewood, N. J.
P. — Born Rochester, Minn., Ms," 21,
1877. Pupil of Jonas Lie and John
Johansen, Robert Henri. Member:
NAC.
ANDERSON, Harold, 57 Lawton St., New
Rochelle, N. Y. (I.)
ANDERSON, Helge, 152 Huntington Ave.,
Boston, Mass. (P.)
ANDERSON, Karl, Westport, Conn.
P.,I.— Born Oxford, O., Jan. 13, 1874.
Pupil of AIC; Colarossi Academy in
Paris; studied in Holland, Italy, and
Madrid. Member: Am. PS; SI;
Salma. C; ANA 1913; NAC; Contem-
porary. Awards : Silver medal, C. I.
Pittsburgh, 1910; Lippincott prize,
PAFA, 1916; Altman prize ($500), NAD,
1917; French gold medal, AIC, 1919;
gold medal NAC, 1920. Work: "The
Idlers," Art Institute of Chicago;
"Sisters," City Museum, St. Louis,
Mo.; "Apple Gatherers," Cleveland Mu-
seum; "The Heirloom," Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia.
ANDERSON, Oscar, 78 Rocky Neck Ave.;
h. 7 Davis St., Gloucester, Mass.
P. — Born Gotland, Sweden, July 31,
1873. Pupil of Charles Noel Flagg in
Hartford. Member: Conn.AFA;
S.Indp.A.; Arts and Crafts C, Hart-
ford. Award : Hon. mention and
popular prize, Conn.AFA 1917.
ANDERSON, Percy E., 58 East 56th St.,
New York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: Salma.C.
ANDERSON, Raymond H., 3304 Iowa St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa,
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
ANDERSON, Ronald, 54 West 37th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Lynn, Mass., Nov. 1, 1886.
Pupil Chicago Art Institute; Eric Pape;
George Lawlor. Member: Guild of
Free Lance Artists. Cover designs for:
Woman's Home Companion, Delinea-
tor, Saturday Evening Post, Colliers'
Weekly, McCall's, and Literary Digest.
ANDERSON, Ruth A. (Mrs. Samuel
Temple), 53 Charles St., Boston, Mass
P.— Born Carlisle, Pa. Pupil of An-
shutz, Breckenridge, Cecilia Beaux,
Chase and Jonas Lie. Member:
N.A. Women PS; Fellowship PAFA.
Award : European traveling scholar-
ship, PAFA 1912. Represented in the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
ANDRADE, Mary Fratz (Mrs. C. P. An-
drade), 710 Pembrook Ave., East Lans-
downe. Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
ANDREASEN-LINDBORG, Mrs. Inge-
borg, Katarinaviigen, 15 BII, 'Stock-
holm, SVeden.
P., E. — Born Hjorlunde, Denmark, Aug.
10, 1876. Pupil of AIC, and Royal Acad-
emy of Denmark. Member: Chi-
cago SE; Danish and Swedish Graphical
Societies. Awards : Gold medal.
Royal Academy of Denmark; bronze
medal, Baltic Exhibition. Etchings in
National Museum, Stockholm; Royal
Library, Copenhagen.
ANDREW, Richard, Fenway Studios, 30
Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.; h. 173 Strat-
ford St., West Roxbury, Mass.
P., E., T. — Pupil of Laurens and Gerome.
Member: Boston GA.
ANDREWS, Bernice. See Mrs. B. P. A.
Ferhow.
ANDREWS, Helen F(ranclt), Westover
School, Middlebury, Conn.; h. Farm-
ington. Conn.
P. — Born Farmington, Conn., Dec. 22,
1872. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Laurens
and Constant in Paris. Member:
Conn. AFA; S. Indp. A. Award:
Hudson prize. Conn. AFA, 1914.
ANQAROLA, Anthony, 1318 Rosedale
Ave.. Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Chicago, 111., Feb. 4, 1893.
Pupil of Harry M. Walcott. Member:
Chicago Indp. Art Soc; ASL of Chi-
cago; Chicago SA. Award: First
prize in ASL exhibition. Work: "In
the Ghetto," John Vanderpoel School.
ANGELA, Emillo, 558 Broome St., New
York, N. Y.
S.— M ember: YS.
ANGELL, Louise M., 88 School St., Fall
River, Mass.
Min.P. — M ember: Providence AC;
Providence WCC.
ANKENEY, John S(ltes), 906 Conley
Ave., Columbia, Mo.
P., T.— Born Xenia, O.. April 21, 1870.
Pupil of Twachtman, Chase, Du Mond,
Saint Gaudens and Ross In United
States; Lefebvre, Robert-Fleury, Aman-
Jean, Collin, Tudor Hart. Menard and
Simon in Europe. Mem'ber: Amer-
ican Art Asso., Paris; Wash. AC;
Western Arts Asso.; St. Louis AG;
NAC; Salma. C; Col. A. A. Work:
Portrait of Pres. R. H. Jesse and a
landscape in University of Missouri;
landscape in Lindenwood College, St.
Charles, Mo.
ANNAN, Abel H., Carnegie Studios, West
57th St., New York. N. Y.
P. — M ember: Chicago WCC.
ANNAN, Alice H., Carnegie Studios, 152
West 57th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born New York. Pupil of ASL of
N. Y., Henry B. Snell and Ben Foster.
Member: Chicago WCC; N.Y.Pen
and Brush C. Work: "Old Quebec,"
Poland Spring Gallery.
ANSBACHER, Jessie, Holbein Studio, 152
West 55th St.; h. West 81st St., New
York, N. Y.
P., E.— Born Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Pupil
William Chase. Member: N.A.
Women PS; Art Workers C; N.Y. Guild
of Artists.
APEL. Mrs. Marie, 3 Washington Sq.,
New York. N. Y.
S.— Member: N.A. W^omen PS; Ec-
lectics.
APPEL. Charles P., 57 Ely Place, East
Orange, N. J.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., July 11, 1857.
Pupil of Chase and Mora in New York.
Member: Salma.C, 1906.
339
APP LEGATE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
ARTHURS
APPLEGATE, Frank G., School of Indus-
trial Art, West State and Willow Sts.,
Trenton, N. J.; h. Edgehill Rd., Morris-
ville, Pa.
S., T.— Born Atlanta, 111., Feb. 9, 1882.
Pupil of Univ. of 111. under F. F. Fred-
erick; PAFA under Grafly; Verlet in
Paris. Instructor in modeling, Trenton
Industrial Art School.
APPLETON, Eliza Bridgham (Mrs. Ever-
ard Appleton), 42 Pleasant St., Rum-
ford. R. I.
S.— Born Nov. 9, 1882. Studied with
M. Ezekiel in Rome. Member:
Providence AC.
ARCHAMBAULT, A. Margaretta, 1710
Chestnut St.; h. 426 South 40th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Port, and Min.P.,T. — Born Philadelphia.
Pupil of PAFA; Julian Academy in
Paris. Member: Pa.S.Min.P. (sect.).
Fellowship PAFA; Plastic C; Phila.
AC. ; Phila. Alliance. Work: "Mi-
chael Hilleg-as." IndeDendence Hall,
Philadelphia; "Judge William Maclay
Hall," Law Court, Chambersburg, Pa.;
"Rev. Charles D. Cooper," Church of
the Holy Apostles, Philadelphia.
ARGYROPEDON, Emanuel, 135 East 59th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
ARLENT-EDWARDS, 8., care of Robert
Fridenberg, 22 West 56th St., New York,
N. Y.
Mezzotint Engr. — M ember: Salma.C.
ARMBRUSTER, A. E., 3102 No. High St.,
Columbus, O.
Scenic P. — M ember: Pen and Pencil
Club, Columbus, 1914; League of Co-
lumbus Artists.
ARMFIELD, Maxwell, 104 West 40th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I., C, W., L., T.— Born Ringwood,
England. Studied Birmingham, Paris,
Italy. Member: N. Y. Arch. Lg,
MacD.C; Mural P. Work: "Faus-
tine," Luxembourg Gallery. Illustrates
for "Century," "Asia," "Pall Mall," etc.
ARMINGTON, Mrs. Caroline H(elena), 70
Blvd. du Montparnasse, Paris, France.
P., E. — Born Brampton, Ontario, Can-
ada, Sept. 11, 1875. Pupil of Julian
Academy in Paris. Member: Chicago
SE; Calif. SE; Societe Nationale des
Beaux Arts. Etchings in the New
York Public Library; Luxembourg and
Petit Palais, Paris; British Museum
and South Kensington Museum, Lon-
don; National Gallery, Ottawa, Canada;
Bibliographie de Belgique, Brussels.
ARMINGTON, Frank M(ilton), 70 Blvd.
du Montparnasse, Paris, France.
P., E. — Born Fordwich, Ontario, Can-
ada, July 28, 1876. Pupil of Jean Paul
Laurens and Henri Royer at Julian
Academy in Paris. Member: Paris
AAA. Work: "Portrait of Yetta
Rianza" and "Pont Louis Philippe,
Paris," Luxembourg Gallery, Paris.
Etchings in Congressional Library,
Washington; New York Public Li-
brary; Luxembourg Gallery and Petit
Palais, Paris; British Museum and
South Kensington Museum, London;
Bibliographie de Belgique, Brussels;
National Gallery, Ottawa, Canada.
ARMS, Jessie. See Mrs. Botke.
ARMS, John Taylor, R.F.D. No. 9, Green-
field Hill, Fairfield, Conn.
I., E., A. — Born Washington, D. C,
April 19, 1887. Pupil of Ross Turner,
D. A. Gregg, Felton Brown and Des-
pradelle. Member: Calif. P.M.;
Calif. SE.; Soc. Canadian Painters;
Print Makers of America; Salma.C;
Chicago SE., Brooklyn SE., P.-G.
Work in Ellington (Conn.) Memorial
Church, Congressional Library; Mu-
seum of History, Science and Art, Los
Angeles; and N. Y. Public Library.
ARMSTRONG, Barbara, Fishing Village
Studio, Ogunquit, Me.; h. 1009 West
12th St., Canton, O.; summer, Ogunquit,
Me.
P.— Born Bellaire, O., Sept. 26, 1896.
Pupil of Hamilton E. Field.
ARMSTRONG, C. D., 1409 Union Bank
Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. A.A.
ARMSTRONG, Sam(uel (John), Inter-
laaken Drive, Steilacoorn Lake, Pierce
Co., Wash. P. O. address: News Trib-
une, Tacoma, Wash.
P., I. — Born Denver, Colo., Nov. 7,
1893. Pupil School of Industrial Art,
Phila.; Mechanics Art Inst., Rochester;
J. L. Gerome; Ferris. Member:
Fine Arts Asso., Tacoma, Wash.
Works in "Strand" and "Victoria" The-
atres, Rochester; "Liberty Theatre,"
Cleveland. Illustrations and cover de-
signs for "Sunset" Magazine.
ARMSTRONG, Voyle Neville, 717 North
I St., Bedford, Ind.
P., I., W.— Born Dobbin, West Va.,
Nov. 26, 1891. Pupil of James R. Hop-
kins, H. H. Wessel; Meakin, Eschen-
bach, Barnhorn and Duveneck at Cin-
cinnati Art Academy. Member:
Cincinnati AC. Illustrated "Saul of
Tarsus and Other Poems," and numer-
ous short stories. Writes for news-
papers and magazines. Work in Cin-
cinnati Art Club.
ARNOLD, Mrs. Clara Maxffeld, 22 Higli-
land Ave., East Providence, R. I.
P. — Born East Providence, R. I., Nov.
5, 1879. Member: Providence AC;
Providence WCC. Specialty, fruit and
flowers.
ARNOLD, F. Mcintosh, 510 Anderson St.,
Orlando, Fla.
I. — M ember: Salma.C.
ARNOLD, Harry, 208 Gillette Ave.,
Waukegan, 111.
P., T. — Born Penzance, Cornwall, Eng-
land. Studied at Colarossi Academy in
Paris and in England. Member: S.
Indp. A.
ARNOLD, Lucetta, 630 Negley Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pittsburgh AA 1916.
ARTHURS, Stanley (Massey), 1305 Frank-
lin St.; h. 2108 Boulevard, Wilmington,
Del.
Mural P., I.— Born Kenton, Del., Nov.
27, 1877. Pupil of Howard Pyle. M e m -
340
ASANGER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BABCOCK
ber: Salma.C; SI 1905; N.Y.Arch.Lg.
1912 (assoc); Mural P. Work: "Oc-
cupation of Little Rock, Ark., by Fed-
eral Troops," Governor's Room. State
Capitol, St. Paul, Minn.; "Landing
of De Vries at Swanendale, 1831,"
Delaware College, Newark, Del.; "The
Crusaders," State Capitol, Dover, Del.;
illustrated, "The War of 1812," by Capt.
A. T. Mahan; "The Bigelow Papers";
"The Children's Longfellow," etc.
Author, "On the Old Boston Post Road,"
"Early Steamboat Days," etc.
ASANGER, Jacob, 12 East 15th St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer. Browning, Mont.
P., E., C— Born Altoetting, Bavaria,
Jan. 20, 1887. Pupil of Munich Art
schools. Member: S. Indp. A.
ASH BROOK, Paul, 2 Hedgerow Lane,
Clifton, Cincinnati, O. (P.)
ASHE, Edmund M., Westport, Conn.
P., I., T.~Member: NYWCC; SI,
1901; Pittsburgh AA.
ASHFORD, F. C, 678 West End Ave.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
ASHLEY, Clifford W(arpen), 31 Eighth
St., New Bedford, Mass.
P.— Born New Bedford, Mass., Dec. 18,
1881. Pupil of Howard Pyle, George L.
Noyes. Member: Phila. AC; Salma.
C; N. Y. Arch. Lg.; Wilmington SFA;
New Bedford SFA. Work: "The
Whaling Industry," Public Library,
New Bedford, Mass.; "Outfitting the
■ Whaler," Brooklyn Museum. Author
and illustrator of "A Corner in Four
Posters" and "The Blubber Hunters."
ASHTON, Mrs. May Malone. McKinley
High School; 2430 Upton St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: S. Wash. A. ; Wash.
WCC.
ASPELL, S. B., 132 East 19th 'St., New
York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: SI.
ATHEY, Ruth C, Abbott Press, 114-116
East 13th St., New York, N. Y.; h. 34
Butler Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
P., T. — Born St. Louis, Mo., March 26,
1892. Pupil Pratt Institute. Mem-
ber: Brooklyn WCC.
ATKINS, A(lbert) H(enry), 45 Charles
St., Boston Mass. ; summer. Eastern
Point, Gloucester, Mass.
S., T. — Born Milwaukee, Wis. Pupil of
Cowles Art School in Boston; Julian
and Colarossi Academies in Paris
Member: NSS 1911; Providence AC
Arch. Lg. of N.Y.; Boston Arch.C.
Salma.C; Calif. P.M. Since 1909 mem-
ber of faculty, R. I. School of Design.
Award : Silver medal, Milwaukee
Art Institute, 1917. ^W o r k : "Copen-
hagen Memorial Fountain," Boston;
"Lapham Memorial," Milwaukee; World
War Memorial, Roslindale, Mass.
ATKINS, Florence E(lizabeth), 1040 Bush
St., San Francisco, Calif.
P., S. — Born in Louisiana. Pupil of H.
Sophie Newcomb Art School.
ATKINSON, E.
Hull.
Marie. See Mrs. M. A.
ATWATER, Jean Howe, 321 Whitney
Ave., New Haven, Conn.
P. — M ember: New Haven Paint and
Clay Club.
ATWOOD, Clara E. See Mrs. F. N. Fitts.
ATWOOD, William E(dwin), Gallery-on-
the-Moors; h. The House-on-the-Moors,
East Gloucester, Mass.
P. — Born Killinoly, Conn. Member:
Salma. C. ; Boston AC; NAC ; Copley S.
AUDIGIER, E. D. (Mrs. L. D. Audigier).
care Thomas Cook & Son, Rome, Italy.
(P.)
AULT, George C, 11 Charles St., New
York, N. Y.; h. 1023 Broad St., Newark,
N. J.; summer, Provincetown, Mass.
P. — Born Cleveland, Ohio, October 11,
1891. Pupil of St. John's Wood Art
School and Slade Art School in London.
Member : S. Indp. A.
AUSTIN, Charles P., San Juan Capis-
trano, Calif.
P.— Born Denver, Colo., March 23, 1883.
Pupil of Twachtman in New York, and
Castellucho, Paris.
AVERY. Hope, 35 East 62nd St., New
York, N. Y.
P., S. — M ember: N. A, Women PS.
AVINOFF, A(ndrew N.), Napanoch, N. Y.
P., E.— Born in Russia, Feb. 1, 1884.
Sudied in Russia. Member: N.Y.-
WCC
AVER, J. C, 39 West 67th St., New York,
N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
AYLWARD, W(illiam) J(ames), Salma-
gundi Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
I.— Born Milwaukee, Wis., Sept. 5, 1875.
Pupil of Howard Pyle. Member:
AWCS; NYWCC; Phila.WCC; Salma.C;
A.Pund S. Awards: Shaw purchase
prize, Salma.C. 1911; Beck prize, Phila.
WCC 1912; Illus. prize, Salma. C, 1914.
AZADIGIAN, Manuel, 1854 North Darien
St., Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
AZ2I, Marius A., 120 West 11th 'St., New
York, N. Y.
S.— Born West Hoboken, N. J., Aug. 19.
1892. Pupil of Carl Bitter and A. S.
Calder; Royal Academy of Fine Arts,
Milan, Italy. Member: Y. S.
BABCOCK, Dean. Long's Peak, Colo.
P.— Born in Canton, 111., Jan. 14. 1888.
Pupil of John Vanderpoel, Robert
Henri and Helen Hyde. Member:
Denver AA.
BABCOCK, E(lizabeth) J (ones), (Mrs. J.
W. Babcock, II.), 571 Park Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Keokuk, la., July 19, 1887.
Pupil of Duveneck and Chase. Mem-
ber: N.A. Women PS; Guild of Free
Lance Artists. Illustrates for "Scrib-
ner's "Harper's," etc.
BABCOCK, R(ichard), Woodland Road,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Mural P., I. — Born Denmark, la., June
4, 1887. Pupil of AIC; Weinhold and
Eisengraber School of Painting and
Stiitische Gewerbe Schule in Munich,
341
BACH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BAKER
Germany. Member: ASL of Chi-
cago; Chicago WCC. "Work: "Rus-
sians Outside Port Arthur," U. S. Grant
Hotel, San Diego, Calif.
BACH, Florence Julia, 1110 Elmwood
Ave.; h. 557 Bird Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
P., S.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., June 24,
1887. Pupil of Art School of Albright
Art Gallery, Buffalo; ASL of N. Y.
under Chase and Du Mond. Mem-
ber: Buffalo SA. Award : Hon.
mention, Buffalo SA, 1915: Fellowship
prize, Buffalo SA, 1917; hon. mention,
Buffalo SA, 1918, 1919 and 1921. Repre-
sented in Buffalo Fine Arts Academy.
BACKUS, Mary G., Santa Fe., N. M. (P.)
BACON, Irving R., R. F. D. 4, Redford,
Mich.
P.— Born Fitchburg, Mass., Nov. 29,
1875. Pupil of Chase in New York;
Carl von Marr and Heinrich von Zugel
in Munich. Work: "Village Street
Scene." Louisville Assoc; "The Lit-
tle Old Man of the Woods," D. & C.
Steamer, Detroit; Fellowcraft Club,
Detroit.
BACON, Kate L. See Mrs. Kate B. Bond.
BACON. Peggy, 152 West 55th St.; 162
East 46th St.. New York. N. Y. ; sum-
mer, Rogers Rock. Lake George, N. Y.
P.— Born Ridgefield, Conn., May 2, 1895.
Pupil of Jonas Lie. Member: S.
Indp.A.
BAER, Herbert M., 655 Fifth Ave.; h.
601 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.;
summer, Westport, Conn.
P., Engr., Arch. — Born New York, N.
Y., Nov. 13, 1879. Pupil of Ware at
Columbia University. Member:
SBAA; Arch. Lg. of N. Y. ; 'S. Indp. A.
Award: Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1905. Decorations in Park and Tilford's,
New York City.
BAER, William J(acob), 226 West 59th
St., New York. N. Y. ; h. 174 Walnut St.,
Fast Or?) nge, N. .J.
Min.P. — Born Cincinnati, O., Jan. 29,
1860. Pupil of McMicken School of De-
sign, Cincinnati; Royal Academy, Mu-
nich. Member: Am. S. Min.P. (treas.),
ANA.; Calif. S. Min. P. (hon.).
Awards: Bronze medal, Paris Exp.,
1900; bronze medal. Pan. Am. Exp.,
Buffalo 1^01: silver mednl, Charl-^ston
Exp., 1902; hors concours, St. Louis
Exp., 1904 (Jury of Awsrds't: gold
medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915. Work:
"Aurora" and "Nvmph," Walters Gal-
lery, Baltimore; "Ladv in Pink," Jaffe
Collection. Hamburg: "Daphne," and
portrait in oils, Brooklyn Institute Mu-
seum.
BAILEY, Henrietta D(avldson), Newcomb
Pottery. Audubon PI. and Plum St.; h.
^?A5 De S'oto «t.. New Orlenns. La.
P., C, T. — Born New Orleans, La.
Pupil of Newcomb Art Schools, New
Orleans; Arthur W. Dow in New York.
Member: NOAA; Baltimore Handi-
craft C. Ronresented in Delgado Mu-
seum, New Orleans, La.; City Art Mu-
seum, 'St. Louis.
BAILEY, Henry Lewis, 414 Mortgage
Guarantee Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif.
E.— Member: Calif. AC; Calif. P.M.
BAILEY, Henry T(urner), Cleveland
School of Art, Magnolia Drive and
Juniper Road, Cleveland, O.
L,C.,T.,W.,L.— Born North Scituate,
Mass., Dec. 9, 1865. Pupil of Mass.Nor-
mal Art School in Boston. Member:
Cleveland AA; College AA; Cleveland
SA; Cleveland A. LA.; director, Chau-
tauqua Summer School of Arts and
Crafts. 1906-1916; dean, Cleveland
School of Art, 1917; director, Cleveland
School of Art and the John Huntington
Polytechnic Institute, Cleveland, 1919.
BAILEY, Minnie Moly, 3908 Swiss Ave.,
Dallas, Tex.; summer, Southbridge,
Mass.
P., L— Born Oberlin, Kan., Oct. 29, 1890.
Pupil of Hawthorne, Connah and Pape.
BAILEY. Robert IVI., 15 Beacon St., Bos-
ton, Mass.
P. — M ember: Boston AC.
BAILEY, Vernon Howe, 14 East 60th St.,
New York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: SI.
BAINS, Ethel Franklin Betts, 104 Harvey
St., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
I.— M ember: Fellowship PAPA, Phila.
WCC. Award: Bronze medal, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915.
BAIRD, Eugene Q., 293 Magnolia Ave.,
Jersey City, N. J. (P.)
BAIRNSFATHER, A. L., 53 West 37th
St., New York, N. Y. (P.)
BAKER, Bryant, 1026 Vermont Ave.,
Wash., D. C.
S. — Born London. July S, 1881.
Pupil of London Royal Academy of
Arts. Member: Fellow, Royal So-
ciety of British Sculptors. Work:
Statue of King Edward VII at Hudders-
field, Yorkshire, England; "Prince
Olav," owned by the Queen of Norway;
"Snowden Andrews Memorial." at Win-
chester. Va.; "Edward B. Wright Me-
morial," Austin, Texas; busts of Presi-
dent Wilson and Senator H. C. Lodge,
Gen. P. C. March, Gen. J. J. Pershing,
Hon. Herbert Hoover.
BAKER, Conn, 44 East Norwich Ave.,
Columbus, O.
P. — M ember: Columbus Pen and
Pencil Club.
BAKER, Donald, Westerville, O.
P. — M ember: Columbus Pen and
Pencil Club; S. Indp. A.
BAKER, Mrs. Elizabeth Gowdy, 24 Gra-
mercy Park, New York, N. Y. ; summer,
<^repnwich. Conn.
P. — Born Xenia. O. Pupil of ASL..
Cooper Union and N. Y. School of
Art in New York; PAFA; Cowles Art
School in Boston; studied in Rome,
Florence and Paris: PAFA. Mem-
1) e r : NAC. Specialty, Portraits in
pure aquarelle and in oil.
BAKER, F. A. Fuller, 189 Fulton Ave.,
Hempstead, L. I., N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A,
342
BAKER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BALL
BAKER, Frederic Van Vliet, 39 West
67th iSt., New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born New York, Nov. 6, 1876.
Pupil of Pratt Inst., Brooklyn; Courtois
in Paris. Member: Salma.C; Assoc.
Soc.Nat.des Beaux-Arts, 1901. Instruct-
or, Pratt Institute.
BAKER, George H(erbert), 605i/^ Main
St.; h. 22i South Fifth St., Richmond,
Ind.
P.— Born Muncie, Ind., Feb. 14, 1878.
Studied at Cin.A.A. Member: Rich-
mond Art Assoc; Indiana Artists' C; S.
Indp. A.; Wayne County S. Indp. A.
Awards: First prize, Muncie, Ind.,
1910; second hon. mention, Richmond,
Ind., 1910; firsc prize, Richmond, Ind.,
1913 and 1915.
BAKER, Geo. O., care of Charles Everett
Johnson; h. 941 Glengyle Place, Chi-
cago, 111.
P., I.— Born Mexico, Mo., Jan. 2, 1882.
Pupil of Laurens and Richard Miller,
Paris. Member: SI.
BAKER, Jesse, 135 Zara St., Pittsburgh,
Pa.
P.— M ember: Pittsburgh AA 1916.
BAKER, Mary F(rances), 2263 Caron-
delet St., New Orleans, La.
P.— Born New Orleans, Oct. 28, 1879.
Pupil of Newcomb Art School; PAFA.
Member: New Orleans Art Assoc.
Award : Silver medal. New Orleans
Art Assoc.
BAKER, IVI(aria) May, 408 Raleigh
Ave., Norfolk, Va. ; summer, Wytheville,
Va.
P., T.— Born Norfolk, Va., Sept. 25, 1890.
Pupil of PAFA, Corcoran Art School,
Charles Hawthorne, C. C. Critcher,
Webster. Member: Norfolk SA;
Wash. AC. Award : Irene Leache
prize, Norfolk Society of Arts, 1920.
BAKER, S(amuel) B(urtis), care of Cor-
coran Gallery, Washington, D. C.
P.— Born Boston, Sept, 29, 1882. Pupil
of Major, De Camp and Edward H.
Barnard. Work: Portraits in the
Massachusetts State House and Girls'
High School, Boston; Harvard Law
School, Cambridge, Mass.; Pinkerton
Academy, Derry, N. H. Instructor at
Corcoran Gallery.
BAKOS, Joseph G., Old Palace, Santa
Fe, N. M.; h. 52 Bissell Ave., Buffalo,
N. Y.
P., S., T.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Sept. 23,
1891. Pupil of J. E. Thompson. Mem-
ber: Santa Fe SA.
BALANO, Paula Himmelsbach (Mrs.
Cosme Balano), 54 Linden Ave., Lans-
downe. Pa.
P., I. — Born Leipsic, Germany, May 10,
1878. Pupil of PAFA under Chase, Ce-
cilia Beaux and Walter Appleton Clark;
Mucha in Paris. Member: Phila.
WCC; Fellowship PAFA; NYWCC; N.
A. Women PS; Phila. Alliance. Award:
Shillard gold medal for water colors.
Plastic C, 1916. Work in Fellowship
PAFA collection. Member of faculty
of the Philadelphia School of Design
for Women.
BALCOM, Lowell L(eroy), 136 West 65th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., I., E.— Born Kansas City, Mo., Oct.
22, 1887. Pupil of J. D. Patrick.
Member: Guild of Free Lance A
Represented in Kansas City Public
Library.
BALDRIDGE, C(yrus) Leroy, Harmon-
on-Hudson, N. )^.
I., W.— Born Alton, N. Y., May 27, 1889.
Pupil of Frank Holme. Member:
Guild of Free Lance Artists.
BALDWIN, Burton Clarke, 805 Junior
Terrace, Chicago, 111.
I.— Born Danville, 111., 1891. Pupil of
Chicago Academy of Fine Arts. Mem-
ber: Palette and Chisel C.
BALFOUR, Mrs. Helen, 310 Mt. Wash-
ington Drive, Los Angeles, Calif.
P., L— Born London, Eng., July 11, 1857.
Pupil of AIC. Member: Calif. AC.
Illustrated "Sunset Highways."
BALINK, Hendricus C(ornelius), Taos,
N. M.
P., E. — Born Amsterdam, Holland, June
10, 1882. Pupil of National State Acad-
emy of Amsterdam; C. L. Dake, V. der
Waay, Derkinderen; etching under du
Pont and Arst. Member: Chicago
SA.
BALL, Alice Worthington, 213 West
Monument St., Baltimore, Md.
P. — Born in Boston. Pupil of Collin,
Courtois and Hitchcock in Paris.
Member: N.A. Women PS. ; Conn.
AFA.; NAC; Balto.WCC; S. Indp. A.;
Wash. AC. ; Phila. AC. Award: Hud-
son prize. Conn. AFA, 1915.
BALL, Caroline Peddle (Mrs. Bertrand
E. Ball), Westfield, N. J.
S.— Born Terre Haute, Ind., Nov. 11,
1869. Pupil of Augustus Saint Gaudena
and Cox in New York. Member:
Ind. 'SS. Award: Hon. mention,
Paris Exp., 1900. Work: "Victory,"
in quadriga in U. 'S. building at Paris
Exp., 1900; memorial corbels, Grace
Church, Brooklyn; memorial fountains
at Flushing, L. I., and Auburn, N. Y.
BALL, Linn (B.), 163 West 23rd St.; h.
181 West 75th St., New York, N. Y.;
summer, Hotel Bon Air, Landing, N. J.
P., I., C— Born Milwaukee, Wis., Sept.
25, 1891.
BALL, Mary Roberts. See Mrs. Joseph
Price.
BALL, Robert, 9 West 47th St., New York,
N. Y.
P., I. — Born Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 7,
1890. Pupil of Richard Miller in Paris
and Brittany. Member: Phila. AC;
Salma. C. A w a r d : O. H. Dean prize.
Artists of Kansas City and vicinity,
1915.
BALL, Rutli N(orton), Indian Arts Build-
ing, Balboa Park; h. 4141 Normal St.,
San Diego, Calif.
S. — Born Madison, Wis. Pupil of
J. Liberty Tadd in Philadelphia; St.
Louis School FA; Cincinnati Art Acad-
emy. Member: Cincinnati Women's
AC; Three Arts C. and Crafters Com-
pany, Cincinnati; San Diego AG. Rep-
343
BALL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BARNARD
resented in City Art Museum, St. Louis;
Cincinnati Art Museum; San Diego Art
Museurn, Marine Base, San Diego, Calif.
BALL, Thomas Watson, Old Lyme, Conn.
P., C. — Born New York City, July 7,
1863. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under
Beckwith, Mowbray and Du Mond.
Member: NAC; Salma C. ; Municipal
AS of N. Y.; American Inst. Graphic A.;
NSC; Alliance; MacD. C; Work:
Ceiling decoration in Chapel of the
Intercession, New York City; ceiling
decoration in Trinity Chapel, Buffalo;
figure panels in font, St. Thomas'
Church, New York City; figure panels
in reredos. Chapel of Newman School,
Hackensack, N. J.
BALLANTINE, Edward James, 36 Grove
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Edinburgh, Scotland, Dec. 3,
1885. Member: S. Indp. A.
BALLIN, Florence. See Mrs, Cramer.
BALLIN, Hugo, 662 Lexington Ave., New
York, N. Y. ; h. Saugatuck, Conn.
Mural P. — Born New York, N. Y.,
March 7, 1879. Pupil of ASL of N.Y.;
studied in Rome and Florence. Mem-
ber: ANA 1906; Mural P; N. Y.
Arch.Lg. 1904; Lotos C; Nat.Inst.A.L.;
Union Inter, des Beaux-Arts, Paris;
Arts Club, Rome, Italy. Awards :
Shaw purchase, SAA 1905; President's
prize, N,Y.Arch,Lg, 1906; Clarke prize,
NAD 1906; second Hallgarten prize,
NAD 1907; Isidor medal, NAD 1907;
N,Y, Arch.Lg. 1908; bronze medal, Bue-
nos Aires Exp,, 1910. Work: "The
European Sybil'! and "The Lesson" in
National Gallery, Washington; "Under
the Pergola," Municipal Gallery, Mont-
clair, N. J.; 18 paintings on ceiling
and walls of Governor's Room, Capitol,
Madison, Wis.; "The Lute Player,"
Annmary Brown Memorial Museum,
Providence, R. I.
BALLINGER, H(arry) R(ussell), 1947
Broadway; h. 15 West 67th St., New
York, N. Y.
I. — Born Port Townsend, Wash., Sept.
4, 1892. Pupil Maurice Braun, ASL of
N. Y., and Harvey Dunn. Mem-
ber: Salma. C. ; SI. Illustrations for
"Cosmopolitan," "Good Housekeeping,"
"Saturday Evening Post," "McClures,"
etc.
BALSEIRO, Ernesto, Arecileo, Porto Rico,
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BANCROFT, Milton Herbert, Salmagundi
Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
P,,I.,T, — Born Newton, Mass,, Jan. 1,
1867, Pupil of Mass, Normal Art School
in Boston; PAFA in Philadelphia;
Courtois, Callot, Delance and Girardot
in Paris, Member: Salma.C. 1904;
Phila. Sketch, C; N.Y,Arch,Lg,1907. Prof,
of Art, Swarthmore Col,, 1886-92; Supt.
of Schools, PAFA, 1892-94, Work:
Portraits in Park Bank, New York
City, etc; mural decoration, Panama-
Pacific Exp., 1915.
BAN HAM, Louis, 18 Jones St., Jersey
City, N. J.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A,
BANKSON, G(len) P(eyton), 5222 Lacey
St., Spokane, Wash.; h. Valley, Wash.
P., C. — Born Mount Hope, Wash., Sept.
7, 1890. Self-taught.
BANNISTER, Eleanor C(unnlngham),
Ovington Bldg., 246 Fulton St,; h. 109
Cambridge Place, Brooklyn, New York,
N. Y,
P. — Born New York, N. Y. Pupil of
Whittaker in Brooklyn; Constant and
Lefebvre in Paris. Member: Brook-
lyn SA. Work: "Portrait of Rev.
R, S. Storrs," Brooklyn Museum.
BARBER, Alice. See Mrs. Charles H,
Stephens.
BARCLAY, McClelland, 918 Wrigley Bldg.;
h. 5058 Sheridan Road, Chicago, 111.
P., I.— Born St. Louis, Mo., May 9, 1891.
Pupil of H. C. Ives, George R. Bridg-
man, Thomas Fogarty. Member: ASL
of N. Y.; Chicago AC; Art Service
League, Chicago. Awards: Navy pos-
ter nrize ($250), Committee on National
Preparedness, 1917; first prize U. S. M.
C. recruiting poster; first prize for alle-
gorical painting of Commerce of Chi-
cago from Chicago Association of Com-
merce.
BARHYDT, Jean K. (Mrs. George Weed
Barhydt), The Belnord, 548 Orange St.,
New Haven, Conn.; summer, Center
Harbor, N. H.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., July 14, 1868.
Pupil of G. A. Thompson. Member:
N. A. Women PS.; Conn. AFA; New
Haven PCC,
BARILE, Xavier J., 7 West 14th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I., E. — Born in Italy, March 18,
1891. Pupil of Chapman; Mora; Sloan
and Dodge. Member: ASL of N.
Y.; S. Indp. A.
BARKER, Katherine, The Avondale, 39th
and Locust Sts., Philadelphia, Pa.; sum-
mer, Cliffdale Farm, Croton-on-Hudson,
N, Y,
P., T.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., Dec. 2,
1891. Pupil of Breckenridge, Anshutz,
Carlson, Hale, Beaux and Vonnoh.
Member : Fellowship PAFA.
BARKSDALE, Ethel duPont, Jr., Mt.
Salem Lane, Wilmington, Del,
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BARLOW, Myron, 114 Theodore St., De-
troit, Mich.; and Trepied, Etaples
(Pas-de-Calais'>. France,
P.— Born Ionia, Mich,, 1873, Pupil of
AIC; Gerome and Ecole des Beaux-Arts
in Paris, Member: Paris AAA;
Paris SAP; Soc.Nat,BA, Paris; Phila,
AC, Awards : Gold medal, St, Louis
Exp,, 1904; gold medal, P,-P,Exp., San
F., 1915, Work: "Mother Love,"
Pennsylvania Academy, Philadelphia;
"Liseuse," Palais des Beaux Arts,
Douai, France; "Pecheuse," Detroit
Museum of Art,
BARNARD, Elinor M. (Mrs, Komroff),
601 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y,
P. — Born Kensington, London, England,
Aug. 29, 1872. Member: NYWCC; N.
A. Women PS. Specialty, portraits in
water color.
344
BARNARD
WHO*S WHO IN ART
BARRATT
BARNARD, George Grey, 454 Fort Wash-
ington Ave., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Bellefonte, Pa., May 24, 1863.
Pupil of AIC; earlier at the Ecole des
Beaux-Arts in Paris. Member:
Assoc. Soc. Nationale des Beaux-Arts,
France; Nat. Inst. A. L,.; Ind. SS.
Awards : Gold medal. Paris Exp.,
1900; gold medal, Pan. -Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; gold medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904. Work: "Two Natures," Metro-
politan Museum; "Pan," Central Park,
New York; "I Feel Two Natures," Art
Institute of Chicago; "Labor," State
Capitol, Harrisburg, Pa.
BARNARD, Josephine W., 117 Waverly
PL, New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., April 22,
1869. Pupil of Dow, Snell and Carlson
in United States; Stanhope Forbes in
England. Member : N.A. Women
PS.
BARNES, E(rnest) H(arrison), 1308
Geddes Ave., Ann Arbor, Mich.
P. — Born Portland, Chautauqua Co.,
N.Y., May 10, 1873. Pupil of Will Howe
Foote and Henry R. Poore; AIC and
ASL of N. Y. Member: S.Indp.A.
Teacher freehand drawing and painting,
Univ. of Mich.
BARNES, Gertrude J(ameson) (Mrs.
Henry A. Barnes), 1812 Emerson Ave.,
South, Minneapolis, Minn.
P. — Born Tyngsboro, Mass., Oct. 23,
1865. Pupil of Minneapolis School of
Fine Arts under Douglas Volk; Cowles
Art School in Boston under Dennis M.
Bunker; Snell and Lathrop in New
York; C. H. Woodbury. Member:
Artists League of Minneapolis;
Awards : First prize for landscape,
Minnesota State Art Soc, 1904; hon.
mention, Minnesota State Art Soc,
1908, 1910 and 1914; hon. mention Min-
neapolis AI 1915; bronze medal for oils,
St. Paul Inst., 1916. Work: "In the
Orchard," Minnesota State Art Society,
St. Paul; "Trees by the Sea," Wom-
an's Club, Minneapolis.
BARNES, Matthew, 1456 Jones St., San
Francisco, Calif. (P.)
BARNETT, Bion, care of Mrs. C. W.
Camp, 122 East 82nd 'St., New York,
N. Y. (P.)
BARNETT, Tom P., 3832 Lindell Boule-
vard, St. Louis ,Mo.
P., A.— Born St. Louis, Feb. 11, 1870.
Studied architecture under George I.
Barnett and painting under Paul Cor-
noyer. Member: Chicago AG; NAC;
St. Louis AG; Salma.C. 1920. Awards:
Gold medal for architecture. La. Pur-
chase Exp., St. Louis, 1904; bronze
medal for architecture and painting',
Portland Exp., 1905; first Ives lans-
scape prize ($100), St. Louis Artists'
Guild, 1914, 1915, 1917 and 1919; Scott
Memorial prize ($100), St. Louis AG,
1918; first Architectural prize. Cook
County. Court House, Chicago, Paint-
ing: "Winter Snow," St. Louis Mu-
seum of Fine Arts.
BARNEY, Mrs. Walter. See Stevens,
Esther.
345
BARNEY, J. Stewart, h. 31 West 37th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., A., W.— Born Richmond, Va., Oct.,
1869.
BARNHORN, Clement J(ohn), Art Mu-
seum; h. 578 East Fourth St., Cincin-
nati, O.
S.— Born Cincinnati, 1857. Pupil of
Rebisso in Cincinnati; Bouguereau,
Peuch, Mercie, Ferrier and Julian
Academy in Paris. Member: NSS
1899; Cincinnati AC. Awards:
Hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1895; bronze
medal, Paris Exp., 1900; hon. mention,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904. Work:
"Theodore Thomas," Cincinnati Music
Hall; "Fountain," Shortridge High
School, Indianapolis; fountain figure.
Prince George Hotel, New York;
"Fountain," Hugh High School, Cin-
cinnati; "Magdalen," Cincinnati Art
Museum; "Portrait Bust," Public Libra-
ry, Cincinnati; "Madonna and Child,"
Cathedral fagade, Covington, Ky.;
"Fountain," Conservatory of Music, Cin-
cinnati; eleven panels in Cincinnati
Court House; "Portrait of Major C. R.
Holmes," Cincinnati General Hospital;
Dr. P. S. Connor, relief. Good Samaritan
Hospital, Cincinnati.
BARNS, Cornelia (Mrs. C. Garbett), Mor-
gan Hill, Calif.
P., I.— Born New York, Sept. 25, 1888.
Pupil of Twachtman and Chase. Illus-
trates for the "Liberator."
BARNUM, Emily Keene, Champs des
Tisons, La Sallaz sur Lausanne, Swit-
zerland.
P., T.— Born New York, N. Y., March 29,
1874. Pupil of Vibert in Paris; Irving
R. Wiles in New York and ASL of
N.Y. Member: Pen and Brush Club.
Specialty, water color.
BARON E, Antonio, 771 Lexing-fon Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., E., T.— Born Valle Dolmo, Sicily,
May 20, 1889. Pupil of Du Mond, Chase
and Mora. Member : Chicago SE;
PortP. Award : Bronze medal for
etching, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915; gold
medal, Phila. AC, 1917.
BARR, Paul E., Goldsmith, Ind.; h. Tip-
ton, Ind.
P., W., L., T.— Born near Goldsmith,
Ind., Nov. 25, 1892. Pupil of AIC.
Member: Tipton AA; S. Indp. A.;
Chicago AC; Indiana AC. Work in
Goldsmith Public Schools.
BARR, William, 311 Lyon St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif.
P., I. — Born Glasgow, Scotland, Apr.
26, 1867. Studied in Glasgow. Mem-
ber: Glasg-ow Art Inst. ; Paisley Art
Inst. Work: "Paisley Cross, 1910,"
and "Portrait of Provost Peter Eadie,"
owned by the town of Paisley; "Por-
trait of Thomas Boyle," City Hall, San
Francisco.
BARRATT, Watson, 330 West 39th St.;
h. 168 Waverly PI., New York, N. Y.;
summer. Highlands, N. C
I.— Born Salt Lakei City, Utah, June 29,
1884. Pupil of Howard Pyle, Henri,
BARTLETT
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BARTLETT
Silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; hon.
mention, C.I.Pittsburgh, 1908; Cahn
prize, AIC 1910; silver medal, P.-P.Exp,,
San F., 1915. Work: Mural paintings
and windows, Chicago University Club;
mural paintings, University of Chicago;
Second and Fourth Presbyterian Church;
Council Chamber, City Hall, Chicago;
landscape, "Roman Afternoon," Car-
negie Institute, Pittsburgh; "Blue
Blinds," Friends of American Art, Chi-
cago; "Evening White," Chicago Mu-
nicipal purchase. "Canton Street," Cor-
coran Gallery; mural paintings. Burn-
ham Library, Art Inst., Chicago.
BARTLETT, Madeleine A(delaide), 755
Boylston St.; h. 652 Huntington Ave.,
Boston, Mass.
S. — Born Woburn, Mass. Pupil of
Cowles Art School and Henry H. Kit-
son. Member: Conn. AFA.
BARTLETT, Minnie E., 30 The Knick-
erbocker, 611 East 12th St., Indianap-
olis, Ind.
P., I. — Born Seymour, Ind., June 29,
1890. Pupil of Wheeler, Stark and
Forsyth. Member: Indiana Artists
Assoc.
BARTLETT, Paul W(ayland), 7 West
43rd St., New York, N. Y. ; Third and
Randolph Sts., N. E., Washington, D. C,
and 16 Rue du Commandeur, Paris,
France.
S.— Born New Haven, Conn., 1865.
Son of T. H. Bartlett. Pupil of
Cavelier, Fr^miet and Rodin in Paris.
Member: NSS 1893; Nat. Inst. AL;
Am. Acad AL. Paris AAA (acting
pres.) Royal Acad, of Belgium (As-
soc); Institute of France (Cor.);
ANA 1916; NA 1917; S. Wash. A.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1887; gold medal. Pan- Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; grand prize, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
first medal, Li6ge Exp., 1905; Che-
valier of the Legion of Honor, 1895.
Officer, 1908. Work: "Bear Tamer,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York;
monument to Joseph Warren, Boston;
"Puritans," Capitol at Hartford, Conn.;
decorative figures. New York Public
Library; equestrian "Lafayette," Square
of the Louvre, Paris; "Reading Figure"
and "Erect Figure," Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia;
plaster, "Boy with Garlands," Art In-
stitute of Chicago; "Columbus" and
"Michelangelo," Library of Congress,
Washington, D. C; pediment. House of
Representatives, Washington, D. C. ;
"Patriotism," Duluth, Minn.; "Frank-
lin," Waterbury, Conn. "Lafayette,"
Metz; "Alexander Agassiz," Boston;
"Robert Morris," Philadelphia.
BARTLETT, Truman H., 17 Parley Vale,
Jamaica Plain, Mass.
S., W., L., T.— Born Dorset, Vt., Oct.
25, 1835. Pupil of Fremiet in Paris.
Work: "Wells" bronze statue, Hart-
ford, Conn.; "Benedict" cemetery mon-
ument, Waterbury, Conn.; "Clark"
cemetery monument, Hartford, Conn.;
many busts and statuettes. Writings:
"Life of Dr. William RImmer," "Phy-
siognomy of Abraham Lincoln," "Epo-
Chase and Penfield. Member: SI.
Specialty, stage designing. Designed
entire productions of "Sinbad," "Bom-
bo," "The Last Waltz," "Blossomtime,"
Shubert Winter Garden Shows of 1918,
1919, "The Lonely Heart," "Silver Fox,"
"Florodora," "Monte Christo, Jr."
BARRET, Laura A., National Arts Club,
15 Gramercy Park, New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BARRETT, Elizabeth Hunt (Mrs. Ed-
ward N. Barrett), Amherst, Va.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., Jan. 9, 1863.
Pupil of NAD.
BARRIE, Erwin (S.), 1188 Asbury Ave.,
Hubbard Woods, 111.
P.— Born Canton, O., June 3, 1886.
Pupil AIC. Member: Chicago AC;
Business Men's AC of Chicago.
BARRINGTON, Amy L., 3089 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
BARRY, Edith C(leaves), 83 South Ful-
ler ton Ave.. Montclair, N. J.
P. — Born Boston, Mass. Studied In
New York and France. Member:
N. A. Women PS; Conn. AFA; S. Indp.
A.; ASL of N.Y.
BARRY, John J(oseph), Burton Arms
Apts., 680 Witmer St., Los Angeles,
Calif. ; summer, Carmel, Calif.
E. — Born Hamilton, Ontario, Canada,
June 21, 1885. Pupil of Ernest Haskell.
Member: Calif. SE; Calif. Print
Makers.
BARRY, Marietta, 2555 Fifth Ave., West,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
BARSE, George R(andolph), Jr., Kato-
nah, Westchester Co., N, Y.; and Cen-
tury Assoc, 7 West 43d St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born Detroit, Mich., July 31, 1861.
Pupil of Cabanel, Boulanger and Le-
febvre in Paris. Member: ANA
1898, NA 1899; SAA 1899; Century As-
soc. Awards : First Hallgarten
prize, NAD 1895; Shaw Fund purchase,
SAA 1898; silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901. Work: Eight panels in
Library of Congress, Washington, D. C.
BARTLE, Sara N(orwood), 2300 18th St.,
^Vashington, D. C.
Min. P. — Born Washington, D. C. Pu-
pil of Carroll Beckwith; ASL of N. Y.;
ASL of Washington.
BARTLETT, Dana, 231 South Spring St.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
P., I., T. — Born Ionia. Mich., Nov.
19, 1878. Pupil ASL of N. Y. and Wil-
liam M. Chase. Member: Calif. AC;
Calif. WCC; N. Y. WCC; Print Makers
of Calif.; Laguna Beach AA.
BARTLETT, Elizabeth M. P., 136 Hemen-
way St., Boston, Mass.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BARTLETT, Frederic Clay, Fort Lauder-
dale, Fla. ; summer, Lake Geneva, Wis.
P.— Born Chicago, June 1, 1873. Pupil
of Gysis in Munich; Collin, Aman-Jean
and Whistler in Paris. Member: Al-
lied AA; Chicago SA; Mural P;
Royal Academy, Munich. Awards:
346
BARTON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BAY LOS
cal Portraits of Abraham Lincoln,"
essays on Fremiet, Rodin, Aube and
Millet, etc. Instructor in modeling at
Mass. Inst, of Technology for twenty-
three years.
BARTON, Loren (Roberta), 993 South
Wiiton Place, Los Angeles, Calif.
P., K. — Born Oxford, Mass. M em-
ber: Calif. AC; Calif. PM; Calif. SE.
Award : 1st prize, Arizona Art Ex-
hibition.
BARTON, Ralph, 47 West 68th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., I., C, W.— Born Kansas City, Mo.,
Aug. 14, 1891. Member: SI; Guild
of Free Lance A. Illustrates for maga-
zines.
BARTOO, Catherine R., 102 Oak St.,
Binghamton, N. Y.
P. — Born Williamsport, Pa. Pupil of
Chase; Henri; Mora. Member: N.
Y. Soc. Painters.
BASING, Charles, 163 Clymer St., Brook-
lyn; h. Salmagundi Club, 45 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Province-
town, Mass.
P.— ±iom in Australia, July 23, 1865.
Pupil of Bouguereau and Ferrier. M e m-
ber- NYWCC; Salma. C. ; AWCS; Al-
lied AA; Chicago WCC. Work: Mu-
ral decorations in Columbia Univer-
sity Club, New York; Carnegie Insti-
tute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa.;
ceiling in N. Y. C. R. R. Station.
BATCH ELDER, Mrs. E. B. L. See Evelyn
Longman.
BATCHELOR, C. D., 226 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: SI.
BATEMAN, John, 230 Park Ave., East,
Haddonfield, N. J.
S.— Born Cedarville, N. J., Feb. 14,
1877. Pupil of School of Industrial Arts,
Philadelphia; PAFA; Charles Grafiy;
studied in Paris. Member: NSS
1912; Fellowship PAFA. Awards:
Cresson European Scholarship, 1905;
Cresson Two Year Scholarship, 1906-1907;
hon. mention, P,-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
BATES, Bertha Corson Day (Mrs. D. M.
Bates), "Crossways," Lewiston, Me.;
summer, MacMahan Island, Me.
P., I.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 20,
1875. Pupil of Howard Pyle. Mem-
ber: Plastic C.
BATES, (Earl) Kenneth, 27 Converse PI.,
New London, Conn.
P.— Born Haverhill, Mass., Oct. 28,
1895. Pupil of PAFA. Member:
Fellowship PAFA. Award : Cresson
Traveling Scholarship, PAFA, 1920.
BATHURST, Clyde C, S. E. corner 20th
and Cherry Sts., Philadelphia, Pa.
S. — Born Mount Union, Pa., June 8,
1883. Pupil of Grafly in Philadel-
phia. Member: Fellowship PAFA.
Awards : Cresson traveling scholar-
ships, PAFA, 1908 and 1910; hon. men-
tion, P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915.
BATTEN, McLeod, Mill Valley, Calif. (P.)
347
BAUGHMAN, Mary Barney, 521 West
Gra(;e St., Richmond, Va.
S., L., T.— Pupil of Michel de Tarnov-
sky and Colarossi Academy. Mem-
ber: Richmond AC.
BAUM, Walter E(merBon), Sellersvllle,
Bucks Co., Pa.
P., L— Born Sellersville, Dec. 14, 1884.
Pupil of William T. Trego and PAFA.
Member: Fellowship PAFA. Rep-
resented in the Hazelton High School,
Hazelton, Pa.; Irene Leach Art Asso-
ciation, Norfolk, Va.; PAFA Fellow-
ship Collection; Pennsylvania State Col-
lege; Tuskegee (Ala.) Institute.
BAUMANN, Gustave, 140 Canyon Road.
Santa Fe, N. M.
Engr., P., I. — Born Magdeburg, Ger-
many, June 27, 1881. Pupil of Maxi-
milian Dasio in Munich. Member:
Chicago SA; P-G.; Cliffdwellers, Calif.
P.M. Award : Gold medal for en-
graving, P.-P. Exp., San. F., 1915.
W o r k : "Granny's Garden," Chicago
Art Commission purchase.
BAUS, S(imon) P(aui). Union Trust
Bldg., 116 East Market 'St.; h. 26 De
Quincy St., Indianapolis, Ind.
P. — Born in Indianapolis, Sept. 4, 1882,
Pupil of Adams, Forsyth and Stark.
Member: Ind. SS. Award : Hol-
comb prize ($100), Indianapolis Art
Assoc, 1919, 1921. Represented in John
Herron Art Inst.
BAUSMAN, Marian D. See Mrs. Otis L.
Walker.
BAXTER, Bertha E., 47 Gramercy Park,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
BAXTER, Elijah, 228 Spring St., New-
port, R. I.
P.— Work in R.L School of Design,
Providence, R. L
BAXTER, Martha Wheeler, Brackett
Apartments, Santa Barbara, Calif.
P. — Born Castleton, Vt. Pupil of
PAFA; ASL of ^. Y.; Beaux-Arts Inst,
of N. Y. ; Delecluse, Colarossi and Ju-
lian Academies, Paris; min. painting
under Mme. de Billemont-Chardon and
Mile. Schmitt in Paris, and Mme. Be-
henna in London; tempera under 'Sar-
torelli in Venice. Member : ASL of
N. Y. (life); Fellowship PAFA; Art
Workers C: N. A. Women PS; Pa. S.
Min. P. Awards: Hon. mention, Paris
Exp., 1900; Min. prize, Wolfe AC, 1907.
Work : "Lieut. L. E. Bray, U. S. N.,"
National Gallery, Washington.
BAYARD, C. A., Carnegie Institute, Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P.— Member: Pitts. AA.
BAYHA, Edwin F., Glenside, Pa.
I. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
BAYLINSON, A. S., 1947 Broadway; h.
1227 Wheeler Ave., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Moscow, Russia, Jan. 6, 1882.
Pupil of Robert Henri and Homer Boss.
Member: S.Indp.A.
BAYLOS, Z(elma), Sherwood Studios, 58
West 57th St., New York, N. Y. ; sum-
mer. Lake Mahopac, Putnam Co., N. Y.
P., S., W. — Born in Hungary. Pupil of
Will Low; C. Y. Turner; Courtois,
BAYMAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BEAUX
Prinet and Girardot in Paris. Por-
trait of Gen. Georg-e R. Dyer in the
12th Regiment Armory, and in the 71st
Regiment Armory, New York City;
"Spirit of Democracy" property of
American Red Cross.
BAYMAN, Leo, 10 East 14th St., New
Yorl<:, N. Y. (S.)
BEACH, Chester, 207 East 17th St., New
Yorlc, N. Y.
S. — Born San Francisco, Calif., Mav 23,
1881. Pupil of Verlet and Roland in
Paris. Member: ANA 1908; NSS
1908; N.Y.Arch.Lg.l909; Nat. Inst. A. L.
Award : Barnett prize, NAD 1909; sil-
ver medal, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915.
Represented in Chicago Art Institute
and the Cleveland Museum of Art.
BEAL, Gifford, 230 West 59th St.; 27 West
67th St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York City, 1879. Pupil
of Chase, Du Mond and Ranger. Mem-
ber: ANA1908; NA1914; AWCS; NAC;
Salma.C.1900. Lotos C; Century Assoc.
Phila.AC; Fellowship PAFA (assoc);
NYWCC; Mural P.; N.Y.Arch.Lg.l911.
Award: Third prize ($100), Worces-
ter, Mass., 1903; bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; Shaw Fund, Salma.C, 1909;
first Hallgarten prize, NAD 1910; Clarke
prize, NAD 1913; silver medal, NAC
1913; 3rd medal ($500), CI Pittsburgh,
1913; hon. mention AIC 1913; 3rd medal
($1,000), Corcoran, Washington, 1914;
gold medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915;
Stuart Duncan prize, Newport A. A.,
1917; Phila. WCC prize, 1917; NAC gold
medal and $1,000 prize, 1918; hon. men-
tion, Phila. AC, 1919; Altman prize
($500) NAD, 1919. Work: "May-
fair" and "The Albany Boat," Metro-
politan Museum, New York; "A Puff of
Smoke," Art Institute of Chicago; also
Syracuse Museum and San Francisco
Art Inst. ; six water colors, Detroit
Museum.
BEAL, Reynolds, R. P. D. No. 2, New-
burgh, N. Y.
P.— Born New York City, 1867. Pupil
of Chase. Member: NYWCC; ANA
1909; Salma.C.1898; NAC; Lotos C;
AWCS; Century Assoc; S. Indp. A.
Awards : Hurley W. C. prize, Salma.
C, 1902.
BEAL, Thaddeus R., Newburgh, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
BEALES, Isaac B., 356 Harrison Ave.,
Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. ; summer, Mil-
ford, Conn.
P., C, L., T.— Born Great Yarmouth,
Eng-land, Aug. 14, 1866. Pupil of E. J.
Poynter, Woodhouse Stubbs.
BEALL, C. C, 2487 Grand Ave., New
York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: SI.
BEALS, Gertrude. See Mrs. Frank
A. Bourne.
BEAN, Caroline Van Hook, 140 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., W., T.— Born Washington, D. C.
Pupil of Harry Thompson, Paris; Chase,
New York. Member: N. A. Women
PS; New Haven PCC; S. Indp. A.
BEARD, Alice, 246 Fulton St., Brooklyn,
New York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Cincinnati, O. Member:
N. A. Women PS.; S. Indp. A.
BEARD, Daniel Carter ("Dan Beard"),
87 Bowne Ave., Pushing, L. I., N. Y.
P., I.— Born Cincinnati, O., June 21,
1850; son of James Henry Beard, NA.
Pupil of Sartain and Beckwith at ASL
of N.Y. Member: SI (ex-pres.; hon.
1915). Specialty, animals and illustrat-
ing books on outdoor life; cartoonist,
historical Americana.
BEARD, Lina, Flushing, L. L, N. T.
I. — Born Cincinnati, O.; sister of Dan-
iel C. Beard. Pupil of Cooper Union
and ASL of N. Y. Author and illus-
trator, with her sister Adelia, of "Little
Folks Handy Book," etc.
BEATTY, John W(esley), Richland
Lane, Pittsburgh, Pa.
P., E.— Born Pittsburgh, 1851. Pupil
Royal Bavarian Academy, Munich.
Member: Pittsburgh Art Soc;
Pittsburgh AA; Pittsburgh Photog-
raphers' Soc. (hon.), Boston GA (hon.),
A. I. Graphic A. (hon) Lotos Club.
Director Dept. of Fine Arts, Carnegie
Inst., Pittsburgh, since 1896. Repre-
sented in National Gallery, Washing-
ton, D. C, and Lotos Club, New York.
Awards : Cross of Knight of the
Legion of Honor, 1921. Author: "An
Appreciation of Augustus Saint
Gaudens"; "Art of John Alexander,"
etc.
BEATTY, Sarah BIythe, 202 Penn Ave.,
Wilkinsburg, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh Art Assoc.
Award : First prize, Pittsburgh AA,
1914.
BEATTY, W. Gedney, 247 Central Park,
West, New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
BEAULEY, William Jean, 140 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Joliet, 111., Sept. 15, 1874. Pu-
pil of Henri and Maratta in New York;
Yvon in Paris. Member: N.Y.Arch.
Lg.; Salma.C. 1908; Paris AAA; Phila.
AC; Players C; A. Fund S. Award :
Arch.Lg. prize, 1912.
BEAUMONT, Arthur, 112 Rhine Ave.,
Stapleton, S. I., N. Y.
P. — Born Bradford, Eng., Apr. 7, 1879.
Pupil of Bouguereau in Paris; Olsson in
London. Member: S. Indp, A.;
Salma.C; United Scenic Artists' Assoc.
Award : Gold medal, Julian Acad-
emy, Paris, 1905.
BEAUMONT, Lilian A(dele), 23 Alveston
St., Jamaica Plain, Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Jamaica Plaiii, Mass. Pupil of
School of Boston Museum of Fine Arts
under Benson, Tarbell and Philip Hale.
Member: Copley S.
BEAUX, Cecilia, 132 East 19th St., New
York, N, Y. ; summer, East Gloucester,
Mass.
P., T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil of
William Sartain, Philadelphia; Julian
and Lazar schools in Paris. Mem-
ber: SAA 1893; ANA 1894; NA 1902;
Port. P.; NAC; Soc. des Beaux-Arts,
348
BECHER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BEISIEGEL
Paris; Fellowship PAFA; Allied AA.;
Phila.WCC (lion.); N.A. Women PS
(hon.) A w a r ds : Mary Smith prize,
PAFA 1885, 1S87, 1891 and 1892; gold
medal, AC Phila., 1893; Dodge prize,
NAD 1893; bronze medal, C.I.Pittsburgh,
1896; first class gold medal ($1,500),
C.I.Pittsburgh, 1899; Temple gold medal,
PAFA, 1900; gold medal, Paris Exp.,
1900; gold medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; gold medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904; Saltus medal, NAD 1914; medal of
honor, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915; Proctor
portrait prize, NAD, 1915; NAC prize,
N.A.Women PS. 1917. Work: "A
New England Woman," Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia; "After the
Meeting," Toledo Museum of Art;
"Ernesta," Metropolitan Museum, New
York City.
BECHER, Arthur E., Hopewell Junction,
N. Y., P. O. Box 101, Ardsley, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Freiberg, Germany, July 29,
1877. Pupil of Louis Mayer and Howard
Pyle. Member: SI 1910; Salma.C.
BECK, Minna McL(eod), 121 Chestnut
St.; h. 1705 North Front St., Harris-
burg, Pa.
P., W., T.— Born Atlanta, Ga., May 18,
1878. Pupil of Arthur W. Dow in New
York. Member: Washington, AC.
Art Director of the Harrisburg Schools.
BECK, Otto Walter, 964 Pelhamdale Ave.,
Pelham Manor, N. Y.
P.— Born Dayton, O., March 11, 1864,
Pupil of Isaac Broome of Trenton;
Munich Academy under Gysis and
Loefftz; scuplture under Riimann.
Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg.l902; NAC
(life) ; S.Indp.A. Awards : First
prize. National competition for mural
decorations of the City Hall, Cincin-
nati, 1897. Work: "The Life of
Christ" (20 pictures) and "Portrait
of a Lady," Brooklyn Institute Mu-
seum; "Portrait Group, Old Guard,"
69th Regt. Armory, New York City;
two paintings illustrating the "Life of
Christ," National Gallery, Washington,
one at Newark Art Assoc, and one in
Montclair Museum.
BECK, Raphael, 78 Delaware Ave., Buf-
falo, N. Y.
P., S., I. — Pupil of Weber in Munich;
Julian Academy in Paris. Member:
Buffalo SA. Awards : Pan-Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; St. Louis Exp., 1904;
Lewis and Clark Exp., Portland, 1905.
BECKER, Frederick, 511 East 7th St.,
Oklahoma City, OkJa.
P., T. — Born Vermilion, S. D., Mar. 24,
1888. Pupil Joseph T. Pearson, Hugh
H. Breckenridge, Daniel Garber, Hale,
Robert Reid, Emil Carlsen. Mem-
ber: Asso. of Okla. Artists. Work:
"Gray Day," "After the Shower," Art
Gallery, University of Oklahoma.
BECKER, Mrs. See Dix, Eulabee.
BECKER, Maurice, Tioga, Tioga Co., Pa.
P., Cartoonist — Born in Russia, Jan. 4,
1889. Pupil of Robert Henri. Mem-
ber: S.Indp.A.
BECKINGTON, Alice, Carnegie Studios,
154 West 57th St., New York, N. Y.;
summer, Scituate, Mass.
Min.P.,T.— Born St. Charles, Mo., July
30, 1868. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under
Beckwith; Constant, Lefebvre and La-
zar in Paris. Member: Am.S.Min.P.
(pres.) ; Pa.Soc.Min.P. Awards: Hon.
mention, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
bronze medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
Work: Miniature, "Mrs. Beckington,"
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
BECKWITH, Arthur, 438 Montgomery
Block, Montgomery St., San Francisco,
Calif.; summer, "Green Brae," Marin
Co., Calif.
P. — Born London, England, Jan. 24,
1860. Pupil of South Kensington schools.
Member: San F.Inst.of Art; Sequoia
Club; Bohemian Club. Work: "Sun-
light and Shadow," Golden Gate Park
Museum, San Francisco; "Foggy Morn-
ing on the Coast," Sequoia Club, San
Francisco.
BEDFORD, Cornelia E., New Century
Club, 124 South 12th St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
BEDFORD, Henry E., Wiscasset, Me.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
BEDORE, Sidney, Midway Studios, 6016
Ellis Ave., Chicago, 111.
S. — Born Stephenson, Mich., March 5,
1883. Pupil of AIC; Beaux-Arts Insti-
tute of Design; and 'Solon Borglum,
Nev/ York, N. Y.
BEEBE, Miss Dee, 231 Garfield Place,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
P., T. — Born New Orleans, La. Pupil
of Chase, Cox, Snell in New York; Duv-
eneck in Cincinnati. Member:
NYWCC; N. A. Women PS.
BEEK. Mrs. Alice D. Engley, 1310 North
5th St., Tacoma, Wash.
P., W., L., — Born Providence, R. I.,
June 17, 1876. Pupil of Sidney Bur-
leigh in Providence; Academie Dele-
cluse, Lazar, L'hermitte. Puvis de Cha-
vannes and Edward Ertz in Europe.
Awards : Grand prix; 2 croix d'hon-
neur; 2 gold medals and 1 silver medal
from Expositions Internationales Fran-
caises; grand prize and gold medal at
Seattle Exposition, 1909.
BEEKMAN, Henry Rutgers, 38 East 76th
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer. West
Hampton Beach, Long Island, N. Y.
P.— Born New York City, Nov. 18, 1880.
Pupil of Hawthorne; Bredin; Lathrop.
BEEMER, Edwin F., 103 East 10th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BEERS, Alexander Richard, Auditorium
Theatre; h. 2828 Palmer Ave., Chicago,
111.
P.— Born Titusville, Pa., 1882. Pupil of
Phila. Textile School and AIC. Mem-
ber: Palette and Chisel C.
BEISIEGEL, Albert, 170 Jefferson Ave.,
Rochester, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
349
BELCHER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BENEKER
BELCHER, Hilda, 939 Eighth Ave., New
York, N. Y.; summer, Pittsford, Rut-
land Co., Vt.
P., I.— Born Pittsford, Vt., Sept. 20, 1881.
Pupil of Chase, Henri and Hayes Miller
in New York. Member: AWCS
NYWCC; N. A. Women PS; Conn.
APA. Awards : First prize, Strath-
more Water Color Contest, 1908;
Beal prize. NYWCC, 1909; Hudnut
prize AWCS, 1915 and 1918; Dun-
ham prize, Conn. AFA, 1915; Barney
prize, Newport A. A., 1916; Hudnut
prize, NYWCC, 1917; sketch prize; N.
A. Women PS. 1917. Work: "The
Mother," Maryland Institute, Balti-
more; "The Ascension," First Luth-
eran Church, Baltimore; "The Easter
Window," Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts.
BELCHER, Mrs. Martha Wood, Van Dyke
Studios, 939 Eighth Ave., New York,
N. Y.; summer, Pittsford, Rutland Co.,
Vt.
P., E., T.— Born in England, Aug. 17,
1844. Pupil of Cooper Inst., New York;
Flugen, Lietzenmeyer and LJnden-
schmidt in Munich. Member: N.
A. Women PS; NYWCC. (Asso.).
BELL, Caroline M., Mattituck, L. I., N. Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
BELL, Clara Louise, Hotel Doanbrook,
1924 East 105th St., Cleveland, O.
P.— Born Newton Falls, O., Dec. 18,
1886. Pupil of Edith P. Stevenson,
Cleveland School of Art; ASL of N. Y.
Member: NYWCC; Studio C.
Award : Penton medal for miniature
painting, Cleveland Museum, 1919.
BELL, E(dward) A(ugust), 226 West 59th
St., New York, N. Y.; and Peconic,
L. I., N. Y.
P.— Born New York, Dec. 18, 1862. Pu-
pil of NAD; Bavarian Royal Academy
in Munich. Member: SAA 1898;
ANA, 1901; Salma.C. 1904. Awards:
Bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1889; second
Hallgarten prize, NAD, 1893; silver
medal. Pan- Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
Work: "Ready for a Walk," Art
Association, Indianapolis; "The Stat-
uette," Cincinnati Museum; "The Rose,"
Smith College, Northampton, Mass.
BELLOWS, George W(esley), care of
Knoedler & Co., 556 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Born Columbus, O., Aug. 12, 1882.
Pupil of Maratta, Jay Hambidge and
Henri in New York. Member: ANA
1908; NA 1913; Am. PS; NAC; Port.
P.; P-G; MacD. C; S. Indp. A.; Los
Angeles Modern AS; Nat. Inst. A. L. ;
Boston AC (hon.). Awards: Hall-
garten prize, NAD 1908; Sesnan medal,
PAFA 1913; first Hallgarten prize
($300) , NAD 1913 ; hon. mention, C.LPitts-
burgh 1913; 3rd medal ($500), C.LPitts-
burgh, 1914; Maynard prize, NAD 1914;
gold medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915;
Harris bronze medal and prize ($300),
AIC 1916; Isidor Medal, NAD 1916;
Texnple Medal, PAFA 1917; landscape
prize, Newport AA, 1918; Beck gold
medal, PAFA, 1921. Work: "Up
Hudson," Metropolitan Museum, New
York; "North River," Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia; "Snow Capped
River," Telfair Academy, Savannah;
"Polo at Lakewood," Columbus, (O.)
Art Association; "Blackwell's Bridge,"
Toledo Museum; "Summer City," Na-
tional Arts Club, New York; 3 portraits,
Ohio State University; "Rain on the
River" and "Portrait of Walter Little-
field," R. I. School of Design, Provi-
dence; "Love of Winter," Art Institute
of Chicago; "A Day in June," Detroit
Institute; lithograph, "In the Park,"
Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh.
BELLVILLE, Laura M., 4225 Grove Ave.,
Norwood, Ohio.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
BEMAN, Jean. See Mrs. Cook Smith.
BEMENT, Alon, 210 West 59th St., New
York, N. Y. ; care of Maryland Institute,
Baltimore, Md.
P., Photo. ,T.— Born Ashfield, Mass., Aug.
15, 1878. Pupil of Boston Museum
School: Bonnat and Constant in Paris;
Naas School, Sweden; Ecole des Beaux
Arts. Member: Salma.C. 1907.
Prof, of Fine Arts, Teachers Col., Colum-
bia Univ., since 1906. Instructor College
of City of New York. Director, Mary-
land Institute, Baltimore.
BEMUS, Mrs. Mary B., 401 S. Hope St.,
Los Angeles, Calif.; 2130 Emerson Ave.,
Santa Barbara, Calif.; summer, Owens-
mouth, Calif.
P., T. — Born Leicester, New York, N.
Y., Aug. 17. 1849. Pupil of L. M.
Wiles.
BENDA W(ladyslaw) T., 140 Wadsworth
Ave.; 1 Gramercy Park, New York,
N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI 1907; Arch. Lg. 1916;
Players C, 1905; Mural P. Award:
Silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F„ 1915.
BENDER, Russell Thurston, 333 South
Dearborn St.; h. 2717 Jackson Blvd.,
Chicago, 111.
I.— Born Chicago, 1895. Pupil of Chi-
cago Academy of Fine Arts. Mem-
ber: Palette and Chisel C.
BENEKER, Gerrit A., care of Cleveland
Pressed Steel Co., Cleveland, O.; sum-
mer, Truro, Mass.
P., I., W., L.— Born Grand Rapids,
Mich., Jan. 26, 1882. Pupil of John
Vanderpoel and Frederick Richardson
in Chicago; F. V. Du Mond, Henry
Reuterdahl in New York; Charles W.
Hawthorne in Provincetown. Mem-
ber: Salma.C; Provincetown AA;
Cleveland SA. Award : New York
Herald Easter prize, 1905; Kellogg's
Corn Flakes, 4th prize, 1914; Scarab
Club, 3rd prize, Detroit, 1916; Penton
medal for industrial painting, Cleve-
land Museum, 1919. Represented in
permanent collection of Provincetown
Art Association and Grand Rapids Cen-
tral High School; Youngstown Museum
of Art. Author of Victory Liberty Loan
Poster, "Sure, We'll Finish the Job."
350
BENN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BERGE
BENN, Ben, 244 East 23rd St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born Russia, Dec. 27, 1884. Pupil
of NAD. Member: Soc. Modern
Arti.sts of America. Work: Por-
trait of Judge J. Panken in Second
Dist. Municipal Court House, New York.
BENNETT, Charles A(lpheus), 1711 Co-
lumbia Terrace, Peoria, 111.
C, W., T. — Born Holden, Mass., March
28, 1864. Editor of Manual Training
Magazine; author of "The Manual
Arts."
BENNETT, E(mma), (Dunbar), (Mrs.
Harrison Bennett), 68 Boulevard de
Courcelles, Paris, France; Cochituate,
Mass.
S. — Born New Bedford, Mass. Pupil of
British Academy in Rome. Member:
Copeley S; MacD. C; Lyceum Club of
Paris.
BENNETT, Francis I., 72 Whitford Ave.,
Nutley, N. J.
P., I. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Mar. 8,
1876. Pupil of Anshutz, Chase, Henri.
BENSON, Frank W(eston), 120 River-
way, Boston, Mass.; h. 46 Washington
Square, Salem, Mass.
P., E.,T.— Born Salem, March 24, 1862.
Pupil of Boston Museum School; Bou-
langer and Lefebvre in Paris. Mem-
ber: ANA 1897; NA 1905; Ten
Am.P.; Nat.Inst.A.L.; Chicago SE;
Port. P.; P.-G. ; Boston GA.; Brooklyn
SE. Awards : Third Hallgarten prize,
NAD 1889; Clarke prize. NAD 1891;
medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893;
medal. Mechanics' Assoc, Boston, Ells-
worth prize, AIC; Cleveland Art Assoc,
prize; Jordan prize, Boston, $500 in
1894 and $300 in 1895; Boston AC
prize, $1,000 in 1895 and $100 in 1896:
Shaw purchase, SAA 1896; chronological
medal, C. I. Pittsburgh, 1896; second
class medal ($1,000), C. I. Pittsburgh,
1899; silver medal, Paris Exp., 1900;
silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo.
1901; Lippincott prize, PAFA 1903; gold
medal ($1,500), CI Pittsburgh, 1903;
2 gold medals, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
Proctor prize, NAD 1906; gold medal,
ACPhila. 1906; second prize, Corcoran
Gallery, Washington, 1907; Temple gold
medal. PAFA 1908; silver Harris
medal, AIC, 1909; Palmer medal
and prizp ("$1,000). AIC 1912; Logan prize
($25), Chicago SE 1918; first W. A.
Clark prize ($2,000). and Corcoran gold
medal, Corcoran Gallery, Washington,
1919. Work : "Autumn" and "Evening
Light." Cincinnati Museum: "Portrait
of a Boy." etching, "Mallards," Carne-
gie Institute, Pittsburgh: "The Sis-
ter^," Buffalo Fine Arts Academy:
"Thp Bather." "Studies of Autumn and
Spring," "Portrait of Mrs. Jesse Met-
calf," "The Black Hat." "Summer" and
"Isaac C. Bates," R. I. School of
Design. Providence: "Eleanor," "Head,"
and "Plierht of Ducks," Boston Mu-
seum of Fine Arts; "Girl Playing Soli-
taire." and "Portrait of My Daugh-
ters," Worcester Art Museum; "Sun-
light," Indianapolis Art Association;
"A Rainy Day," and etching, Chicago
Art Institute; "Portrait of a Lady,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York; "On
Lookout Hill," Detroit Athletic Club;
"My Daughter," and "Open Window,"
Corcoran Gallery, Washington, D. C;
"My Daughter Elizabeth," Detroit In-
stitute.
BENSON, Leslie L(augulilie), 602 West
190th St., New York, N. Y.
I.— Born Mahone. N. S., March 15, 1885.
Pupil Boston Museum of Fine Arts,
Eric Pape School, Fenway School.
Member: Guild of Free Lance Art-
ists; SL
BENTLY, Benedict, 37 East Roger Ave.,
Merchantville, N. J.
P. — M ember: Phila. AA.
BENTLEY. John W., Woodstock, Ulster
Co.. N. Y.
P.. T.— Born Paterson, N. J., Jan. 3,
1880. Pupil Bridgman, DuMond, Har-
rison, Henri. Member: Salma. C;
Lg. of N.Y.A.; Buffalo SA. 1921.
Award : Hon. mention, Buffalo SA,
1921.
BENTON, Harry Stacy, South Norwalk.
Conn.
P., I. — Born Saratoga Springs, N.Y., Oct.
11, 1877. Pupil of AIC. Member:
Salma.C. 1905.
BENTON, Thomas H.. care of The Daniel
Gallery, 2 West 47th St., New York,
N. Y. (P.)
Wiggins, Topplnish,
BENZ. Mildred
Wash. (P.)
BENZIGER, August, 140 West 57th St..
New York, N. Y. : summer. Villa Guten-
berg, Brunnen, Switzerland.
Port. P. — Born Einsiedein, Switzerland,
.Tan. 2, 1867. Pupil of Royal Academy
in Vienna; Julian Academy and Ecole
des Beaux-Arts under Bonn^^t in Paris.
Member: Union Artistique, Paris.
W^ork: Portrait of Roosevelt, Chica-
go Historical Society.
BERDAN, Anna P., 71 Edgehill Rd., New
Haven, Conn.
P. — M ember: New Haven PCC.
BERDANIER, Paul F., 5877 Nina PI., St.
Loui«. Mo.
P. — Born Frackville, Pa., March 7, 1879.
Pupil of Charles Hope Provost in New
York: Gustave W^olff and School of Fine
Arts in St. Louis. Member: St. Louis
AG; 2x4 Soc; St. Louis A. Lg.
A Av a r d s : 2nd Prize; Thumb Box Ex-
hibition, St. Louis Art League. 1919;
1st Prize, Missouri State Fair, Serlalia,
Mo., 1920: St. Louis Chamber of Com-
merce Prize, St.L. AG. 1920.
BERG, George Louis. Stony Creek. Conn.
P. — Born McGregor. la., Oct. 27, 1870.
Pupil of ASL. of N. Y. Chief of De-
partment of Fine Arts. Alaska-Yukon-
Pacific Exp., Seattle, 1909. Member:
Guild of American Painters, New
Haven PCC.
BERGE, Edward, 1335 Greenmount Ave.,
Baltimore, Md.
S.— Born Baltimore, Jan. 3, 1876. Pupil
of Maryland Inst, and Rinehart School
of Sculpture in Baltimore; Julian Acad-
351
BERENSON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BICKNELL
emy, Verlet and Rodin in Paris.
Member: Charcoal Club; NSS 1908;
NAC. Awards : Clark prize, Paris
AAA; bronze medal, Pan-Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; bronze medal, P.-P.Exp.,
San F., 1915. Monuments to Watson,
Tattersall, Latrobe and Armistead, all
in Baltimore; "The Scalp," Museum of
Honolulu, H. I.
BERENSON. Elizabeth, 204^ West 13th
St., New York, N. Y. (P.)
BERGLUND, Hilma L. G., 1860 Feronia
Ave., St. Paul, Minn.; summer, Brook
Park, Minn.
P.. C— Born Stillwater, Minn., Jan. 23,
1886. Pupil St. Paul School of Art;
Handicraft Guild, Minneapolis. Mem-
ber: Artists Soc, St. Paul, Minn.
BERNATH, Sander, 45 Washington Sq.,
South, New York, N. Y. (P.)
BERNEKER, Louis F(rederick), 122 East
59th St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Clinton, Mo. Pupil of St.
Louis School of Fine Arts; Laurens in
Paris. Member: NYWCC; AWCS;
Allied AA; Salma. C. Represented in
Dallas (Tex.) Art Association. In-
structor Mechanics Institute.
BERNEKER, Maud F(ox), 122 East 59th
Street, New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Memphis, Tenn., April 11,
1884. Pupil of NAD. Member: NA
Women PS.
BERNER, iVIrs. E., 503 Grand Street,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BERNINGHAUS, Oscar E., 3939 Castle-
man Ave., St. Louis, Mo; summer,
Taos, N. M.
P., I.— Born St. Louis, Oct. 2, 1874. Pupil
of St. Louis School of Fine Arts.
Member : St. Louis AG; Salma. C;
St. Louis 2 x 4 S.; Taos SA; St. Louis
A.Lg-. Awards : Dolph prize St. Louis,
1907; share of Chicag-o Fine Arts Bldg.
prize, SWA, 1913; Bascom prize, St.
L. AG; 1915; Brown prize, St. L.
AG, 1917; Chamber of Commerce
prize, St. L. AG, 1918; popular prize,
St. L. AG, 1919; Weimar prize, St. L.
AG, 1919; St. L. AG prize, 1919.
Work : Two lunettes, Jefferson City,
Mo., State Capitol Bldg. ; "Winter in
the West," City Art Museum, St.
Louis; and in various libraries and
schools. Specialty, Western subjects.
BERNSTEIN, Aline, 233 West End Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BERNSTEIN, Michael, 24 East 99th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BERNSTEIN, Theresa F., 39 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, Policy
Cove, Mass.
P. — Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil of
Philadelphia School of Design. Mem-
ber: P-G,; N. A. Women PS; Eclec-
tics; Plastic C. Awards: Shillard
g-old medal for water colors. Plastic
C, 1915; NAC prize, N. A. Women PS,
1916.
352
BERRY, Annabel Ledlie, 22 Green-
ough Place, Newport, R. I. (P.)
BERRYMAN, Clifford Kennedy, "Eve-
ning Star" Bldg., 11th and Pa. Ave.; h.
1754 Euclid St., N. W., Washington,
D. C.
I- — Born Versailles, Ky., Apr. 2, 1869.
Author "Cartoons of 58th House of
Representatives"; originator of "Teddy
Bear." On staff of Washington "Eve-
ning Star" since 1907.
BERSON, Adolphe, 1037 Fillmore St., San
Francisco, Calif.
P. — Born San Francisco. Calif. Pupil of
Lefebvre and Robert-Fleury in Paris.
BERTSCH, Fred S., 15 East Huron St.;
h. 1629 Granville Ave., Chicago, 111.
Des. — Born in Michigan in 1879. Pupil
of AIC. Member: Palette and
Chisel C.
BETTIS, Charles Hunter, 127 North
Dearborn St.; h. 1429 Sherwin Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
I., Des. — Born in Texas in 1891. Pupil
of AIC. Member: Palette and
Chisel C; Chicago Arch. C; T Square
and Palette C.
BETTS, Anna Whelan, 59 High St., Ger-
mantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
I., P., C, T.— Born Philadelphia. Pupil
of Howard Pyle at Wilmington; Cour-
tois in Paris; and of Vonnoh. Mem-
ber: Phila.WCC; Fellowship PAFA.
Award : Bronze medal, P.P.Exp.,
San. F., 1915. Work: Illustrations
in color for "Century," "Harper's" and
other magazines.
BETTS, Louis, 119 East 19th St., New
York, N. Y.
Port.P.— Born Little Rock, Ark., Oct.
5, 1873. Pupil of his father, E. D.
Betts, Sr.; Wm. Chase; AIC. Mem-
ber: ANA 1912; NA 1915; Fellowship
PAFA; Chicago SA; Nat. Inst. A.L.;
Port.P. Alhed AA; 'Salma. C. Awards:
Cresson ($3,000) Scholarship, PAFA
1903; hon. mention, C.I.Pittsburgh, 1910;
bronze medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915;
Proctor prize, NAD, 1918. Works :
William M. R. French and "Apple Blos-
soms,''' Art Institute of Chicago.
BEVANS, M. T., Hotel Brevoort, 8th St.
and 5th Ave., New York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI.
BEVANS, Mrs. M. T., Hotel Brevoort,
8th St. and 5th Ave., New York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI.
BEWLEY, Murray P., 114 Waverly PL,
New York. N. Y.
P. — Born Fort Worth, Tex., June 19,
1884. Pupil of AIC; Chase, Beaux and
Henri in New York. Member: Paris
AAA; Salma. C; Allied AA. Award :
Hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1910;
first prize, Salma. C, 1921. Work:
"Buds" and "Portrait of Mrs. Percy V.
Pennybacker," Ft. Worth (Tex.) Mu-
seum and in the Pennsylvania Academy
of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia.
BICKNELL, Evelyn M., care of Salma-
gundi Club, 45 Fifth Ave.; and 18 West
27th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born in New York. Member:
NYWCC; Salma.C.1901; AWCS.
BICKNELL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BITTINGER
BICKNELL, Frank A(lfred), School of B
Design, Carnegie Institute of Teclmol-
ogy, Pittsburgh, Pa.; summer, Old Lyme,
P._Born Augusta, Me., Feb. 17, 1866.
Pupil of Albion H. Bicknell at Maiden, g
Mass.; Julian Academy in Paris under
Bouguereau and Robert-Fleury. Mem-
ber: Paris AAA; Salma.C. 1907; NAC;
Lotos C; Allied AA.; MacD.C; ANA
1913; SPNY. Work: "October Morn-
ing," National Gallery, Washington, D. "=»
C; "Mountain Laurel." Montclair, N. J.,
Museum; "Pirate's Cove." Denver Art B
Assoc; "November," Boston Art Club;
"The Beech and the Birch," Union
League Club, New York, N. Y. Asso.
professor, School of Design, Carnegie
Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa. b
BICKNELL, W(illiam) H(arry) W(ar.
ren), Arlington St., Winchester, Mass.
Etcher— Born Boston, Mass., July 12.
1860. Pupil of Otto Grundmann and
Boston Museum School. Member:
Copley S. 1880; Chicago SE; Boston SE.
Award : Bronze medal, St. Louis B
Exp., 1904.
BIDDLE, George, 52 East 53rd St., New
York, N. Y.
P._M ember: Calif. AC; Fellowship
PAFA.
BIESEL, Charles, 30 E. Ontario St.; h.
5249 Calumet Ave., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born New York City, Oct. 20, 1865.
Member: Providence AC; Providence
WCC; Wash. AC; S. Indp. A.; Newport
AA; Art Service League, Chicago; Chi- B
cago SA.
B
BIESEL, H. Fred., 5249 Calumet Ave.,
Chicago. 111.
P., I.— Born Philadelphia. Sept. 27, 1903.
Pupil of R. I. School of Design; AIC.
Member: S. Indp. A.
BIGELOW, Charles C, 1520 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (I.) B
BIGELOW, L. Seymour, Jr., Plaza Bldg.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
BIGGS, Walter, 39 West 67th St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Salem, Va. B
I.— Born Elliston, Va., June 4, 1886. b
Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller, Henri
and Edward Penfield. Member: SI;
Salma. C. Illustrates for "Harper's,"
"Scribner's" and "Good Housekeeping."
BILLINGS, Mary H(athaway), Van Dyck
Studios, 939 Eighth Ave., New York,
N. Y.; h. 373 Grand Ave., Brooklyn, B
N. Y. ; summer. Ford River Farm, Am-
herst, Mass.
P. — Born Brooklyn. Pupil of Rhoda b
Holmes Nicholls, Cullen Yates. Mem-
ber: NAC.
BILOTTI, Salvatore F., 9 Macdougal Al-
ley; h. 78 W. 11th St., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Cosenza, Italy, Feb. 3, 1879.
Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1914 (assoc);
Allied AA. NSS. A w a r d : Cresson
Scholarship, PAFA, 1906-1907; collabo-
rative prize, N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1914.
BINNS, Elsie, Alfred, N. Y. (S., C.)
353
INTLIFF, Mrs. Martha B(radshaw),
1522 College St., La .loUa, Calif.
P.— Born Superior, Wis., Sept. 19, 1869.
Pupil of Giuseppe Ferrari In Rome.
M e m b er : N. A. Women PS.
IRCH, Reginald B(athurst), Lock Box
636, Dover, N. J.
I. — Born London, England, May 2, 1856;
came to America at age of 16. Studied
in Munich and Italy. Member: SI.
iRD, L. Pern, Glenlyn, St. Cross Road,
AVinchester, England. (I.)
SRDSALL, Amos, Jr., Sharpless Ave.,
Melrose Park, Pa.; summer, Tom's
River, N. J.
P. — Born in New Jersey, June 10, 1865.
Self-taught. Member: Salma. C.
IRGE, Mary Thompson (Mrs. Edward
Birge), 1914 North Pennsylvania St.,
Indianapolis, Ind. ; summer, Ridgefleld,
Conn.
P.— Born New York, June 5, 1872. Pupil
of Yale School of Fine Arts. Mem-
ber: Paint and Clay C. of New Haven.
IRREN, Joseph P., Art Institute; h.
49 East Elm St., Chicago, 111.; summer,
Provincetown, Mass.
P. — Born Chicago. Pupil AI Chicago;
studied in Philadelphia, New York,
Paris and Munich. Member: Chi-
cago AC; Chicago SA; S. Indp. A.; Pa-
lette and Chisel C. (past pres.); AIC
Alumni Assoc, (hon. pres.); Beach-
combers' Club; Provincetown AA. Rep-
resented in Chicago Municipal Collec-
tion and Bermuda Art Commission.
ISCHOFF, Franz A., 320 Pasadena Ave.,
South Pasadena, Calif.
P.— M ember: Cahf. AC.
ISHOP, Harold S., Fine Arts Bldg.; h.
113 Hillside Ave., Rochester, N. Y.
P.. E.— Born Mar. 25. 1884. Pupil of
Cincinnati Academy and Frank Duve-
neck. Member: Cincinnati AC;
Rochester AC.
ISHOP, Hubert E., 87 East Ave., Nor-
walk. Conn.
P.— Born Norwalk, Conn., March 8, 1869.
Self taught. Member: Silvermine
Group of Artists; S. Indp. A.
ISHOP, Irene. See Mrs. E. T. Hurley.
ISSELL, Edgar J(ulian), 3016 Bartold
Ave., Maplewood Station, St. Louis, Mo.
P.— Born Aurora, 111., March 14, 1856.
Pupil of Otto Grundmann in Boston;
Boulanger, Lefebvre, Collin and Cour-
tois in Paris. Member: St. Louis
Soc. of Artists (ex-pres.).
ITTERLY. Mrs. L. P., 1241 Lincoln St.,
Denver, Colo.
P., S. — Member: Denver A A.
ITTINGER, Charles, Duxbury, Mass.
P.— Born Washington, D. C, June 27,
1879. Pupil of ASL of N.Y.; Ecole des
Beaux-Arts, Delecluse and Colarossi
academies in Paris. Member: ANA
1912; NAC (Hfe) ; Paris AAA; Allied
AA; St. Botolph C, Boston; Salma.C.
1908; Duxbury AA. Awards: Bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; second
Hallgarten prize, NAD 1909; Clarke
prize, NAD 1912; silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915.
BIVA
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BLASHFIELD
BIVA, Lucien, 162 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.,
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BJURMAN, Andrew, 109 South Almansor
St., Alhambra, Cal.
S., C, T. — Born in 'Sweden, Apr. 4,
1876. Member: Cahf. AC. Awards:
Bronze medal, San Diego Exp., 1915;
second prize, California Liberty Fair,
1918.
BLACK, Eleanor S(lmms) (Mrs. Robert
M. Black), 3732 Dawson St., Pittsburgh,
Pa.; summer, Provincetown, Mass.
P. — Born Washington, D. C, Jan. 9,
1872. Pupil of Howard Helmick, C. W.
Hawthorne and O. L. Linde. Mem-
ber: Pittsburgh AA; S.Indp.A.
BLACK, Mrs. Kate Eleanor, 4168 Forest
Ave., South Norwood, O.
P., C— Born London, Dec. 3, 1855. Pu-
pil of Cincinnati Academy. Mem-
ber: Cincinnati Woman's Art C.
Award : Bronze medal, Provincial
Exhibition, New Westminster, B. C,
Canada.
BLACK, Mary C. W. (Mrs. Clarence A.
Black), "El Cerrito," Santa Barbara,
Calif.; summer, "Black Forest," Ham-
ill's Point, Muskoka, Canada.
P. — Born Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Pupil of
W. L. Lathrop, ASL of N. Y. ; Mora and
Glenn Newell. Member: N. A.
Women PS; Calif. AC; NAC; S.
Indp. A.
BLACK, Norman I., 414 West 154th St.,
New York, N. Y.; summer. Cliff Island,
Casco Bay. Me.
P., I. — Born Chelsea, Mass., Nov. 8,
1883. Pupil of Eric Pape School, Bos-
ton; Julian Academy and Beaux-Arts,
Paris.
BLACK, Mrs. Norman I., 414 West 154th
St.. New York. N. Y. ; summer, Cliff
Island, Casco Bay, Me.
P. — Born Providence, R. I., Apr. 15,
1884. Pupil of Eric Pape School, Bos-
ton; Julian Academy in Paris; studied
in Munich. Member: Providence AC.
BLACK, Olive P(arker), 124 West 77th
St., New York. N. Y.
P. — Born Cambridge, Mass., July 22,
1868. Pupil of H. Bolton Jones, Chase,
ASL of N. Y., and NAD in New York.
Member: N. A. Women PS; SPNY.
BLACK, Mrs. Robert M., 3732 Dawson
St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
BLACKMAN, Carrie Horton (Mrs. George
Blackman), 17 Southmoor Ave., St.
T-ouis, Mo.
P.,W.— Born Cincinnati, O. Pupil of St.
Louis School of Fine Arts: Chap-
lin in Paris. Me m b e r : St.L.A.G.
Awards : Medal, Alaska- Yukon
Exp., 1909. Specialty, children's por-
traits.
BLACKMORE, Arthur E(dward), 109
East 14th St.. New York, N. Y.; h. 426
South Second Ave.. Mt, Vernon, N. Y.
P..C. — Born Bristol, England. Feb. 8,
1854. Pupil of South Kensington Mu-
seum, London. Member: Salma.C.
1897; A. Aid S.; A. Fund S.; N.Y.Arch.
Lg.l914 (assoc); Wash AC; S.Indp.A.
354
BLACKSTONE, Harriet, 222 West 23rd
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New Hartford, N. Y. Pupil
of Julian Academy in Paris; Chase
summer schools; Pratt Inst., Brooklyn.
Member: Chicago SA; American
Women's AA, Paris; Inter. Soc.AL.;
Chicago AG; Chicago AC; Chicago Mu-
nicipal AL. Represented in Vincennes
Art Asso.; San Francisco Museum; Na-
tional Gallery of Art, Washington.
BLACKTON, J. Stuart, 47 Fifth Ave.,
New York. N. Y.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
BLACKWELL, Wenonah, 1933 Broad-
way, North, Seattle, Wash. (P.)
BLAIR, E. R., 2248 Euclid Ave., Cleve-
land, O.
I. — M ember: Cleveland SA.
BLAIR, James B., Woodland Rd., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
BLAISDELL, Mrs. Bertram, 539 Potters
Ave., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence WCC.
BLAKE, Donald, 244 West 14th St., New
York, N. Y.; h. 2826 Central Ave.,
Tampa, Fla.
I. — Born Tampa, Fla., June 26, 1889.
Pupil of PAFA and Henry McCarter.
Award : Cresson Traveling Scholar-
ship. PAFA. Member: Fellowship
PAFA.
BLAKE, James Henry, 117 Elm St., West
Somerville, Mass,
P.,L,C.,T.— Born Boston, Mass., July 8,
1845. Pupil of Hollingsworth and Rim-
mer in Boston; Moore in Cambridge.
President, Cambridge Art Circle. Spe-
cialty, scientific subjects.
BLANCHARD, Ethel C. See Mrs. Leon
Collver.
BLANEY, Dwight, 308 Fenway Studios,
30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Brookline, Mass., Jan. 24, 1865.
Member: Copley S., 1892; Boston
WCC; Boston GA; Award: Bronze
medal, P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915.
BLANKE, Esther, 1200 Steinway Hall, 64
East Van Buren St.; h. 418 Deming PL,
Chicago, 111.; summer, R. R. 22, Nash-
otah. Wis.
P., C— Born Chicago, 111.. Feb. 2. 1882.
Pupil of AIC; studied in London and
Munich. Member: Chicago AG; Cor-
don C.
BLANKE, Marie Elsa, Fine Arts Bldg. ;
h. 418 Deming PL. Chicago, 111.
P. — Born in Chicago. Pupil of AIC and
studied in Munich and London. M e m-
ber: Chicago SA; Chicago AC. In«
structor in art, Lewis Institute, Chicago.
BLASHFIELD, Edwin H(owland), Car-
negie Studios; h. 40 West 59th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Mural P., W., L. — Born New York, Dec.
15, 1848. Pupil of Bonnat in Paris.
Member: ANA 1882; NA 1888; paint-
er member (National) Commission of
Fine Arts; Mural P. (pres.); N.Y.
Arch. Lg.l 886; N.Y. Municipal AS; NSS
(lay); FAS; Century Assoc; AIA
BLEIL
WHO*S WHO IN ART
BLUMENSCHEIN
(hon.); Nat.Inst.A.L. (pres.); Acad.
AL; So. of American Artists (ex-pres.);
New York Fed, of Fine Arts (pres.);
Fellowship PAFA. Awards: Bronze
medal Paris Exp., 1900; gold medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; medal of honor, N.Y.
Arch.Lg. 1911; Carnegie prize, NAD
1911. Work : "Carry On," Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York; "Washing-
ton Laying Down His Commission," and
"The Edict of Toleration of Lord Balti-
more," Court House, Baltimore; "The
Law," Cleveland Federal Building; "The
Uses of Wealth." lunette. Citizens Bank,
Cleveland, O., Fame," four penden-
tives, Hudson County Court House, Jer-
sey City; "Wisconsin in the Past and
Present," State Capital, 1 idison; four
pendentives to main dome, Essex Coun-
ty Court House, Newark; "The Power of
the Law," Appellate Court, New York;
"The Graduate," lunette. College of the
City of New York; "Music and the
Dance," Waldorf-Astoria; Decoration
of semi-dome and choir. Church of
the Saviour, Philadelphia, Pa.; Panel
in Governor's Room, State Capitol,
Pierre, S. Dak.; "Pittsburgh Offering
Its Steel and Iron to the World,"
lunette. Bank of Pittsburgh; "The Dis-
coverers and Civilizers Led to the Head
Waters of the Mississippi," "Minnesota
as a Grain State," "The Fifth Minne-
sota Regiment at the Battle of Cor-
inth," three lunettes, Minnesota State
Capitol, St. Paul; "The Evolution of
Civilization" and "The Human Under-
standing," Library of Congress, Wash-
ington; "The Law," panel, Luzerne
County Court House, Wilkes-Barre,
Pa.; "The Law," four pendentives,
Mahoning County Court House, Youngs-
town, O.; dome crown, Wisconsin State
Capitol, Madison; mosaics in St. Mat-
thew's Church, Washington, D. C; two
windows in First Presbyterian Church,
Chattanooga, Tenn. Author, with Mrs.
Blashfield, of "Italian Cities": editor,
with Mrs. Blashfield and A. A. Hopkins,
of Vasari's "Lives of the Painters"; au-
thor, "Mural Painting in America," 1914.
BLEIL, Charles (George), San Mateo,
Calif.; summer, Monterey, Calif.
P., E. — Born San Francisco, Dec. 24,
1893. Pupil San Francisco Inst, of Art.
Member: San F.AA; Calif SE.
Work: "Autumn Road." Palace of
Fine Arts; "The Green House," "The
Red Barns," Calif. Artists Gallery.
BLENNER, Carle J(oan), 58 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Richmond, Va., Feb. 1, 1864.
Pupil of Yale Art School; Bouguereau,
Robert-Fleury and Aman-Jean in Paris.
Member: Salma.C; New Haven
PCC; Conn.AFA; Wash.AC, Awards:
Medal, Boston AC 1891; third Hallgar-
ten prize, NAD 1899; hon. mention.
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
BLISS, Alma Hirsig, 1664 Lexington Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BLISS, Elizabeth Sturtevant.
Samuel Theobald, Jr.
See Mrs.
BLOCH, Julius T(hiengen), 10 South 18th
St.; h. 2135 North Uber St., Philadel-
phia. Pa.
P. — Born Kehl, Baden, Germany, May
12, 1888, Pupil of PAFA. Member:
■S. Indp. A.; Fellowship PAFA; Phila.
Alliance.
BLONDHEIM, Adolphe W., Province-
town, Mass.
P.,E.,L,T.— Born Baltimore, Md., Oct.
16, 1888. Pupil of Maryland Inst, and
Charcoal Club in Baltimore; PAFA
under Chase, Beaux, Breckenridge, etc.
Member: Salma. C, Fellowship
PAFA. Awards : Isidor medal,
NAD, 1918; Logan medal, Chicago Art
Inst., 1920. Represented in Chicago Art
Inst.; Calif. Public Library; State
House, Mo.
BLOODGOOD, Robert F., 58 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
BLOOIVl, M. E., 741 Monroe St., North
Bergen, N. J.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BLUIVi, Alex. A,, The Kenmare, Tentii and
Pine Sts. ; h. 1520 Chestnut St., Philadel-
phia, Pa.
P., E. — Born Cincinnati, O., Feb, 7,
1889. Pupil of Duveneck in Cincinnati;
Mielatz in New York. Member:
Phila. Alliance. Work: Four etch-
ings in Congressional Library, Wash-
ing; etchings in Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston.
BLUM, Helen A(brahams) (Mrs. Alex A.
Blum), 1929 Girard Ave., Philadelphia,
Pa
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa„ Aug, 17,
1886. Pupil of Elliot Dangerfleld, Henry
Snell and Hugh Breckenridge. Mem-
ber: Fellowship PAFA.
BLUME, Mrs. Melita, Brookhaven, L. I.,
N. Y.
Ldscp. P. — Born Halle, Germany. Pupil
of ASL of N. Y.; National Academy,
Munich. Member: N. A. Women
PS; S. Indp. A.; PBC; Alliance; Lg. of
American Artists.
BLUMENSCHEIN, Ernest L(eonard),
Taos, N. M.
P., I.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., May 26,
1874. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy;
ASL of N.Y. ; Constant, Laurens and
Collin in Paris. Member: ANA 1910;
Salma. C. ; SI 1901; AWCS; Paris AAA;
Taos SA. Awards : Beck prize, Phila-
WCC 1909; Isidor portrait prize, Salma.
C. 1910 and 1911; Isidor medal. NAD
1912; silver medal, P. -P. Exp., 'San F.,
1915; Potter Palmer gold medal and
$1,000, AIC 1917. Represented in Cin-
cinnati Art Museum; Los Angeles Art
Museum; Kansas City Library.
BLUMENSCHEIN, Mary Shepard Greene
(Mrs. E. L. Blumenschein), Taos, N. M.
P.,S. — Born in New York. Pupil of
Herbert Adams in New York; Collin in
Paris. Member: N. A. Women PS;
Pen and Brush C; SI 1912 (assoc);
ANA 1913. Awards: Third medal,
Paris Salon, 1900; second medal. Paris
Salon, 1902; silver medal, St. Louis Exp.,
355
BLUMENTHAL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BOHNERT
1904; Julia Shaw memorial ($300), NAD
1915. Represented in Brooklyn Museum
of Arts and Sciences.
BLUMENTHAL, M(oses) L(aurence),
518 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.; h.
Elkins Park, Pa.
I., T. — Born Wilmington, N. C, July
13, 1879. Pupil Pennsylvania Museum
School, and studied in Munich. Mem-
ber: Guild of Free Lance Artists;
Phila. Sketch C. Illustrates for "Sat-
urday Evening- Post," "The Ladies
Home Journal," "Collier's," "Mc-
Clure's," "Scribner's," etc.
BLUMLER, George, 113% East 31st St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
BOALL, Marian G., Mills College, Oak-
land, Calif. (P.)
BOARDMAN, Frank C, Columbia, Tenn.
P. — M ember: New Haven PCC.
BOARDMAN, Rosina C(ox), "Banbury-
Holt," Huntington, N. Y.
Min. P. — Born New York City. Pupil
of Alice Beckington, George Bridg-
man, Frank du Mond. Member:
NAC; N. A. Women PS.
BOBBS, Ruth Pratt, 10 Gramercy Park,
New York, N. Y.; h. 1610 North Dela-
ware St., Indianapolis, Ind.
P.— Born Indianapolis, Ind., Sept. 3, 1884.
Pupil of Wm. M. Chase. Member:
NAC; N. A. Women PS; Pen and Brush
C; Indiana AC. Work: "The Span-
ish Shawl," Herron Art Institute, In-
dianapolis.
BOCK, Charles Peter, Manvel, Texas.
P. — Born in Germany, Aug. 13, 1872.
Pupil of AI Chicago; Simon in Paris.
Member: Dallas Painters; Overland
Landscape Outfit. Work: "Where
Sand and Water Meet," Dallas Public
Library.
BOCK, Richard W., The Gnomes, River
Forest, 111.
S.— Born in Germany, July 16, 1865;
came to America at age of 5. Pupil of
Schafer, Berlin Academy; Falguiere.
Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris. Mem-
ber: Chicago SA; SW Sc. Award:
Medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893.
Work: Illinois State Soldiers' and
Sailors' Monument at Shiloh; Lovejoy
monument at Alton, 111.; bronze group
on Public Library at Indianapolis; Sol-
diers' Monument at Chicamaugua, for
Lancaster, Pa.; group of 3 figures on
Missouri State Bldg., St. Louis Exp.,
1904; pediments on C. B. Q. R. R. Sta-
tion, Omaha, Neb.
BODFISH, Evelin. See Bourne.
BOEBINGER, Charles William, Walnut
and Central Parkway, Cincinnati, O. ; h.
Beechwood Rd., Ft. Mitchell, Ky.
P., L, C, T.— Born Cincinnati, O., June
17, 1876. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Acad-
emy; ASL of N. Y. Member: West-
ern Drawing and Manual Teachers
Assoc.
BOERICKE, Johanna M(agdalene), 5932
Overbrook Ave.. Philadelphia, Pa.
P., S.— Born Philadelphia, Feb. 13, 1868.
PupU of PAFA; studied in Rome and
Pans. Member: Plastic C. ; Fellow-
ship PAFA; Pa.S.Min.P.; S.Indp.A.;
Philc-i. Alliance.
BOGDANOVE, A. J., 145 East 23rd St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Monhegan
Island, Me.
P., T.— Born Minsk. Russia, Aug:. 11,
1887. Pupil at NAD under Maynard and
F. C. Jones. Member: S. Indp, A.
Lg. of NYA. Work: Mural decora-
tion in Hebrew Sheltering Guardian So-
ciety, Pleasantviile, N. Y. ; two mural
decorations in the Brooklyn Commercial
High School.
BOGER, Fred, 2440 Jefferson Ave., S. Nor-
wood, O.
P., L— Born Baltimore, Md., Oct. 12,
1857. Pupil of Frank Duveneck in Cin-
cinnati. Member: Cincinnati AC.
Work: "Judge Alphonso Taft," Supe-
rior Court, Hamilton County, O; por-
traits of George B. Cox and August
Herrman at Blaine Club, Cincinnati, O.
BOGERT, George H., 108 West 57th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; and Lyme, Conn.
Ldscp.P.— Born New York, 1864. Pupil
of NAD; Puvis de Chavannes. AimS
Morot and Boudin in Paris. Mem-
ber: ANA 1899; SAA 1899; Lotos C;
Salma.C.1897; A.Fund S. Awards:
Hon. mention, PAFA, 1892; Webb Prize,
SAA 1898; first Hallgarten prize, NAD
1899; bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1900;
silver medal, Pan-Am, Exp., Buffalo,
1901; gold medal, AAS, Phila., 1902 and
1907; silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
Work: "Surf and Wind," "Rouen,"
"Chale Church, Isle of Wight, Eng-
land," and "October Moonlight,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York;
"Sunset," Corcoran Gallery, Washing-
ton, D. C; "A Stormy Day at Katwyk,
Holland," Buffalo Fine Arts Academy;
"Sea and Rain," National Gallery,
Washington, D. C; "After Sunset —
Longpre," Pennsylvania Academy,
Philadelphia; "Autumn Sunset," "Ven-
ice by Moonlight" and "Dordrecht,"
Brooklyn Institute Museum.
BOHM, Max, 60 Summit Ave., Bronx-
ville. N. Y.
P.— Born Cleveland, O., Jan. 21, 1868.
Pupil of Laurens, Guillemet and Con-
stant in Paris. Member: ANA 1917;
NA 1920; Salma.C; Mural P.; Province-
town Beachcombers' C; Provincetown
AA. ; Cleveland AC; Paris SAP; Paris
AAA; Chelsea Arts Club and United
Arts Club in London. Awards :
Third class medal, Paris Salon, 1898;
silver medal, Paris Exp., 1900; bronze
medal. Pan- Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
gold medal. P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915;
Clarke prize, NAD 1917. Work:
"Golden Hours," Luxembourg, Paris;
Minn. State Art Society; mural decora-
tion. Court House, Cleveland, O.; por-
trait of Gov. Lind, Capitol, St. Paul,
Minn.; work in National Gallery, Wash-
ington, D. C.
BOHNERT, Herbert, 2258 Euclid Ave.;
• h. 1875 East 81st St.. Cleveland, O.
P., I.— Born Cleveland, C, May 19, 1888.
Pupil Cleveland School of Art. M e m -
356
BOLTON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BORGLUM
b e r : Cleveland 'SA; second prize,
Cleveland SA, 1919.
BOLTON, Robert F(rederick), 502 West
139th St., N. Y.; summer, Cloverly
Farm, Verona Station, N. Y.
P. — Born New York City, March 19,
1901. Pupil of Curran, Francis C.
Jones, Maynard.
BONAR, James, Park BIdg., Pittsburgh,
Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
BONAWIT, G. Owen, 8 West 13th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
BONAWITZ, George, 320 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
BOND, Kate Lee Bacon, 899 Ash St.,
Winnetka, 111.
P., T. — Born Topeka, Kan., Nov. 18,
1890. Pupil of AIC. Member: Chi-
cago SA; Chicago S. Min. P.
BON HA JO, Val, 23 Hulbert Block, Cin-
cinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati AC.
BONNET, Leon D., 24 Gramercy Park,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
BONSALL, Elisabeth F(earne), 8430 Wal-
nut St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P., L— Born Philadelphia, Sept. 12, 1861.
Pupil of PAFA under Eakins and
Howard Pyle; Collin and Courtois
in Paris. Member: Plastic C;
Fellowship PAFA. Phila. Alliance.
Awards : First Toppan prize, PAFA
1885; Mary Smith prize, PAFA 1888 and
1897. Work: "Hot Milk," Pennsyl-
vania Academy, Philadelphia.
BONSALL, Mary W., 3430 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I. — Born Fernwood, Pa. Pupil of
Cecilia Beaux, Robert Vonnoh and Wm.
M. Chase. Member: Plastic C; Fel-
lowship PAFA; Pa.S.Min.P. Specialty,
portraits in oil and miniature and de-
signs for seals.
BONTA, Elizabeth B(rainard), 290 Adel-
phi St., Brooklvn, New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Syracuse, N. Y. Pupil
of A. W. Dow in New York. Mem-
ber: Brooklvn WCC. Award :
Bronze medal for water color, St. Paul
Inst., 1916. Work: "The Pale Moon,"
St. Paul Inst.
BOOG, Carle IVllchel, 206 Parkville Ave.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Sursee, Canton L,ucerne,
Switzerland. 1877. Pupil of AST. of N.
Y. ; Ecole des Beaux-Arts and Bonnat,
Paris. Member: S.Indp.; Lg. of
NYA.
BOONE, Cora M., 1450 Alice St., Oakland,
Calif. (P.)
BOOTH, Franklin, 57 West 57th St., New
York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI 1911; Salma.C.
BOOTH, Hanson, Woodstock, Ulster Co.,
N. Y.
P., I. — Born Noblesville, Ind., May 19,
1886. Pupil of Vanderpoel and C. F.
Browne in Chicago; George Bridg-
man in New York. Member: SI
1910; Salma.C. Award: Shaw prize,
Salma.C. 1913. Illustrated "The Poet
Who Saved His Youth," "House of the
Dawn," "Lady of the Twilight," Mc-
Clure's; "The Love Tryst," American
Magazine; "Minister of Police," and
other books.
BOOTH, James Scripps, 836 South El Mo-
lino Ave., Pasadena, Calif.; summer,
"Cranbrook," Birmingham, Mich.
P., S.— Born Detroit, Mich., May 31,
1888. Studied in Europe. Member:
Calif. AC; Scarab Club. Awards:
Second Hopkin Prize, Detroit Art In-
stitute, 1915.
BOREIN, Edward, 4 East 39th St., New
York, N. Y.
E. — Born San Leandro, Calif., 1873.
BORG. Carl Oscar, Santa Barbara, Calif.
P. — Born at Grinstad, Sweden, March 3,
1879. Self-taught. Member: Calif.
AC; Salma.C; Inter.Soc.AL; San F.SA;
San F.SE; Calif. WCS. Awards:
Hon. mention, Vichy, 1913; silver medal,
Versailles, 1914; silver medal, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915; silver medal, San
Diego, 1915; gold medal, San Diego,
1916; second Black prize, Calif. AC.
1918; silver medal, Societe des Artistes
Francais, 1920; Mabury Purchase Prize,
Calif. AC, 1920. Represented in Univer-
sity of California, Berkeley, Calif. Mu-
nicipal Collection, Phoenix, Ariz.;
Golden Gate Museum, San Francisco;
Hearst Free Library, Anaconda.
BORGLUM (John) Gutzon (de la Mothe),
166 East 38th St., New York, N. Y.; h.
Stamford, Conn.
S.,P.,L,T.— Born in Idaho, March 25,
1867. Pupil of San Fran. Art Assoc;
Julian Academy in Paris. Settled in
New York in 1902. Member: Soc.
Nat. des Beaux- Arts, Paris; N.Y.Arch.
Lg.l902; Am. PS (vice-pres.) ; Royal Soc.
of British Artists. Awards : Gold
medal. Western Art Assoc; gold medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904. Work: Sheridan
monument, Washington, D. C; colossal
head of Lincoln, Capitol, Washington,
D. C; "Mares of Diomedes," and "Rus-
kin." Metropolitan Museum, New York;
"Lincoln Memorial," Newark, N. J.;
"The Flyer." University of Virginia,
Charlottesville.
BORGLUM. Solon H(annibal), 9 East
59th St., New York, N. York; h. Rocky
Ranch, Norwalk, Conn.
S.— Born Ogden, Utah. Dec 22, 1868.
Pupil of his brother, Gutzon Borglum,
and of the Art Academy of Cincinnati
under Rebisso; Fremiet and Puech in
Paris. Member: NSS 1901; ANA
1911; Silvermine Group of Artists.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1899; silver medal, Paris Exp.. 1900;
silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp.. Buffalo,
1901; gold medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
silver medal, Buenos Aires Exp., 1910.
Work: Equestrian statue of Gen.
John B. Gordon, Atlanta. Ga. ; eques-
trian statue of "Bucky O'Neil," Pres-
cott, Ariz.; "Backus Memorial," Packer
Institute. Brooklyn, New York; "Sol-
diers and Sailors Monument," Danbury,
ZS7
BORGORD
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BOURQUIN
Conn.; "Hurley Monument," Topeka,
Kan,; "Border of White Man's Land"
and "Bulls Fighting," Metropolitan
Museum, New York; "C. A. Schieren"
(bust), Brooklyn Institute Museum; six
bronzes in Detroit Institute; Schieren
Memorial, Greenwood Cemetery; "Pio-
neer," Court of Honor, San F.Exp.,
1915; heroic statue of Jacob Leisler,
New Rochelle, N. Y. ; "Inspiration,"
"Aspiration," "Little Lady of the Den,"
St. Marks Church in the Bouwerie, New
York, N. Y.
BORGORD. Martin, care of Salmagundi
Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
P., S.— Born Norway. Feb. 8, 1869. Pu-
pil of Laurens in Paris. Member:
Salma. C; Allied AA; Paris AAA; 'St.
Lucas Society, Amsterdam, Holland.
Award: Medal, Paris Salon, 1905.
Work: "Laren Weaver," Carnegie
Inst., Pittsburgh.
BORIE, Adolphe, 4100 Pine St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.; and 58 West 57th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — Born Philadelphia, Jan. 5, 1877.
Pupil of PAFA and Munich Academy.
Member: Fellowship PAFA; AC
Phila.; Port.P.; Allied AA.; ANA 1917.
Award : Beck gold medal, PAFA
1910; silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F.,
1915; Maynard portrait prize, NAD 1917.
BORON DA, Lester D., 131 Waverly Place,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Reno, Nev., July 24, 1886.
Member: Salma. C.
BORZO, K(arel), 3025 East Madison St.,
Seattle, Wash.
P.— Born in Holland, April 3. 1888.
Member: Seattle Fine Arts Society.
BOSLEY, Frederick A(ndrew), 162 New-
bury St., Boston, Mass.; h. Higginson
Road, Lincoln. Mass.
P.— Born Lebanon, N. H., Feb. 24, 1881.
Pupil of Tarbell and Benson in Boston;
studied two years in Europe on Paige
Scholarship from School of Boston Mu-
seum of Fine Arts. Instructor of paint-
ing at School of Boston Museum of Fine
Arts since 1913. Member: Boston
GA. Award : Bronze medal P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915. honorable men. In-
ternational Exhibition, Carnegie Inst.,
1920. Work: "The Dreamer," Boston
Museum.
BOSS, Homer, 37 West 16th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
BOSTON, Frederick J(ames), 735 Fulton
St.; h. 267 Marlborough Rd., Brooklyn,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Bridgeport, Conn., Feb. 18,
1855. Pupil of Whittaker in Brooklyn;
Carolus-Duran in Paris. Member:
Brooklyn SA.; Salma.C.
BOSTON, Joseph H., Carnegie Hall, New
York, N. Y.
P,,T. — Born Bridgeport, Conn. Mem-
ber: ANA 1901; SAA 1896; Salma.C.
1898; Allied AA; Brooklyn AC. Award:
Bronze medal Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901. Work : "The Devil's Glen" and
"Portrait of Franklin W. Hooper,"
Brooklyn Institute Museum.
BOSWORTH, Winifred, Woodland, El-
gin, 111.
P., E.— Born Elgin, 111., 1885. Studied
at AIC; Boston Museum of Fine Arts;
AST^ of N. Y.; Laurens in Paris; Eispn-
griiber in Munich. Member: Chi-
cago WCC; Chicago SE; S.Indp.A.
BOTH, Armand, 245 Paine Ave., New
Rochelle, N. Y.
I. — Born Portland, Me., Jan. 8, 1881.
Pupil of Albert E. Moore and Eric Pape
in Boston; Laurens and Steinlen in
Paris. Member: SI 1913. Illustra-
tions: Sir Gilbert Parker's works; nov-
els for Harpers; current magazines.
BOTH, W. C, 2314 Indiana Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.
Etcher — M ember: Chicago S. Etchers.
BOTKE, Cornelius, Carmel-by-the-Sea,
Calif.
P. — Born Leenwarden, Holland, July 6,
1887. Pupil of Chris Lebrun. Mem-
ber: Chicago SA. Awards : Fine
Arts Bldg. Prize, 1918; Hon. mention
for landscape, American Exhibition,
Chicago, 1921. Work: "The Golden
Tree," Public Schools, Chicago; "The
Last Snow," Oak Park High School;
"Lifting Clouds," Public Library, Ponca
City, Okla.
BOTKE, iVIrs. Jessie Arms, Carmel-by-
the-Sea. Calif.
P., I.— Born Chicago, 111., May 27, 1883.
Pupil of AIC, Johansen, Woodbury and
Herter. Member: Chicago SA.
Award : Englewood Woman's Club
prize ^$50), AIC, 1917; Cahn prize, AIC,
1918; bronze medal, Peoria Society of
Allied Arts, 1918; medal, Chicago SA,
1919. Work: "White Swans," Mu-
nicipal Gallery, Chicago; mural deco-
ration for Ida Noyes' Hall, University
of Chicago; "Geese," Chicago Art In-
stitute.
BOTSFORD, Anna. See Mrs. John H.
Comstock.
BOUGH E, Louis, Daniel Gallery, 2 West
47th St.. New York. N. Y.
P., E.— Born New York, N. Y., March
18, 1896. Pupil of Richard Miller, 'Simon,
Menard and J. P. Laurens in Paris;
Ossip Linde, Du Mond, Luis Mora in
New York. Member: Paris AAA;
Penguins.
BOUCHE, IVlarian Wright, care of Daniel
Gallery, 2 West 47th St., New York,
N. Y.
P., W.— Born New York, Dec. 8, 1895.
Pupil of Henry Matisse, Walt Kuhn.
Member: Paris A. A. A.; Penguin
Club; S.Indp.A.
BOUDREAU, James C, Fulton Bldg.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
BOUGUEREAU, Elisabeth (Jane) Gard-
ner (Mrs. W. A. Bouguereau), 75 Rue
Notre-Dame-des-Champs, Paris, France.
P.— Born Exeter, N. H., 1837.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1879; third class medal, Paris Salon,
1887; bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1889.
BOURQUIN, J. E., 1632 University Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
358
BOURNE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BRADDOCK
BOURNE, Mrs. Evelin Bodfish, 515 West
122nd St., New York, N. Y. ; summer.
Box 29, Waresham, Mass.
P. — Born Waresham, Mass., July 10,
1882. Pupil of NAD under Brush, Volk
and Jones.
BOURNE, Gertrude Beals (Mrs. Frank A.
Bourne), 130 Mt. Vernon St., Boston,
Mass.
P. — Born in Boston. Pupil of Henry
B. Snell and Henry W. Rice. Mem-
ber: Copley 'S., 1904; NYWCC, 1916;
N. A. Women PS. Specialty, water col-
ors.
BOUTWOOD, Charles Edward, care of F.
A. Bryden and Co., Chicago, 111.
P.,T. — Born in England. Pupil of Royal
Academy in London; later studied in
Paris. Member: Chicago SA; Chi-
cago WCC. Award : Silver medal,
Chicago SA, 1913.
BOWDITCH, Mary O., 16 Arlington St.,
Boston, Mass. (S.)
BOWER, M. L., 1730 Sansom St., Phila-
delphia, Pa. (I.)
BOWDOIN, Harriette, 1947 Broadway; h.
164 West 66th St., New York, N. Y.
P.,I.,C.,T. — Born in Massachusetts. Pu-
pil of Henry B. Snell and Elliott Dain-
gerfield in New York; Frank Brangwyn
in France. Member: N. A. Wo-
men PS; AWCS; NYWCC; Pen and
Brush C; S. Indp. A.; SPNY.
BOWEN, Benjamin J., Hotel des Voy-
ageurs, Concarneau, Finistere, France;
h. 517 Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
P. — Born South Boston, Mass., Feb. 1,
1859. Pupil of Lefebvre, Robert-Fleury
and Bouguereau in Paris.
BOWER, Alexander, Salmagundi Club, 45
Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born New York, N. Y., March 31,
1875. Pupil of PAFA under Thomas
P. Anshutz, Member: Salma.C.
BOWER, Mrs. Lucy Scott, 18 Rue Bois-
sonade, Paris, France.
P., W. — Born Rochester, Iowa, Jan. 18,
1867. Pupil of Chase; Robert-Fleury
and Lefebvre in Paris. Member: N.
A. Women PS. Work: "The Old
Street," Museum of Vitre, France.
BOWLES, Mrs. Caroline, 375 Waverly
Drive, Pasadena, Cal.
P.— M ember: Cal. AC.
BOYD, Myra, R. F. D. 2, Sharpsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
BOYD, Rutherford, Leonia, N. J.
I. — M ember: Salma. C.
BOYD, William, Empire Bldg., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.; h. Sewickley, Pa.
P., Arch. — Born Glasgow, Scotland,
Aug. 24, 1882. Pupil of Paul Cret.
Member: AIA; Pittsburgh AA.
BOYDEN, Dwight Frederick, care of
Algonquin Club; h. 382 Commonwealth
Ave., Boston, Mass.
Ldscp.P. — Born Boston, Mass., 1860.
Pupil of Boulanger and Lefebvre in
Paris. Member: Salma.C. 1902.
Awards: Silver medal, Boston; hon.
mention, Paris Salon, 1899; third gold
medal, Paris Salon, 1900.
BOYER, Jane Allen (Mrs. Murray Boyer),
Riverton, N. J.
P.— M ember : Fellowship PAFA;
Plastic C.
BOYLAN, W(illiam), 254 East 5th St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P.— Born Brooklyn, April 10, 1879.
Studied in New York. Member:
Brooklyn WCC; Brooklyn SA.
BOYLE, Charles W(ellington), Delgado
Art Museum; h. 1615 Prytania St., New
P., T.— Born New Orleans, La. Pupil
of Paul Poincy; A. Molinary; ASL of N.
Y. Member: NOAA; NAC. Work:
"Afternoon Light," Delgado Museum;
"Oak on Bayou," New Orleans Art As-
sociation.
BOYLE, Gertrude, 246 West 14th St., New
York, N. Y.
S. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
BOYLE, Sarah Yocum McFadden (Mrs.
Frederic A. Boyle), 3505 Hamilton St.,
West Philadelphia, Pa.; h., 94 'South
Munn Ave., East Orange, N. J.
Min.P. — Born Germantown, Pa. Pupil
of Drexel Inst., Pyle, Deigendesch and
Herman Faber in Philadelphia. M e m-
ber: Plastic C; Phila. Alliance; Fel-
lowship PAFA; Pa. S. Min. P.
BOYNTON, George R(ufus), Sherwood
Studios, 58 West 57th St., New York,
N. Y.; summer, Cragsmoor, Ulster Co.,
N. Y.
P., W. — Born Pleasant Grove, Wis.,
Oct. 16, 1866. Pupil of J. G. Brown,
C. Y. Turner, Walter Shirlaw and Chase.
Member: Lotos Club; A. Fund S.
Works : Portraits of Rear Adml.
Coghlan, and Gen. Anson G. McCook in
the Union League Club; portrait of Gen.
Alexander S. Webb, in West Point Mili-
tary Academy; portrait of Dr. William
Temple Hornaday owned by the N. Y.
Zoological Society.
BRABAZON, Thomas, 21 Pavilion St.,
Hartford, Conn.
P.,L.,T.— M ember: Conn.AFA; Hart-
ford Municipal AS. Head teacher at
Municipal Art Schools; lecturer on
American Indian ideograms for interior
decoration.
BRACKEN, Julia M. See Mrs. William
Wendt.
BRACKENRIDGE, Cornelia, see Talbot,
Mrs. M. W.
BRACKETT, Arthur Loring, 22 Thorn-
dike St., Brookline, Mass.
P. — M ember: Boston AC.
BRADBURY, Charles Earl, 402 University
Hall, Urbana, 111.; h. 610 South Prairie
St., Champaign, 111.; summer, 129 East
Pleasant Ave., Syracuse, N. Y.
P., I., T.— Born North Bay, Oneida Co.,
N. Y., May 21, 1888. Pupil of Painting
Department, Syracuse University; Jean
Paul Laurens and Academic Julian,
Paris.
BRADDOCK, E(ffie) Frances, 406 Third
Ave., Warren, Pa.
S., C— Born Philadelphia. Pupil PAFA,
J. Liberty Tadd, Emily Sartain. M e m-
b e r : Plastic C.
359
BRADFIELD
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BRAUNER
BRADFIELD, Mrs. E. P., Pontiac, Mich.
(P.)
BRADLEY, Mrs. Susan H., 20 Brimmer
St., Boston, Mass.
Ldscp.P.— Born Boston, May 15, 1851.
Pupil of Thayer, Edward Boit, Chase
and School of Boston Mus. Mem-
ber: Phila. "WCC; Fellowship PAFA;
Boston WCC; NYWCC; S.Indp.A. Rep-
resented in Herron Art Institute, In-
dianapolis.
BRADLEY,. W. B., 2771 Decatur Ave.,
Bronx, New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., Nov. 16, 1890.
Pupil of Edward Trumbull.
BRADLEY, Will (William H.), 131 East
23d St., New York, N. Y.; h. Short
Hills, N. J.
I.— Born Boston, Mass., July 10, 1868.
Member: SI 1910; N.Y.Arch.Lg.l914
(assoc); Players, 1905. Art director
"Collier's Magazine," 1907-09, and of
"Good Housekeeping," 1911-13; "Metro-
politan," 1914-16; "Century," 1914-16.
Author and illustrator of "Toymaker
to the King" and "The Wonder Box."
BRADT, Delphine, 1820 Spruce St., Phila-
delphia, Pa. (P.)
BRADWAY, Florence Dell, Art Alliance,
1823 Walnut St.; h. 2012 West Ontario
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P., T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Oct 16,
1898. Pupil of Philadelphia School of
Design. Member: Plastic C; Alum-
nae of Philadelphia School of Design.
BRAKKEN, Andrew, Belfair, Washing-
ton. (P.)
BRAMNICK, David, Mark Bldg., 721 Wal-
nut St.; h. 764 South 5th St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P. — Born KishinefC, Russia, May 17,
1894. Pupil PAFA. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA. Work in Graphic
Sketch Club.
BRANCH, Grove R., 64 Fruit St., Worces-
ter, Mass.
P., C, T. — Instructor of Jewelry Depart-
ment School of the Worcester Museum;
also at Commonwealth 'School of Art.
Boothbay Harbor, Me. Director of
Manual Arts, Worcester Academy.
Member: Arts and Crafts Society
of Boston.
BRANCHARD, Emiie (Peter), 61 South
Washington Square, New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., Dec. 4, 1881.
Member: Lg. of N.Y.A.; S.Indp.A.
BRANDEGEE, Robert B., Farmington,
Conn.
P.,I.,C.,T.— Born Berlin, Conn. Pupil
of JacQueson de la Chevreuse in Paris.
Member: ANA, 1908; Conn.AFA;
Eclectics. Award : Silver medal,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; bronze
medal, Exp. Universelle, Paris. Work:
"The Wanderer," Hillyer Gallery,
Smith College, Northampton, Mass.
BRANNAN, Sophie iVIarston, 27 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Mountain View, Cal. Pupil
of Mark Hopkins Inst, of Art, San
Francisco; studied in Paris. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; SPNY; San
Francisco Art. Assoc; Conn.AFA.; PBC.
Award : McMillin prize, N. A. Women
PS, 1912; hon. mention, Conn.AFA.
BRANNIGAN, Gladys (Mrs. Robert A.
Brannigan, 242 West 56th St.; h. 419
W. 119th St., New York; summer. East
Gloucester, Mass.
P. — Born Hingham, Mass. Pupil of
Corcoran Art School, NAD, and H. B.
Snell. Member: N.A. Women P.S. ;
Lg. of N.Y.A.; Wash. WCC.
BRANSOM, Edith, 411 West 114th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
BRANSOM, Paul, Green Lake P. O., Ful-
ton Co., N. Y.
P., I.— Born Washington, D. C, July 26,
1885. Member: SI 1911; New York
Zoological Soc. Illustrated: "The Call
of the Wild"; "The Wind in the Wil-
lows"; "Neighbors Unknown"; "The
Feet of the Furtive"; "Hoof and Claw";
"The Sandman's Forest," "The Sand-
man's Mountain," "Over Indian and
Animal Trails," "More Kindred of the
Wild," "The Secret Trails," "Children
of the Wild," etc.
6RASZ, Arnold F(ranz), 189 Main St.;
h. 299 East Irving St., Oshkosh, Wis.
P., S., I., E.— Born Polk County, Wis.,
July 19, 1888. Pupil of Minneapolis
School of Fine Arts; Henri in New
York. Member: Wis. PS.
BRAUN, Mrs, Cora Fischer, Department
of Fine and Applied Arts, University of
Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn.
P., C, W., L., T.— Born Jordon, Minn.,
May 27, 1885. Pupil of Garber, Hale,
Joseph Pearson, Breckenridge, Chase,
Blashfield and Beaux. Member:
Fellowship PAFA. Acting Associate
Professor of Art, University of Ne-
braska, 1918-1919; Acting Assistant
Professor of Art, Ohio State University,
1919-1920; Director, Dept. of Applied
and Fine Arts, University of Tennessee.
BRAUN, M(aurice), Point Loma, Calif.
P. — Born Nagy Bittse, Hungary, Oct.
1, 1877. Pupil of E. M. Ward, Maynard
and Francis C. Jones at NAD in New
York. Member: California AC; San
Diego AG. Represented in Municipal
Collection, Phoeniz, Ariz.; San Diego
Museum. Awards : Hallgarten prize,
NAD 1900; gold medal, Panama-Calif.
Exp., San Diego, 1915; gold medal,
Panama-Calif. Int. Exp., San Diego,
1916.
BRAUNER, Olaf, Franklin Hall, Cornell
University; Ithaca, N. Y.
P.,S.,T. — Born Christiania, Norway, Feb.
9, 1869. Pupil of Benson and Tarbell
in Boston. Member: Gargoyle Soc;
Central N.Y.Chpt.AIA (hon.). Prof, of
painting, Cornell Univ. since 1900.
Work: "Come Unto Me," altar piece
in Church of Our Saviour, Chicago;
portraits in the Kimball Library, Ran-
dolph, Vt. ; in Cornell University Li-
brary, Ithaca; in Girls' High School,
Boston; in Amherst College. Amherst,
Mass.; sculpture, "Dane Memorial" In
Walnut Hill Cemetery, Brookline, Mass.;
Clifton Beckwith Brown medal. Col-
lege of Architecture, Cornell University;
fountain at Seal Harbor, Me.
360
BRAUNHOLD
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BRENNER
BRAUNHOLD, Louis, 35 North Dearborn
St., Chicago, 111.
Etcher — M ember: Chicago Soc. of
Etchers.
BRAXTON, William Ernest, 436 Lexing-
ton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Washington, D. C, Dec. 10,
1878. Pupil of J. B. Whittaker. Mem-
ber: Lg. of N.Y.A.; S.Indp.A.
BRECK, Joseph, Metropolitan Museum of
Art, New York, N. Y.
P., I. — A ward: Gold medal for paint-
ing, Minnesota State Art Society, 1916.
BRECKENRIDGE, Hugh H(enry), Port
Washington, Pa.
P., T.— Born Leesburg, Va., Oct. 6, 1870.
Pupil of PAFA; Bouguereau, Ferrier
and Doucet in Paris. Member:
NYWCC; Phila.WCC; Fellowship PAFA;
ACPhila.; ANA, 1913; Phila.Chap.AIA
(hon.). Instructor in PAFA since
1894. Member of Municipal Art Jury
of Phila. Awards : First Toppan
prize and European scholarship,
schools of PAFA; medal, Atlanta Exp.,
1895; hon. mention, Paris Exp., 1900;
bronze medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; second Corcoran prize, S. Wash. A.,
1903; gold medal, ACPhila.1907; first
prize, Wash.WCC, 1908; silver medal,
Buenos Aires Exp., 1910; gold medal,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915; third W. A.
Clark prize ($1,000), and Corcoran
bronze medal, Washington, 1916; Stotes-
bury prize, PAFA, 1917; gold medal of
honor, PAFA, 1919; Sesnan gold medal,
PAFA, 1920; gold medal. Fellowship
PAPA, 1920. Work: Portraits in
University of Pa., Art Club, Jefferson
Medical College, College of Pharmacy,
College of Physicians, Historical So-
ciety, Pennsylvania Hospital, Philoso-
phical Society and City Hall, all in
Philadelphia; University of Va. ; State
House, Hartford, Conn. Landscapes in
St. Louis Club, St. Louis, Mo., and in
University Club, Indianapolis, Ind.,
"Still Life," San Francisco Art Mu-
seum; Court House, Reading, Pa.;
State Normal School, West Chester,
Pa.; Delgado Museum of Art, New Or-
leans.
56 Bedford Ave,
BREDEMEIER, Carl,
Buffalo, N. Y. (P.)
BREDIN, C(hristine) S., 5450 Delancey
St.. Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I. — Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy;
Colarossi in Paris. Member: AI
Graphic Arts. Award : Medal, At-
lanta Exp., 1885.
BREDIN, R. Sloan, New Hope, Bucks
County, Pa.
P., T.— Born Butler, Butler Co., Pa.,
Sept. 9, 1881. Pupil of Chase, Du Mond
and Beckwith. Member: ANA, 1921
Allied AA; Salma.C; Inter. Soc. AL
NAC (life); Rochester AC. Awards
Second Hallgarten prize, NAD, 1914
bronze medal, P. -P. Exp., San P., 1915
Maynard Portrait prize, NAD, 1921
prize, Salmagundi Club, 1921. Work
"Midsummer," Minneopilas Art Society,
and in the National Arts Club.
BREGLER, Charles, 4935 North 11th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P., S., C— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil
of Thomas Eakins; PAFA; ASL of
New York. Member: Fellowship
PAFA.
BREGY, Edith IVl(aurice), 1627 Sansom
St., 2023 North Broad St., Philadel-
phia, Pa.; summer. Spring Lake, N. J.
P. — Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil of
Phila. School of Design for Women,
PAFA, Snell, Beaux, Carlsen and
Woodbury. Member: Plastic C. ;
Fellowship PAFA; Phila. Alliance.
Work: "Pink Roses," Herron Art
Institute, Indianapolis, Ind.
BREHM, George, 15 West 67th St., New
York, N. Y.
I., T.— Born Anderson, Ind., Sept. 30,
1878. Pupil of Forsyth, Twachtman,
Bridgman and Du Mond. Member:
SL
BREHM, Worth, 15 West 67th St., New
York, N. Y.; Norwalk, Conn.
I.— Born Anderson, Ind., Aug. 8, 1883.
Pupil of John Herron Inst.; AIC; ASL
of N.Y. Member: SI 1910; Salma.C.
BREITMAYER, M. V., 25^ East Main St.,
Jackson, Mich.
E.— M ember: Chicago SE; Fellow-
ship PAFA.
BREMER, Anne, Studio Bldg., 1369 Post
St., San Francisco, Cal.
P. — Born San Francisco, Cal. Pupil of
Mark Hopkins Inst, of Art, San Fran-
cisco; ASL of N. Y.; La Palette and
Academie Moderne, Paris. Member:
San F. Art Assoc; Calif. A. C.
Award: Bronze medal, P. -P. Exp.,
San P., 1915; silver medal, San P. AA.
1918. Work: "Memorial Panel,"
Y. W. C. A., San Jose, Cal.; Del Monte
Art Gallery, Monterey, Calif. ; Beth.any
College, Lindsborg, Kan.; mural decor-
ation, Mt. Zion Hospital; Palace of
Pine Arts, San Francisco, Cal; Mills
College, Oakland Art Gallery, Oakland,
Calif.
BREMOND, Jean Louis, 29 Rue de
I'Yvette, Paris, France.
E. — M ember: Chicago SE.
BRENNAN, Alexander Joseph, 14 West
98th St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, May 18, 1881.
Member: S. Indp. A.; Lg. of N.Y.A.
BRENNAN, Mrs. A. L. See Arrah Lee
Gaul.
BRENNEN, Charles, Westfield, N. J.
I. — M ember: SI.
BRENNER, Victor D(avid), 18 East 8th
St., New York, N. Y.
S., Medalist. — Born Shavely, Russia,
June 12, 1871. Pupil of Louis Oscar
Roty. Came to New York in 1890.
Member: NSS 1902; N.Y.Arch.Lg.
1902; NAC. Awards : Bronze medal,
Paris Exp., 1900; hon. men., Paris Salon,
1900; bronze medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901: silver medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904; gold medal, Brussels Exp., 1910;
silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San P., 1915.
Work: Set of medals in Metropolitan
Museum, New York; Pine Craftsmanship
361
BRETT
WHO'S WHO IN AHT
BRIDGMAN
Medal for School Art League of New
York, 1911; Schenley memorial fountain,
Pittsburgh, 1917; represented in Paris
Mint; Luxembourg, Paris; Munich
Glyptothek, Vienna Numismatic Soc;
Am. Numismatic Soc, New York; Bos-
ton Museum of Fine Arts; Mint in Phil-
adelphia; Art Institute, Chicago; Minne-
apolis Institute.
BRETT, Harold M., Fenway Studios, 30
Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.; summer,
North Chatham, Cape Cod, Mass.
P., I. — Born Middleboro, Mass., Dec.
13, 1880. Pupil of Walter Appleton
Clark, H. Siddons Mowbray and How-
ard Pyle. Member: Boston AC.
BREUER, H(enry) J(oseph), Lone Pine,
Inyo Co., Calif.
P., I.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 16,
1860. Member: San F. AA. Awards:
Silver Medal, Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
Exp., Seattle, 1909; gold medal, P.-P.
Exp., San Francisco, 1915.
BREUL, Harold G(uenther), 57 West 10th
St., New York, N. Y. ; h. 251 Fruit
Hill Ave., Providence, R. I.
I.— Born May 6, 1889. Pupil of Henry
McCarter. Awarded Cresson Schol-
arship, PAFA. Illustrates for Collier's
and McGraw-Hill publications.
BREWER, Adrian L(ou!s), 448 River
Blvd., St. Paul, Minn.
P.— Born St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 2, 1891.
Pupil of N. R. Brewer. Member:
Minneapolis AC. Award : Bronze
medal, 'St. Paul Inst., 1917; silver medal
for oils, St. Paul Inst., 1918.
BREWER, Alice Ham (Mrs. F. Layton
Brewer), 241 Midland Ave., Montclair,
N. J.
Min.P. — Born Chicago, 111., March 14,
1872. Pupil of AIC; ASL of N.Y.; Henry
Mosler, W. J. Whittemore and Rhoda
Holmes Nicholls. Member: NYWCC.
BREWER, Ethellyn. See Mrs. Louis De
Foe.
BREWER, Nicholas Ricliard, Salmagundi
Club, 45 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.,
and 4 East Ohio St., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born in Olmstead Co., Minn., June
11, 1857. Pupil of D. W. Tryon and
Charles Noel Flagg in New York.
Member: Chicago SA 1891; Salma.
C, 1903; Wash. AC; N.Y.Municipal AS;
Nat. AC; Los Angeles AC. Awards :
Second prize, Minn. State Art Society,
1912; St. Paul Inst, purchase prize, 1915;
First prize Illinois State Fair, 1917;
Municipal Art League, Art Inst, of
Chicago purchase prize, 1921. Repre-
sented in collection of portraits of gov-
ernors of Rhode Island, Wisconsin,
South Dakota and Minnesota, and in
state portrait collections of Maine,
Iowa, North Dakota; and Salmagundi
Club, New York; St. Paul Art Institute;
Art Institute of Chicago; Sioux City
High School; Municipal Art League,
Decatur, 111.; University of Oklahoma
and University of Minnesota.
BREWSTER, Amanda. See Mrs. R. V.
V. Sewell.
BREWSTER, Anna Richards (Mrs. Will-
iam T. Brewster), Hartsdale, N. Y.;
summer, Wakefield, R. I.
P.,I.,S. — Born Germantown, Pa., Apr. 3,
1870. Pupil of Dennis Bunker and H.
Siddons Mowbray in America; Constant
and Laurens in Paris. Member:
N. A. Women PS. Award: Dodge
prize, NAD, 1889.
BREWSTER, Eugene V., 175 Duffield St.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y. ; h. Roslyn,
N. Y.
P., W., L.— Born Bayshore, N. Y., Sept.
7, 1870. Self taught. Member:
Salma. C; Allied AA; Brooklyn SA.
Editor, The Classic Magazine and Mo-
tion Picture Magazine.
BREWSTER, George T(homas), Ward's
Point, Tottenville, S. I., N. Y.
S.,T. — Born Kingston, Mass., Feb. 24,
1862. Pupil of Mass. State Normal Art
School; Ecole des Beaux- Arts, under
Du Mond, and of Mercie in France.
Member: NSS 1898; N.Y.ArchLg.
1897; NAC; N.Y.Municipal AS; NSC;
Nat. Geographical Soc. Founder Mod-
elling Class ASL, 1886; Instructor R. I.
School of Design, 1892-93. Instructor at
Cooper Union since 1900. Work:
"Thomas R. Proctor," Utica, N. Y. ;
"J. Carroll Beckwith," Library of New
York University; "Robert E. Lee," for
Hall of Fame, New York City; "J. S.
Sherman," Utica, N. Y. ; "Indiana,"
Crowning statue at Indianapolis;
"Hope," Crowning statue, State House,
Providence, R. I.; U. S. Senator P.
Walsh, for Augusta, Ga. ; "Defence
of the Flag," Athens, Pa.; equestrian
statue of W. P. Hussey, Danvers,
Mass.; "Greek Statesman" and "Greek
Drama," Brooklyn Institute Museum;
"Soldiers' Monument," Maiden, Mass.;
"Bust of Bishop Warren A. Candler,"
Atlanta, Ga.; "Alexander Hamilton,"
Hamilton College, Clinton, N. Y. ;
"First Defender Monument," Allentown,
Pa.; "Victory and Peace," Staten Isl-
and, N. Y. ; mural portrait tablets of
Judge Andrews and Judge BischofC, Su-
preme Court, New York, N. Y.
BREWSTER, Isabel (Mrs. Samuel D.
Brewster), 635 Park Ave., New York,
N. Y.
P. — M ember: N.A. Women PS.
BREWSTER, Julia, 216 Hope St., Provi-
dence, R. 1.
P. — M ember: Providence WCC.
BRIDGE, Evelyn, 619 North Michigan
Blvd., Chicago, 111.; summer, Province-
town, Mass.
Min. P., E.— Born Chicago, 111. Pupil
of Ethel Coe, Fursman and Senseney.
Member Chicago AG; AIC Alumni.
BRIDGES, Fidelia, Canaan, Conn.
P.— Born Salem, Mass., May 19, 1834.
Pupil of W. T. Richards. Member:
AWCS; ANA 1873.
BRIDGHAM, Eliza. See Mrs. Everard
Appleton.
BRIDGMAN, F(rederic) A(rthur), 5 Im-
passe de Guelma, Paris, France; and
Lyons-la-Foret, Eure, France.
P.,W. — Born Tuskegee, Ala., Nov. 10,
362
BRIDGMAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BROCK
1847. Pupil of NAD in New York;
Ecole des Beaux-Arts and Ger6me in
Paris. Member: ANA 1874, NA
1881; Lotos C; N.Y.Arch.Lg.l899; Paris
SAP. Awards : Third class medal,
Paris Salon, 1877; second class medal,
Paris Exp., 1878; silver medal, Paris
Exp., 1889; gold, Munich, 1891; second
class, Berlin, 1892; first class. Antwerp.
1894; silver, Paris Exp., 1900; silver,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver, St.
Louis Exp., 1904. Legion of Honor
1878; officer 1907; officer of Order of
St. Michael of Bavaria. Work: "Pro-
cession of the Sacred Bull Apis-Osiris,"
Corcoran Gallery, Washington; "On the
Bosphorus," "An Interesting Game"
and "Oriental Scene," Museum of the
Brooklyn Institute; "Awaiting His
Master" and "Women in Biskra Weav-
ing the Burnoose," Art Institute, Chi-
cago, 111. Author, in French, of "An-
archy in Art," "Vers I'ldgal" and
"Winters in Algeria." Author of a
symphony and other orchestral compo-
sitions.
BRIDGMAN, George B., 215 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y. ; h. Pelham, N. Y.
P., T. — Instructor at Art Students
League of New York.
BRI DWELL, Harry L(oud), 287 McCor-
mick Place, Cincinnati, O.
P.— Born Leesburg, C, Aug. 13, 1861.
Member: Cincinnati AC (hon.)
BRIGGS, C. A., care New York Tribune,
New York, N. Y. (Cartoonist.)
BRIGHAM, W. Cole, Harbor Villa, Shel-
ter Island Heights, Suffolk Co., N. Y.
P.,C.,T.— Born Baltimore, Md., Jan. 11,
1870. Pupil of ASL of N.Y. Mem-
ber: ASL of N. Y. ; A. Aid So.
Specialty, marine mosaics.
BRIGHAM, William Edgar, 460 Rocham-
beau Ave., Providence, R. I.
P.. I., T.— Born North Attleboro. Mass.,
July 29, 1885. Pupil of Henry Hunt
Clark and Denman Ross. Me m b e r :
Providence AC; Boston SAC. Head of
Department of Decorative Design, Prov-
idence. R. I.
BRIGHAM, Clara Rust (Mrs. W. E.
Brigham), 460 Rochambeau Ave., Provi-
dence, R. I.
P., C— Born Cleveland, July 25, 1879.
Pupil of Blanche Dillaye, William
Brigham. Member: Prov. AC;
Needle and Bobbin Club; Handicraft
Club, Providence. Director: In-
dustrial Dept., Federal Hill House.
BRINDESI, Olympic, care of Chester
Beach, 207 E. 17th St.; h. 71 Thompson
St., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Italy, Feb. 7, 1897. Pupil
Chester Beach, A. P. Proctor.
BRINGHURST, Robert P(orter), 21 Yale
Ave., University City, Mo.
S.,C.,T.— Born Jerseyville, 111., Mar. 22,
1855. Pupil of St. Louis School of
Fine Arts; Ecole des Beaux- Arts in
Paris. Member : St. Louis AG.;
2x4 Soc. Awards : First class
medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893;
cash prize, Tennessee Centennial, Nash-
ville, 1897; silver medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904; medal ($500), St. Louis AG, 1915;
Meston prize, St. Louis AG, 1916.
Work: "The Artist's Dream," Art
Association, Indianapolis; "Awakening
Spring," Art Institute of Chicago; rep-
resented in St. Louis Museum.
BRINKERHOFF, RCobert) M(oore), 50
West 67th St., New York, N. Y.
I.— Born Toledo, O., May 4, 1879. Pupil
of ASL of N. Y. ; Colarossi Academy in
Paris. Member: SI 1912. Illustra-
tions in Harper's, Collier's, etc.; car-
toons in New York Evening World,
Evening Mail, etc.
BRINLEY, D(aniel) Putnam, Datchet
House, New Canaan, Conn.
Ldscp.P.— Born Newport, R. I., March
8, 1879. Pupil of ASL of N.Y.; studied
in Florence and Paris. Member:
NAC (life); N.Y.Municipal AS; MacD.
C; Am. PS; Contemporaries; Union In-
ternationale des Beaux-Arts et des
Lettres; N. Y. Arch. Lg. Work: Dec-
oration for Y. M. C. A. Convention
Bldg., 1919; decorations for the Hudson
Motor Car Bldg., New York, N. Y.
BRINTON, Caroline Peart (Mrs. Christian
Brinton), Androssan Park, West Ches-
ter, Pa.
P. — Born in Pennsylvania. Pupil of
PAFA; studied in Paris. Member:
Fellowship PAFA; Plastic C; NAC.
Awards : Mary Smith prize, PAFA
1898.
BRISON, Mary J., 36 West Union St.,
Athens, O. (P.)
BRITT, Ralph M., 456 East South St.,
Winchester, Ind.
P. — Born Winchester, Ind., July 19,
1895. Pupil of William Forsyth.
Member: AA of Winchester; Indiana
AC. Award : Hon. mention, India-
napolis AA, 1918 and 1920. Work:
"Melting Snow," Library, Winchester,
Ind.; "Wood Cutters," "November
Weather," in Public Schools, Lafayette,
Ind.
BRIXTON, Harry, 67 Wellesley St., Tor-
onto, Canada. (P.)
BRITTON, James, Holbein Studios, 117
West 13th St., New York, N. Y. ; sum-
mer, Gloucester, Mass.
P.,I.,Engr.,W.— Born Hartford, Feb. 20,
1878. Pupil of C. N. Flagg, A. F. Jac-
caci, George de F. Brush, R. B. Bran-
degee. Member: Eclectics: P-G; Soc.
Conn. Artists. Awards : First prize,
Farmington, Conn., 1902. Work:
"Portrait of William Gedney Bunce,"
Morgan Museum, Hartford, Conn.
BROBECK, Charles I., 893 Locburne
Ave., Columbus, O.
P.— Born Columbus, O., Sept. 29, 1888.
Pupil of Columbus Art School and De-
troit School of Fine Arts. Member:
Col. Pen and Pencil C; Col. Soc. Art-
ists and Sculptors.
BROCK, Emma L(IIIIan), Fort SnelUng,
Minn.
P., I., W.— Born Fort Shaw, Mont.,
June 11, 1886. Pupil of Ernest A. Bat-
chelder, Mary M. Cheney and George
363
BROCKMAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BROWN
Bridgman. Award: Poster prize, St.
Paul Inst. 1918. Specialty, illustration
for children.
BROCKMAN, Paul, Carolina Court, Se-
attle, Wash. (P.)
BRODHEAD, George H(amilton), 194
Harvard St., Rochester, N. Y.; summer,
Marblehead Neck, Mass.
P., C. — Born Boston, Mass., Dec. 5,
1860. Member: Rochester AC.
BRODZKY, H(orace), 141 East 27th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I., E., W. — Born Melbourne, Aus-
tralia, Jan. 30, 1885. Studied in Mel-
bourne and London. Member: "The
Penguins"; Allied Artists Assoc, Lon-
don; London Group.
BROEDEL, Max, Johns Hopkins Medical
School; h. 320 Suffolk St., Guilford, Bal-
timore, Md.
I.— Born June 8, 1870, in Leipzig, Ger-
many. Pupil of Leipzig Acad, of Fine
Arts. Associate professor of art as
applied to medicine, John Hopkins Uni-
versity.
BROKAW, Irving, 522 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y. ; summer. Mill Neck, N. Y.
P., W.— Born New York, N. Y., Mar.
29, 1871. Pupil of Bouguereau, Ferrier,
Julian Academy.
BROMWELL, Elizabeth Henrietta, 646
Williams Parkway, Denver, Colo.
P., W.— Born Charleston, 111. Studied
in Denver and Europe. Member :
Denver AA.
BROOK, Alexander, care of Mrs. C. R.
Bacon, Ridgfield, Conn.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BROOKE, Lena R., 619 Boissevain St.,
Norfolk, Va. (P.)
BROOKS, A(lden) F(inney), 4357 St.
Lawrence Ave., Chicago, 111.; summer,
Hilaire Cottage, R. F. D. No. 2, Fenn-
ville, Mich.
P., S.— Born West Williamsfield, O., Apr.
3, 1840. Pupil of Edwin White in Chi-
cago; Carolus-Duran in Paris. Mem-
ber: Chicago SA. Awards : Yerkes
prize, Chicago SA, 1892; 111. State Fair
prize, 1895. Work: "Boys Fishing,"
Union Club, Chicago; "Gen. George H.
Thomas" and "Judge Kirk Hawes,"
Public Library, Chicago; "Gov. Jno. R.
Tanner," Capitol, Springfield, 111.; "Isaac
Elwood" and "James Glidden," State
Normal School, De Kalb, 111.; "Vice-
Pres. Sandison," State Normal School,
Tej re Haute, Ind.
BROOKS, Amy, 2 Colliston Road, Brook-
line, Mass.
P.,I.,W. — Born Boston, Mass. Pupil of
Boston Museum School. Illustrates own
books, such as "The Dorothy Dainty
Books," "The Randy Books," and a
novel, "At the Sign of the Three
Birches," "Prue Series," etc.
BROOKS, Carol. See Mrs. H. A. Mac-
Neil.
BROOKS, Cora S(malley), 524 Walnut
St., Philadelphia, Pa.; h. Lansdowne,
Pa.
P.— Studied at Phila. Sch. of Design
for Women. Member: N. A. Women
PS; Plastic C; Phila. Sch. of Design
Alumni; Phila. Alliance; l^g. of NY a.
Awards: Hon. mention, Plastic C.
1920. Represented in Pennsylvania
State College.
BROUGH, Walter H., 813 So. 58th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
BROUN, Aaron, Pocono Bldg., 229 4th
Ave.; h. 587 East 137th St., New York,
N. Y.
I., C. — Bom London, England, Mar. 1,
1895. Pupil New York School of De-
sign, Beaux Arts Society. Member:
American Bookplate Soc. ; Soc. of Pos-
ter Friends: Alliance.
BROWN, Alice Van Vechten, Wellesley
College, W^ellesley, Mass.
P., T.— Born Hanover, N. H., June 7,
1862. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Abbott H.
Thayer and others; studied in Europe.
Member: ASL of N. Y. ; Copley S.
1901; Archaeological Inst, of America;
College A.A. Professor of Art, Wel-
lesley College since 1897. Author, with
William Rankin, of "Short History of
Italian Painting."
BROWN, Arthur William, Van Dyck Stu-
dios, 939 Eighth Ave.; h. 233 West 100th
St., New York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI 1910.
BROWN, Benjamin C, 120 No. El Molino
Ave., Pasadena, Cal.
Ldscp.P., E. — Pupil of Paul Harney and
John Fry in St. Louis; Laurens and
Benjamin-Constant in Paris. Mem-
ber: Calif. AC; Calif. PM; Chicago
SE.; Lg. NYA. Awards: St. Louis
Exp., 1904; bronze medal, Lewis and
Clark Exp., Portland, 1905; silver medal,
Alaska-Yukon Exp., Seattle, 1909;
bronze medal for etching, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915; prize and hon. mention,
Calif. AC, 1916; silver and gold medal,
San Diego Exp., 1915; bronze medal
for etching, Sacramento Art Exhibit,
1917; first Black landscape prize, Calif.
AC, 1918. Represented in Oakland Art
Gallery, Public Library, Pasadena, Cal.;
Municipal Gallery, Phoenix, Ariz.; Sac-
ramento State Library; Exposition Park
Museum, Los Angeles; British Museum;
Smithsonian Institution, Washington.
BROWN, Bolton (Colt), National Arts
Club, 15 Gramercy Park, New York,
N. Y.
P., E.. L.. W., T.— Born Dresden. N. Y.,
Nov. 27, 1865. Member: NAC (life);
Instructor, Cornell Univ.; Head of Art
Dept., Leland Stanford. Jr.. Univ. for ten
years. Work: "The Bather," Na-
tional Arts Club, New York; "Monterey
Fishing Village," Indianapolis Art Ass >-
elation; "Sifting Shadows" and "Farm-
house in Winter," Brooklyn Institute
Museum. Series of lithographs in Brit-
ish Museum; lithographs in Brooklyn
Museum and New York Public Library.
Founder and owner of The Artists'
Press. New York, N. Y.
BROWN, Charlotte Harding (Mrs. James
A. Brown), Smithtown, L. I., N. . Y.
I.— Born Newark, N. J., Aug. 31, 1873.
Pupil of Phila. School of Design for
Women; PAFA; Howard Pyle at Drexel
Inst. Member: Fellowship PAFA;
364
BROWN
WHO*S WHO IN ART
BROWN
Phila. WCC; Plastic C. Awards:
Silver medal. Woman's Exp., London,
1900: silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
silver medal, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915.
Illustrations for "Century," etc.
BROWN, Dorothy Hunter, 69 Arlington
Ave., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
BROWN, Ethel Pennewill, Frederica,
Del.
P., I.— Born Wilmington, Del. Pupil of
Twachtman and Howard Pyle. Mem-
ber: Phila. Plastic C; Fellowship
PAFA; S. In dp. A.; Wilmington So. F.
A.; Phila. Alliance.
BROWN, Fanny Wilcox, 92 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., C— Born Baltimore, Md., Oct. 10,
1882. Pupil of Bryson Burroughs in
New York. Member: S.Indp.A. ;
Petrus Stuyvesant C. Work: "Youth,"
Y. M. C. A. Bldg., New York City;
and Wanamaker's, New York.
BROWN, Florence Bradshaw (Mrs. Har-
old Haven Brown), 2007 North Delaware
St., Indianapolis, Ind. (P.)
BROWN, Francis F., 126i4 S. W. 7th St.,
Richmond, Ind.
P., T. — Born Glassboro, N. J., Jan. 19,
1891. Pupil of J. Ottis Adams and Wil-
liam Forsyth. Member: Indiana AC.
Awards : Prizes, Indiana State Fair,
1915, 1916, 1917, 1918, 1919 and 1920; hon.
mention, Herron Art Inst., 1918 and
1919; Art Asso. Prize, Herron Art Inst.,
1920; Foulke Prize, Richmond AA., 1920.
Represented in Richmond Public Art
Gallery and Herron Art Institute.
BROWN, Frank A., care of The Salma-
gundi Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.; h. Machiasport, Me.
P. — Born Beverley, Mass., April 21,
1876. Pupil of Louis Kronberg; Julian
in Paris. Member: Salma. C.
BROWN, George Bacon, 84 Remsen St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y. ; summer, care J. S.
Markey, North St. Paul, Minn.
P. — Born Ogdensburg, N. Y., April 9,
1893. Pupil of Chicago A.I., of Lee
Woodward Zeigler at St. Paul Institute.
Member: St. Paul A.S. Work:
Mural decoration in Elks Club, St. Paul,
Minn.
BROWN, Glenn Madison, 808 Seventeenth
St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
1^, E.— Born Hartford, Conn., Oct. 28,
1876. Pupil of E. C. Messer in Washing-
ton; ASL of N. Y. ; Julian Academy,
Laurens, Prinet and Colarossi in Paris.
BROWN, Grace Evelyn, Trinity Bldg., 168
Dartmouth St., Boston, Mass.; h. 27
Hollis St., Newton, 58, Mass.
P., I.. W., L. — Born Beverly, Mass., Nov.
24, 1873. Pupil of Joseph De Camp,
Albert H. Munsell and Vesper L. George.
Member: S.Indp.A.; Copley S.
Writer of short stories, poems, essays
and articles.
BROWN, Harold Haven, care of John
Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis, Ind.
P.,I.,T. — Born Maiden, Mass., June 6,
1869. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art School;
Ecole des Beaux-Arts under Gerome,
and Julian Academic under Laurens in
Paris. Award : Bronze medal, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901. Director, John
Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis, 1914-
1921.
BROWN, Harrison Paul, 42 Macomb St.;
h. 104 Clinton St.. Mt. Clemens, Mich.
P., C, T. — Born Waterloo, Ind., Jan.
29, 1889. Pupil of Walter M. Clute
F. F. Fursman, George Senseney, Well-
ington Reynolds. Member : Ind.
AC.
BROWN, Helen Parrish, Stony Brook,
L. I., N. Y. (P.)
BROWN, Horace, Springfield, Vt.
P.— Born Rockford, 111., Oct. 23, 1876.
Pupil of John Carlson; John Johansen,
W. L. Lathrop. Member: Salma.C;
Allied AA.
BROWN, Howard V., 131 West 23d St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I., T. — Born Lexington, Ky., July
5, 1878. Studied at AIC, and ASL of
N. Y. M e m b e r : SI 1910. First as-
sistant, Fawcett School of Industrial
Arts, Newark, N. J.
BROWN, Howell C(hambers), 120 North
El Molino Ave., Pasadena, Cal.
E.— Born Little Rock, Ark., July 28,
1880. Member: Calif. SE. ; Calif.
P.M.; Chicago SE; Brooklyn SE. Rep-
resented in the Museum of History, Sci-
ence and Art, Los Angeles.
BROWN, Irene, Rome, Italy; h. 172 Pros-
pect St., East Orange, N. J.
P., S.— Born Hastings, Mich., Feb. 26,
1881. Pupil of Chase, Hawthorne and
Johansen. Member: N. A. Women
PS.
BROWN, James Francis, 51 West 10th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Niagara Falls, N. Y, Pupil of
NAD in New York; Collin and Bou-
guereau in Paris; Royal Academy in
Munich. Member: Salma.C. 1904.
BROWN, J. Randolph, 198 Dartmouth St.,
Boston, Mass.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BROWN, Lillian Cushman (Mrs. Charles
Lyman Brown), 8 Eusworth Terrace,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P., L.— Pupil of AIC: ASL of N. Y. ;
Arthur W. Dow. Member: Nat'l
Education Assoc; Western Drawing
and Manual Training Assoc; College
AA.
BROWN, R. Alston, 43 East 59th St., New
York, N. Y.
I.— Born Xenia, O., June 4, 1878. Pupil
of Chase, DuMond, Mora, Nowottny.
BROWN, Roy, 84 Grove St., New York,
N. Y. ; h. Wilton, N. H.
Ldscp. P., I.— Born Decatur, 111., 1879.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. ; Rafaelli and
Menard in Paris. Member: ANA;
NAC (life); Allied AA; AWCS; Salma.
C. ; Paris AAA. Award : Isidor Prize,
Salma.C, 1918. Work: "The Dunes,"
Art Institute of Chicago; "Landscape,"
Northwestern University, Evanston,
111.; Springfield Art Assoc, Springfield,
111.; Municipal Art Lg., Decatur, 111.;
"Pines and Poplars," National Arts
Club.
365
BROWN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BROWNSCOMBE
BROWN, Ted, "Chicago Daily News,"
Chicago, 111. (Cartoonist.)
BROWN, Thomas E., 3358 Eighteenth St.,
N. W., Washington, D, C. (P.)
BROWN, W(illiam) Alden, 120 Dora St.,
Providence, R. I.
Ldscp. P. — Born Providence, March 15,
1877. Pupil of E. M. Bannister; R. I.
School of Design; ASL summer class at
Woodstock, N. Y. ; at Lyme, Conn., un-
der Frank V. Du Mond. Member:
Providence AC; Providence WCC;
Conn.AFA. Work: "Beside Still
Waters," Pen and Pencil C, Provi-
dence, R. I.; "The Oaks," Alpha Delta
Psi Fraternity, R. I. State College,
Kingston, R. I.
BROWN, Walter Francis, Palazzo da
Mula. San Vio 725, Venice, Italy; and
25 Orchard PL, Providence, R. I.
P., I. —Born Providence, R. I., Jan. 10,
1853. Pupil of Gerome and Bonnat in
Paris. Member: Providence AC.
Work: "The Acropolis" and "The
Parthenon," Hay Library, Providence.
Illustrated "A Tramp Abroad," by
Mark Twain; "Roger Williams," by
Charles Miller.
BROWNE, Be I more. Spray Ave., Banff,
Alberta, Canada; h. R. D. No. 1, South
Tacoma, Wash.
P.— Born Thomkinsville, S. I., N. Y.,
June 9, 1880. Pupil of Chase, Carroll
Beckwith; and Julian in Paris. Mem-
ber: Soc. Am. Animal P. and S. ; Lg.
of N.Y.A.
BROWNE, Frances E., 11 The Westmin-
ster, Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
BROWNE, George Elmer, 58 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y. ; and 17 Place
Vendome, Paris, France; summer,
Provincetown, Mass.
P., E., Lith. — Born Gloucester, Mass.,
May 6, 1871. Pupil of School of Boston
Museum of Pine Arts; Lefebvre and
Robert-Fleury in Paris. Member:
Salma.C. 1898; A.Fund S. 1902; Paris
AAA 1912; AWCS 1915; NAC 1915; Al-
lied AA 1915; Societe des Arts Moderne,
Paris; Salma.C; Allied AA; P-G;
NYWCC, 1917; NAC; ANA, 1919; Beach-
combers' Club; Provincetown AA;
Brooklyn SE; Lotos C. Awards:
Bronze medal. Mechanics' Fair, Bos-
ton, 1895; book plate prize, Salma.C,
1898; George Inness, Jr., prize, Salma.C,
1901; Isidor prize, Salma.C, 1915 and
1917; Vezin prize, Salma.C, 1919; Shaw
Purchase Prize, Salma.C, 1920; Salma.
Thumb Box prize, 1921. Work : "The
White Cloud," and "Edge of the
Grove," Toledo Museum; "The Wain
Team," National Gallery, Washington;
"The Port, Douarnenez Brittany," Art
Inst., Chicago; "Coast of Brittany,"
Montclair (N. J.) Museum; "Autumn in
Finistere," Omaha (Neb.) Public Li-
brary; "Evening in Brittany," Erie
(Pa.) Art Club; "La Guidecca," Union
League Club, Chicago; "The Church,
Montreuil," Kansas University; "After
the Rain," Milwaukee Art Institute;
"Moonrise in Holland," University Club,
Milwaukee; "Bait Sellers of Cape Cod,"
purchased by French Government from
Salon of 1904. Instructor of drawing
and painting, West End School of Prov-
incetown, Mass.
BROWNE, Harold Putnam, Dept. Draw-
ing and Painting, School of Fine Arts,
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kas.;
43 Elm St., Danvers, Mass.; summer, P.
O. Box 453, Provincetown, Mass.
P. — Born Danvers, Mass., Apr. 27, 1894.
Son of George Elmer Browne. Pupil
of Caro-Delvaille at Colarossi Acad-
emy; Jean Paul Laurens and Paul Al-
bert Laurens at Julian Academy in
Paris; Heymann at Munich; George
Elmer Browne and F. Luis Mora in
New York. Member: Paris AAA;
Paris AASC; Provincetown AA; College
AA. Professor, School of Fine Arts,
University of Kansas.
BROWNE, Margaret Fitzhugh, 2636 West
Somerset St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I. — Born Boston, Mass., June 7, 1884.
Pupil of Joseph De Camp. Member:
Fellowship PAFA.
BROWNE, Matilda (Mrs. Frederick Van
Wyck), 142 East 18th St., New York,
N. Y. ; summer, Lyme, Conn.
P., T.— Born Newark, N. J., May 8,
1869. Pupil of C M. Dewey, H. S.
Bisbing and Julian Dupre. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; AWCS; Lyme
AA; Artists' Club of Newark; Conn.
AFA. Awards : Hon. mention,
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; Dodge
prize, NAD 1899; third Hallgarten prize,
NAD 1901; hon. mention, Conn. AFA,
1918; Flagg prize ($100), Conn. AFA,
1919.
BROWNELL, Matilda A., 1110 Carnegie
Studios; h. 322 West 56th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — Born in New York. Pupil of Chase
and MacMonnies.
BROWNELL, Rowena P., 368 Thayer St.,
Providence, R. I.
P. — Member: Providence AC.
BROWNING, G. W(esiey), 730 Third
Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah.
P.,I.— Born Salt Lake City, Sept. 24,
1868. Member: Soc. Utah Artists;
Utah Art Inst. Award : First prize
'for water color, Utah Art Institute.
Illustrations on nature study.
BROWNLOW, C(harles) V(ictor), 435
Hansberry St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born in England, May 28, 1863.
Pupil of J. W. Whymper.
BROWNSCOMBE, Jennie (Augusta), 96
Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.; summer,
Palenville, Greene Co., N. Y.
P.— Born HonesJdale, Pa., Dec. 10, 1850.
Pupil of L. E. Wilmarth, NAD, and
ASL of N. Y. ; Henry Mosler in Paris.
Member: NAC; N.Y.Municipal AS;
N. A. Women PS; Washington AC.
Work: "First Thanksgiving," Mu-
seum of Pilgrim Hall, Plymouth, Mass.
Specialty, historical figure subjects,
many of which have been reproduced
as etchings, etc.
366
BRUBAKER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BUCK LIN
BRUBAKER, J(ay) O., 32 West 47th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Valhalla,
N. Y.
P., I.— Born Dixon. 111., Oct. 5, 1875.
Pupil of Bridgman and Julian. Mem-
ber: Guild of Free Lance A.
BRUESTLE, George M., U?, East 23d St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer. Lyme, Conn.
Ldscp.P.,T.— Born New York, Dec. 22,
1872. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under
Mowbray; Colarossi Academy under
Courtois and of Aman-Jean in Paris.
Member: Artists' Club of Lyme;
Salma.C; Allied AA. Work: "After-
noon Landscape," Gibbes Memorial
Museum, Charleston, S. C. ; "Brown Hill-
side," Reading- (Pa.) Museum.
BRUMBACK, Mrs. Louise Upton, 118
East 19th St., New York, N. Y. ; sum-
mer, The House on the Hill, Gloucester,
P., W., L.— Born Rochester, N. Y. Pupil
of Chase. Member: N. A. Women PS;
NAC; Pen and Brush C. Award:
First Moore prize ($100), Artists of
Kansas City and vicinity, 1915. Rep-
resented at Art Association, Omaha,
Nebr. ; Memorial Gallery, Rochester, N.
Y.
BRUMMER, Beata Mortensson, 43 East
57th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BRUNDAGE, Frances I. (Mrs. W. T.
Brundage), 311 Decatur St., Brooklyn,
N. Y.
P.— Born Newark. N. J., June 28, 1854.
Pupil of her father, Rembrant Lock-
wood.
BRUNDAGE. W(illiam) T(yson), 311 De-
catur 'St., Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born New York, N. Y., Jan. 14.
1849. Pupil of Shirlaw at ASL of N.Y.
Member: Salma.C; ASL of N.Y.
BRUNNER, F(rederick) Sands, 6033 Web-
ster St., Philadelphia, Pa.
L— Born Boyertown, Pa., July 27, 1886.
Pupil of Herman Deigendesch.
BRUSH, George de Forest, 9 MacDougal
Allev, New York, N. Y.; summer, Dub-
lin, N. H.
P.— Born Shelbyville, Tenn., Sept. 28,
1855. Pupil of Gerome in Paris.
Member: ANA 1888; NA 1908; A.
Fund S; SAA 1880; Nat.Inst.A.L.; Am.
Acad. A. L. Awards : First Hallgarten
prize, NAD 1888; medal, Columbian
Exp., Chicago, 1893; Temple gold medal.
PAFA 1897; gold medal, Paris Exp.,
1900; gold medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; gold medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904; Saltus medal, NAD 1909. Work:
"In the Garden" and "Henry George,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York, N. Y.;
"Mother and Child," Corcoran Gallery,
Washington; "Portrait of a T.ady." Car-
negie institute, Pittsburgh; "Mother
and Child," Museum of Fine Arts, Bos-
ton; "The Moose Chase," National Gal-
lery, Washington; "Mother and Child,"
Pennsylvania Academy, Philadelphia;
"Young Violinist," Worcester Art Mu-
seum; "Mother and Child," Brooklyn
Museum.
BRYANT, Everett Lloyd, care of Alley &
Trask, 52 East 53rd St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born Gallon, O., 1864. Pupil of
Blanc and Couture in Paris; Herkomer
in London; Anshutz, Chase and Breck-
enridge in Philadelphia. Member
Fellowship PAFA; Phila. Sketch C
Phila. WCC; Charcoal C. Award
Silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915
Specialty, flowers. Work: "Asters,'
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts, Philadelphia; "A Study," St.
Paul Institute.
BRYANT, Mrs. Maude D., Hendrioks, Pa.
P. — Born Wilmington, Del., May 11,
1SS0. Punil of PAFii under >nshutz.
Breckenridge and Chase; Colarossi
Academy in Paris. Member: Char-
coal C; N. A. Women PS. Award:
Ball prize ($100), Charcoal C. 1914.
Work : "Calendula and Aster," Penn-
sylvania Academy of the Fine Arts;
"Pompons and Doll," Fellowship PAFA,
Phila.
BRYANT, Mrs. Nanna Matthews, 9 Ex-
eter St., Boston, Mass. (S., P.)
BRYANT, Wallace, Cosmos Club, Wash-
ington, D. C.
Port. P. — Born in Boston. Pupil of
Constant, Laurens, Robert-Fleury and
Bouguereau in Paris.
BUCCINI, Alberto, 347 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
BUCHANAN, Ella, 1539 North Edgemont,
Los Angeles, Calif.
S. — Born Preston, Canada. Pupil of
Charles J. Mulligan. Member: Chi-
cago SA; Cal. AC. Award: First
prize, Calif. Liberty Fair. 1918; second
Moore prize, Calif. AC. 1918; Utah Mor-
mon Memorial Prize. Work : "Martha
Baker Memorial," Chicago; "Pete" and
"Dry Water Hole," Southw^est Museum,
Los Angeles, Calif.
BUCHANAN, Luvena, see Mrs. E. A.
Vysekal.
BUCHBINDER. D. G., 315 East End Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: AA Pittsburgh.
BUCK, Charles Claude, 495 East 188th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., S., E., T.— Born New York City,
July 3, 1890. Pupil of Emil Carlsen
and Francis C. Jones.
BUCK, Emma G., 1732 North Shore Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
P., S., C— Born Chicago, 111., Feb. 16,
1888. Pupil of Charles Mulligan.
Member: Chicago AG; Chicago AC;
Boston SAC. Work: Wisconsin
Perry's Centennial medal.
BUCKHAM, Charles W., 175 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
BUCKLIN, W(illiam) S(avery), River-
side, Conn.; summer. Law's Farm,
Fitchburg, Mass.
P.— Born Phalanx, N. J., Oct. 2, 1851.
Pupil of Normal Art School in Boston;
ASL of N. Y.; Rondel in New York.
Member: ASL of N. Y.
367
BUDD
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BURBANK
BUDD, Charles Jay, 119 East 18th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. 218 North Grove
St., 'East Orange. N. J.
P., I. — Born S. Schodack, Rensselaer Co.,
N. Y., Feb. 14, 1859. Pupil of PAFA
under Eakins; ASL of N.Y. Mem-
ber: Phila. Sketch C. Specialty, chil-
dren's books.
BUDD, Katherine Cotheal, 527 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I., Arch.— Pupil of William M. Chase.
BUDELL. Ada, 76 Washington PL, New
York. N. Y.
P., I.— Born Westfield, N. J., June 19,
1873. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS. Illustrated
numerous books for children.
BUDWORTH, William S(ylvester), 615
South Eighth Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 22,
1861. Self-taught. Awards: Silver
medals AAS, 1902 and 1903; second
prize, Atlanta Fair, 1919 and 1920.
Work in Rochester (N. Y.) Museum.
BUEHLER, Lytton (Briggs), 346 West
58th St., New York, N. Y. ; Province-
town. Mass.
P.— Born Gettysburg, Aug. 6, 1888.
Pupil of PAFA. Member: Fellow-
ship PAFA. Award : European trav-
eling scholarship, PAFA 1908. Work:
"Portrait Maj. Richardson" in Canan-
daigua (N. Y.) Public Library.
BUEHR, Karl Albert, 1727 Chase Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
P., T. — Born in Germany. Studied in
England, France and Holland; pupil
of AIC. Member: Chicago SA;
Awards : Bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904, hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1910; silver medal, Chicago SA, 1914;
Chicago Municipal Purchase; silver
medal, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915; second
Logan medal and Butler prize. AIC
1919; first medal, Peoria Society of
Allied Arts 1920.
BUEHR, Mary G. Hess (Mrs. Karl Albert
Buehr), 1727 Chase Ave., Chicago, 111.
Min.P.,C.— Born Chicago, 111. Studied in
Holland and in France; pupil of AIC.
BUERGERNISS, Carl, 2819 West Girard
Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
BUFFI NGTON, Eliza, Madison, N. J. (I.)
BUFFUM, Katharine G. Died December,
1921.
I.— Born Providence, R. I., Sept. 2, 1884.
Pupil PAFA. Member: Plastic C,
Fellowship PAFA. Works: Illustrated
"The Secret Kingdom"; "Mother Goose
in Silhouette"; "Silhouettes to Cut in
School"; "Songs of Schooldays," etc.
S'^ecialty: Silhouettes.
BULL, Charles Livingston, Oradell, N. J.
I., P.— Born New York State, 1874. Pupil
of Harvey Ellis and M. Louise Stowell.
Member: NYWCC; Salma.C; NAC.
Specialty, wild animals.
BULL, W. H., San Mateo, Calif. (P., I.)
BULLARD, Mrs. Marion R., Woodstock,
N. Y.
P. — Born Middletown, N. Y. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; Conn, AFA.
Award : McMillin landscape prize
($100), N.A.Women PS. 1916.
BULLEY, Rachel. See Mrs. Trump.
BULLOCK, Mrs. James Cunllffe, 17 Han-
over St., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
BUMSTEAD, Ethel Quincy, 12 Berkeley
St., Cambridge, Mass.
P. — Born London, England, June 22,
1873. Pupil of Boston Museum School;
of Abbot Graves and of A. W. Biihler.
Member: Copley S.1893.
BUNCH, J. Arnold, 3101 Brooklyn Ave.,
Kansas City, Mo. (P.)
BUNDY, John Elwocd, 527 West Main
St., Richmond, Ind.
Ldscp. P.— Born Guilford Co., N. C,
May 1, 1853. Awards: Mary T. R.
Foulke prize, Richmond, 1911; Hol-
comb prize, Herron Art Institute, 1917.
Member: Richmond Art Assoc.
Work: "Blue Spring," and "Old
Farm in Winter," Public Gallery,
Richmond, Ind.; in City Art Museum,
St. Louis; Public Art Collection, Vin-
cennes, Ind.; Art League, Muncie, Ind.;
Art Assoc, Rockford, 111.; Art Assoc,
Sioux City, la.; "Wane of Winter,"
and "Beech Woods in Winter," Art As-
sociation of Indianapolis.
BUNNER, Rudolph F., Ridgefield, Conn.;
Great Kills, S. I., N.' Y.
P., L— M ember: NYWCC; Salma.C.
1890.
BUONGIORNO, Donatus, Maddaloni, Ca-
serta, Italy.
Mural P., T. — Born Solofra, Italy, Nov.
11, 1865. Pupil of Roil Inst, of Fine Art,
Naples. Work: "Apotheosis of the
Evangelist," Church of St. Leonard of
the Franciscan Fathers, Boston, Mass.;
"St. Charles Borromeo," in Church of
Sacred Heart, Boston; "Fall of the
Angels," in Church of St. Michael, Brat-
tleboro, Vt.; "The Holy Trinity," in
Church of St. Peter, Boston; "The
Apotheosis of St. Clara," in St. Clara's
Church; "Our Lady of Peace," in the
Church of Our Lady of Peace; "Prin-
cipal Episodes in the Life of Christ,
of St. Francis of Assisi, and of St.
Anthony of Padua," in Church of the
Most Precious Blood, in New York City.
"Episodes of Christ and 'St. Charles
Borromeo" in the Church of St. Lazarus,
East Boston, Mass.
BURBANK, E(lbridge) A(yer), Stigler,
Oklahoma; h. Harvard, 111.
P.— Born Harvard, 111., Aug. 10, 1858.
Pupil of Academy of Design in Chicago;
Paul Nauen in Munich. Member:
Chicago SA. Awards : Yerkes first
Prize, Chicago, 1893; medals and hon.
mention, Atlanta Exp., 1895. Since 1897
has made portraits of over 125 types of
N. American Indians; represented in
Field Museum and Newberry Library,
Chicago, and Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D. C.
BURBANK, William Edwin, Manchester,
N. H.
P., T.— Born Boston, Mass., Oct. 6, 1866.
Pupil of Cowles Art School in Boston;
Laurens and Constant in Paris. In-
368
BURCKHARDT
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BURN HAM
structor of drawing and painting and
one of Directors, Manchester Institute
of Arts and Sciences.
BURCKHARDT, H. W., 2346 Madison
Road, Cincinnati, O. . . ^
P. — M ember: Cincinnati AC.
BURD, Clara Miller, 18 West 34th St.,
New York. N. Y.; 45 Myrtle Ave., Mont-
clair, N. J. , ^_ _. ,. ,
p I c.— Born New York City. Studied
in' New York and Paris. Illustrated "In
Memoriam" and numerous children's
books; designs covers for magazines;
paints portraits of children; designed
and executed numerous memorial win-
dows.
BURDETTE, Hattie E., 1419 G St., N.
W.; h. "The Nansemond," Washington,
D. C.
p' — M ember: S. Wash. A.; Wash.
WCC; Wash. AC.
BURDICK, Doris, Maiden, Mass.
P., I. — Born Maiden, Mass., May 21,
1898. Specialty: Silhouette por-
traits.
BURDICK, H(orace) R(obbins), 16 Park
Ave., Maiden, Mass.; summer, Went-
worth, N. H.
Port. P., T., W. — Born East Killingly,
Conn., Oct. 7, 1844. Pupil of Lowell
Inst, and Boston Museum School under
Hollingsworth and Grundmann. Mem-
ber: Boston AC. Awards : Medal
at Mechanics Inst., Boston. Work:
Portraits in State House and Faneuil
Hall, Boston; Memorial Hall, Cam-
bridge; New Bedford Savings Bank and
High School; Berkshire " Co. Court
House; Pittsfield Berkshire Savings
Bank; Berkshire Life Insurance Co.
BURGDORFF, Ferdinand, Bohemian
Club, San Francisco, Calif.; summer,
Carmel Highlands, Calif.
P.— Born Cleveland, O., Nov. 7, 1881.
Pupil of Cleveland School of Art.
Member: Salma. C. Work: "Old
Wharf," Memorial Museum, San Fran-
cisco.
BURGER, A. W., 3 Suter Terrace, Roch-
ester, N. Y.
P. — Member: Rochester AC.
BURGESS, A(lice) Lingow, (Mrs. W. H.
Warner), 1268 Quinnipiac Ave., New
Haven, Conn.
P., C, T. — Born St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 7,
1880. Pupil of Anton Fabres, W. M.
Chase, W. L. Lathrop. Member :
S.Indp.A.
BURGESS, Ida J., Woodstock, Ulster
Co., N. Y.
P., C, W.— Born Chicago, 111. Pupil of
Chase and Shirlaw in New York; Mer-
son in Paris. Member: Chicago SA;
N.Y. Woman's AC; Pen and Brush C.
Awards : First prize for competitive
design for decoration of Reception
Room, Illinois State Bldg., World's Fair,
Chicago, 1893. "Work: "Youth En-
quiring of the Sphinx," "The Libation
Pourer," "The Law," "Inspiration,"
mural decorations in the Ovington Lunt
Library, North Western University,
Evanston, 111. Designed many stained-
glass windows and has written on this
subject.
BURGESS, Mrs. R. T. See Rosamund
Tudor.
BURGESS, Ruth Payne (Mrs. John W.
Burgess), Athenwood, Rhode Island
Ave., Newport, R. I.
Port.P. — Born Montpelier, Vt. Pupil of
ASL of N. Y. under Brush, Cox, Beck-
with and Melchers. Member:
Hartford Art Academy; ASL of N. Y.
ex-pres.); N. A. Women PS (pres. five
years); Providence WCC; Art Asso. of
Newport, patron of Metropolitan Mu-
seum. Work: "Hon. A. B. Hep-
burn," Treasury Bldg., AVashington;
"Judge Pierson " Public Library. Hol-
yoke. Mass.; "Prof. March" and "Dr.
Daniel Bliss." Amherst College; "His
Royal Highness, Prince August Wil-
liam," Potsdam, Berlin, Germany.
BURLEIGH, Sydney R(ichmond), "Fleur-
de-Lys": h. 69 College St., Providence,
R. I.
P., I.— Born Little Compton, R. I., July
7, 1853. Pupil of Laurens in Paris.
Member: NYWCC; Providence AC,
(pres.); Boston WCC; AWCS; Salma.C.
Awards : Bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; open prize, Buffalo SA, 1913.
Work: "Landscape" and "Luxem-
bourg Garden," R. I. School of Design,
Providence.
BURLIN, Paul, 106 West 57th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., L.— Born New York City, Sept. 10,
1886. Pupil of NAD. Member: Sal-
ma.C. Inter. Soc, AL. ; Contemporary;
S.Indp.A.
BURLINGAME, Charles Albert, Nanuet,
N. Y.
P.,I.,T. — Born Bridgeport, Conn., March
29, 1860. Pupil of Edward Moran, Wm.
H. Lippincott and J. B. Whittaker.
Member: Salma.C. 1908. Nanuet
Society of Painters. Teacher of drawing
and State Regents for thirty years.
BURLINGHAM, Mrs. Ethel R., 230 Mc-
Cormick PI., Mt. Auburn, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
BURNHAM, Anita Willets (Mrs. Alfred
Newton Burnham), 1255 Asbury Ave.,
Hubbard Woods, 111.
P.,E.,C.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Aug. 22,
1880. Pupil of Chase, Freer, Vander-
poel, Du Mond, Cecilia Beaux, John
Johansen, Martha Baker, Lawton
Parker; etching under Ralph Pearson.
Member: ASL of Chicago; Cordon,
Chicago; Chicago AC; Chicago SA;
Chicago AG; Art Fellowship Assoc, of
AIC. Work: School frieze, Chicago
Public School.
BURNHAM, Roger Noble, 5 Garden Ter-
race, Cambridge, Mass., Honolulu, T. H.
S., L., T. — Born Boston, Mass., Aug. 10,
1876. Pupil of Caroline Hunt Rim-
mer. Member: Boston Arch.C;
Amer.Numismatic Soc; Honolulu Art
Society. Awards : Avery prize,
N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1904; first prize for de-
369
BURNS IDE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BUSH-BROWN
signing and executing scholarship
medal for University of Calif. Work:
Four colossal figures, City Hall Annex,
Boston; panels on main doors Forsyth
Dental Infirmary for Children, Boston;
"Uncle Remus" memorial tablet, At-
lanta; medallion, Johann Ernest Pe-
rabo, Boston Art Museum; Carrington
Mason Memorial, Memphis; figure of
centaur, head of Athena and Tritons on
Germanic Art Museum, Harvard;
Graham Memorial Fountain, Chapel Hill,
N. C. : Lowry Memorial Fountain, Hono-
lulu, T. H.; medals in Herron Art Insti-
tute, Indianapolis; Boston Art Museum.
Kansas City Fine Arts Institute; In-
structor at School of Architecture,
Harvard University, 1912 to 1917.
BURNSIDE, Cameron, 86 Rue Notre Dame
des Champs, Paris, France.
P. — Born London, England, July 23,
1887, of American parents. Pupil of
Rene Menard, Rupert Bunny and Lu-
cien Simon in Paris. Member:
Societe des Artistes Independants.
Award : Silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San
F., 1915. Work: Painting owned by
French Government. Official painter to
American Red Cross in France, 1918-19.
BURR, G(eorge) Brainerd, Old Lyme,
Conn.
P. — Born Middletown, Conn. Pupil of
Berlin and Munich Acad.P.A.; ASL of
N.Y. ; Colarossi Academy in Paris.
Member: Allied AA; Salma.C;
Lyme Art Asso; Calif. PM.
BURR, George Elbert, 1325 Logan St.,
Denver, Colo.
P., I., Etcher. — Born near Cleveland, O.
Pupil AIC; studied five years in Europe.
Member: Chicago SE; Denver AA;
Calif. SE; Am.SE; AI Graphic A; Soc.
Frangaise aux Etats Unis; Brooklyn
SE; Calif. PM. Made illustrations for
catalogue of Heber Bishop Collection
of Jades at Metropolitan Museum.
Award : Silver medal for etching,
St. Paul Inst., 1916. Work in Li-
brary of Congress, Washington, D. C. ;
New York Public Library; Museum of
Newark, N. J.
BURRAGE, Mildred G(iddings), Kenne-
bunkport. Me.
P. — Born Portland, Me., May 18, 1890.
Pupil of Richard Miller. Member:
Inter. A. Union, Paris.
BURRELL, Mrs. Louise, 1189 West
Adams St., Los Angeles, Cal.
P. — Born London, England. Pupil of
Herkomer. Member: A. R. M. S.,
Calif. AC.
BURROUGHS, Bryson, 67 Hillside Ave.,
Flushing, L. I., N. Y.
P. — Born Hyde Park, Mass., Sept. 8,
1869. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Merson,
Julian, and Puvis de Chavannes in
Paris. Member: ANA 1904;
SAA 1901; Cincinnati AC. Awards :
Silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; second medal ($1,000), CI Pitts-
burgh, 1903; third prize, Worcester.
Mass., 1904; bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp,, 1904. Curator of Paintings, Met-
ropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
Work: "Danae in the Tower," Brook-
lyn Museum; "Ariadne and Bacchus,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York; "The
Fishermen," Chicago Art Inst.
BURT, Beatrice IVIiiliken, 355 Union St.,
New Bedford, Mass.
Min. P. — Born New Bedford, Mass.,
Dec. 17, 1893. Pupil of Del6cluse and
Mme. Laforge in Paris; Mrs. Lucia F.
Fuller, Mrs. Elsie Dodge Pattee and
Miss Welch in New York.
BURT, Frederic, Box 645, Harrison, N. Y.
S.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
BURT, Louis, 3835 W^hite Plains Ave.,
Bronx, New York, N. Y.
P. — Born New York, N. Y., July 20,
1900. Pupil Henri, George Bellows,
John Sloan. Awards : Hon. men-
tion, MacDowell Club, 1916, 1917, 1918.
BURT, IViary Theodora, 1203 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia. Pupil of PAFA;
Julian Academy in Paris. Member:
Plastic C; Fellowship PAFA; Phila. Al-
liance.
BURTIS, iVIary E(lizabeth), 406 Claren-
don PL, Orange, N. J.
P.— Born Orange, N. J., June 8. 1878.
Pupil of Mme. Christine Lumsden.
Member: S. Indp. A.
BURTON, S(amuel), C(hatwood), 63 Riv-
erside; h. Campus Club, 112 Church St..
Minneapolis, Minn.; summer. Province-
town, Mass.
P., S., I., E., W.. L., T.— Born Manches-
ter, England, Feb. 18, 1881. Pupil of
Laurens in Paris; Lanteri in London.
Member: Beachcombers' Club, Prov-
incetown; Chicago SE; Art Masters of
England. Awards : Third prize for
painting, 1917; second prize for paint-
ing, 1918, and bronze medal for etch-
ing, 1920, Minnesota State Fair; second
prize for etching, Minneapolis Inst.,
1921. Professor of painting and lecturer
on art, University of Minnesota.
BUSENBARK, E. J., 117 East 27th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
BUSEY, Nerval H., 39 West 67th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born in Christiansburg, Va., Dec.
28, 1845. Studied in Paris under Bou-
guereau. Member: Salma.C.
BUSH, Agnes S(elene), 529 Belmont,
North, Seattle, Washington.
P. — Born Seattle, Washington. Pupil
of Ella S. Bush and Paul Morgan Gus-
tin. Member: Seattle FAS.
BUSH, Ella Shepard, 223 West Laurel
Ave., Sierra Madre, Calif.
Min. P. — Born Galesburg, 111. Pupil of
J. Alden Weir, Kenyon Cox, Robert
Henri, Theodore W. Thayer. Mem-
ber: P. S. Min. P.; ASL of N. Y.;
Calif. AC; Seattle Fine Arts Soc.
Award : Prize, Seattle Fine Arts
Soc, 1920.
BUSH-BROWN, Henry K(irke), 1729 G
St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
S. — Born Ogdensburg, N. Y., Apr. 21,
1857. Pupil of NAD in New York and
Henry K. Brown; studied in Paris and
Italy. Member : NSS 1893; NAC;
370
BUSH-BROWN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
BYRAM
N.Y.Arch.Lg.l892; S.Wash.A. Work:
Equestrian statues of "Gen. G. G.
Meade," "Gen. John Sedgwick" and
"Gen. John P. Reynolds," Gettysburg,
Pa.; "Justinian," Appellate Court, New
York, N. Y.; Memorial Arch, Stony
Point, N. Y. ; "Gen. Anthony Wayne,"
Valley Forge; "Mountaineer Soldier,"
Charleston, W. Va.; First Philadelphia
Regiment Soldier, Union League, Phil-
adelphia; represented in Metropolitan
Museum, New York; National Museum,
Washington, D. C.
BUSH-BROWN, Margaret Lesley (Mrs
H. K. Bush-Brown), 1729 G. St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
Port. P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., May
19, 1857. Pupil of PAFA; Julian
Academy in Paris under Lefebvre and
Boulanger. Member: Wash. AC; 'S.
Wash. A; Wash. WCC. Awards : Sil-
ver medal, Charleston Exp., 1902; hon,
mention, PAFA; bronze medal, Ashe-
ville. Work: Portraits of Lincoln
and Lee, Blue Ridge, N. C.
BUTENSKY, Jules Leon, 32 Union
Square, New York, N. Y. ; summer, Ra-
mah, Pomona, Rockland Co., N. Y.
S. — Born Stolvitch, Russia, Dec. 13,
1871. Pupil of Hellmer and Zumbusch
at Imperial Academy of Fine Arts in
Vienna; Mercie and Alfred Boucher in
Paris. Work: "Universal Peace,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York; por-
trait of former president, First National
Bank, Brooklyn; "Jacob M. Gordin Me-
morial," Seward Park, New York;
"Exile," White House, Washington,
D. C; "Ames Prize Medal," Harvard
Law School; "Goliath," group at He-
brew Institute, Chicago.
BUTLER, C(ourtland) L., 804 Kennedy
Bldg., Tulsa, Okla.
P., Arch. — Born Columbus, O., Nov. 12,
1871. Member: Pittsburgh AA.
BUTLER, Edward B., 1608 Monroe Bldg.,
Chicago, 111.; h. 945 Sheridan Rd., Hub-
bard Woods, 111.
P.— Born Lewiston, Me., Dec. 16, 1853.
Pupil of F. C. Peyraud. Member:
Chicago SA; Chicago AG; Chicago AC;
Chicago Munic. AL; Calif. AC. Work:
"Clearing Up — Long Island Sound,"
Chicago Art Institute; "Misty Morn-
ing," City of Chicago; "October Mist,"
Chicago Municipal Art League; "Cal-
ifornia Wheat," Los Angeles Museum;
"Late Afternoon— Berkshires," Union
League Club, Chicago; "O'er Hill and
Dale," Crags Club, Los Angeles, Calif.;
Cleveland Museum of Art; "Early
Springs," Chicago Public School Art
Society.
BUTLER, Edward Smith, 1001 Chapel St.,
♦Walnut Hill, Cincinnati, O.
P.,C.,T.— Born Cincinnati, Jan. 26, 1848.
Self-taught. Member: Cincinnati
AC.
BUTLER, Mrs. Helen Sharpies, Long-
port. N. J.
P.— Born West Chester, Pa., Nov. 22,
1885. Pupil of Chase and Anshutz.
Member: Fellowship PAFA; S.Indp.
A.; Plastic C.
BUTLER, Howard Russell, 485 Maylin
St., Pasadena, Calif.
P.— Born New York, March 3, 1856.
Pupil of Dagnan-Bouveret, Roll and
Gervex in Paris. Member: ANA
1897; NA 1899; SAA 1889; NYWCC; N. Y.
Arch.Lg.l889; Century Assoc; AFAS
(pres. 1889 to 1905); Lotos C; NAC;
Nat.Acad. Assoc, (pres.). Awards:
Hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1886; Tem-
ple silver medal, PAFA 1888; medal, At-
lanta Exp., 1895; silver medal, Pan-Am,
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915; Carnegie prize,
NAD, 1916.
BUTLER, James, 75 Washington Place,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp. A.
BUTLER, Mary, 2127 Green St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P.— Pupil of Chase, Henri and Phila,
School of Design, PAFA and Redfield
in Philadelphia; Courtois, Prinet and Gi-
rardot in Paris. Member: Fellow-
ship PAFA (1st vice-pres.); Plastic C;
Buffalo SA; N. A. Women PS; Phila.
Alliance; Conn. AFA; Print Club,
Phila. Awards : Hon. mention,
Buffalo SA 1913 and 1914; Georgine
Shillard gold medal, Plastic C, 1918.
Work: "Goatfell Mountain," Penn-
sylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Philadelphia; "Ogunquit Dunes," West
Chester State Normal School; "Maine
Headland," Williamsport High School.
BUTLER, Theodore E., 75 Washington
Place, New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp. A.
BUTTON, Albert Prentice, 44 Boylston
St., Boston, Mass.
P., I.— Born Lowell, Mass., Nov. 18, 1872.
Pupil of Boston art schools. Mem-
ber: NYWCC; Boston SWCP; Prov-
idence WCC. Work in Boston Art
Club.
BUZBY, Rosella T., Fuller Bldg., 10 So.
18th St.; h. 5153 Wakefield St., Ger-
mantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I. — Born Germantown, Philadelphia,
Pa., Nov. 21. 1867. Pupil of PAFA.
Member: Fellow. PAFA; Plastic C.
BYARD, Dorothy R., 42 Barrow St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp. A.
BYE, Arthur Edwin, Langhorne, Pa.
P., W., L., T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa.,
Dec. 18, 1885. Pupil of School Indus.
Art, Phila.; Academie de la Grande
Chaumiere, Paris; John Carlson and
Charles Rosen. Member: College AA;
Salma.C; Phila. Art Alliance. Author,
"Pots and Pans, or Studies in Still-
Life Painting."
BYER, Samuel, 439 South Halstead St.;
h. 3342 West Polk St., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born in Poland in 1886. Pupil of
AIC. M ember: Palette and Chisel
C.
BYRAM, Ralph Shaw, Lena St., and
Church Lane, Germantown; h. Roum-
fort Road, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa.
P.,I.,C. — Born Germantown, March, 1881.
371
BYRNE
WHO*S WHO IN ART
CALIGA
Pupil of Pa. School of Industrial Art
and of C. P. Weber. Member:
Phila.Sketch C.
BYRNE, Ellen A(bert), 2022 N St., Wash-
ington, D. C; summer, "The River-
side," Ogunquit, Me.
P. — Born Fort Moultrie, S. C, Dec. 4,
1858. Pupil of Corcoran School of Art
In Washington; William M. Chase; Si-
mon and M6nard in Paris. Member:
S. Wash. A.
CADY, Mrs. Edwin A., Warren, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC; Provi-
dence WCC.
CADY, (Walter) Harrison, The Imperial,
corner Bedford Ave. and Pacific St.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
I. — Born Gardner, Mass., June 17, 1877.
Member: Salma.C; SI 1911; Illus-
trated, "Rackety Packety," "Queen
Silver Bell," "The Spring Cleaning,"
"The Cosy Lion," by Frances Hodgson
Burnett, etc.; contributor to "Life," "St.
Nicholas," "Saturday Evening Post,"
"Country Gentleman," "Ladies' Home
Journal," etc.
CAFARELLI, M. A., 24 West 60th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
CAHAN, Samuel, 644 Riverside Drive,
New York, N. Y. (L)
CAHILL. Arthur, San Anselmo, Cal.
P., I., T. — Born San Francisco, May 15,
1879. Pupil of Cal. Art School. Mem-
ber: Cal. AA; Bohemian C, San Fran-
cisco. Work: "Governor Hiram John-
son of California," State Capitol, Cal.;
"Congressman Kent of California" and
"Templeton Crocker" in Crocker Art
Gallery, Sacramento; "Chief Justice Ir-
win," Bohemian Club, San Francisco.
CAHILL, William V(incent), 2625 Polk
St., San Francisco, Calif.
P., T. — Born Syracuse, N. Y. Pupil of
ASL of N. Y.; Birge Harrison and
Howard Pyle. Member: Salma.C.
Calif. AC; All Arts Club of San Fran-
cisco. Awards : Evans prize, Salma.
C, 1912; Vezin prize, Salma.C. 1913;
Ackerman prize ($100), Calif. AC, 1917;
bronze medal, Sacramento Exp., 1917;
silver medal, Sacramento Exp., 1918;
Black prize ($150), Calif. AC, 1919;
first prize, figure, Phoenix Exh., 1919;
figure prize, Sacramento Exp., 1920.
Work: "Thoughts of the Sea," Mu-
seum of History, Science and Art, Los
Angeles; "Summer," Municipal Collec-
tion, Phoenix, Ariz. Professor of draw-
ing and painting. University of Kansas,
1918-19.
CAHILL, Mrs. W. V. See Katherine
Kavanaugh.
CALDER, Alexander (Milne), 1724 North
17th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
S. — ^^Born Aberdeen, Scotland, Aug. 23,
1846. Pupil of John Rhind in Edin-
burgh; studied in England; came to
United States in 1868; pupil of PAFA
under J. A. Bailly and Thomas Eakins.
Work: Equestrian statue of Gen.
George G. Meade in Fairmount Park,
Philadelphia, Pa.; colossal statue of
William Penn and groups on City Hall
tower; memorials of Chief Justice
Sharswood and of John McArthur in
City Hall; three portrait busts in Union
League Club, Philadelphia; represented
in PAFA and Drexel Institute.
CALDER, A(lexander) Stirling, 11 East
14th St., New York, N. Y.
S., T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Jan. 11,
1870; son of Alexander Milne Calder.
Pupil of PAFA; Chapu and Falgui^re
in Paris. Member: NSS 1896;
ACPhila.; SAA 1905; Fellowship PAFA;
ANA 1906; NA. 1913; N. Y. Municipal
AS; N. Y. Arch. Lg. 1910; Century
Assoc; Players'; Nat.Inst.A.L. ; NAC
(life); Lg. of NYA. Instructor, NAD;
ASL of N. Y. Awards: Gold medal,
ACPhila., 1893; hon. mention, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; Lippincott prize,
PAFA, 1905; grand prize, Alaska- Yu-
kon-Pacific Exp., 1909. Work:
Statues of Witherspoon, Marcus Whit-
man and Davies, Presbyterian Bldg.,
Philadelphia; marble sun dial, Fairmount
Park, Philadelphia; monumental arch-
ways, Throop Institute, Pasadena, Cal.;
Lea Memorial, Laurel Hill Cemetery,
Philadelphia; Fountain of Energy, etc.,
P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915; "The Star,"
Herron Art Inst., Indianapolis; "Wash-
ington Group," Washington Arch, New
York, N. Y. ; Depew memorial fountain,
Indianapolis, Ind. ; "The Island," Vis-
caya, Fla. Represented in permanent
collection, Pennsylvania Academy; St.
Louis Museum of Art; Franklin Inn
Club and Smithsonian Institution
grounds, Washington, D. C; Metropoli-
tan Museum, New York, N. Y. Acting
Chief, Dept. of Sculpture, Panama-Pa-
cific Exposition, San Francisco, 1915.
CALDER, Mrs. Josephine, 1861 Parkwood
Ave., Toledo, O.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
CALDER, Ralph M(ilne), care Paul
Chalfin, 597 Fifth Ave.; h. 645 Lexing-
ton Ave., New York, N. Y.
P., A., T. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., April
17, 1884. Pupil of PAFA.
CALDWELL, L. H., 221 South 44th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (L)
CALEWAERT, Louis H. S., 4316 Green-
wood Ave., Chicago, 111.
P., E., S. — Born Detroit. Mich., Aug.
18. 1894. Pupil Detroit School of Fine
Arts under Wicker and studied in Italy,
'Sicily, France and Belgium. Mem-
ber: Chicago SE: Calif. SE. Work
in: Toledo Museum of Art.
CALHOUN, Frederic D., Studio 17,
Handicraft Guild, 89 So. Tenth St.,
Minneapolis, Minn.
P. — Born Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 12,
1883. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Minneap-
olis School of Art. Member: Min-
neapolis AC; Minneapolis AL.
CALIGA, l(saac) H(enry), 1422 Federal
St., Salem, Mass.; Provincetown. Mass.
P. — Born Auburn. Ind., March 24, 1857.
Pupil of William Lindenschmidt, studied
in Munich. Boston and Salem. Mem-
ber: Salma. C; S. Indp. A. Work:
Z72
CALKINS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
CANTER
"Portrait of H. F. Waters," New Eng-
land Historical and Genealogical So-
ciety; "Portrait of Matliew Robson,"
Salem (Mass.) Y. M. C. A.; "James B.
Colgate." and "Marcus Waterman," New
York Chamber of Commerce.
CALKINS, Loring Gary, 24 Milk St., Bos-
ton, Mass.
E., T.— Born Chicago, 111., June 11, 1881.
Pupil of Vanderpoel; Charles Francis
Brown; Freer. Member: AlC. Alumni
Assoc; ASL, of Chicago. Illustrated
"Land and Sea Mammals of Middle
America and West Indies."
CALVERT, Bertha Winifred, Fourth Ave.
and Union St.; h. 1002 Acklin Ave.,
Nashville, Tenn.
P.— Born Nashville, Dec. 6, 1885. Spe-
cialty, ivory miniatures.
CALVERT, E., 238^ Fourth Ave., North;
h. 1002 Acklin Ave., Nashville, Tenn.
P. — Born in York, England, May 4,
1850. Work : Portraits in Mercer
University, Macon, Ga. ; Vanderbilt Uni-
versity; Lake Geneva, Wis., Assembly
Hall; Masonic Grand Lodge, Nashville.
CALVERT, Peter R., Fourth Ave. and
Union St.; h. 807 Sixteenth Ave., South,
Nashville, Tenn.
P. — Born near Leeds, Yorkshire, Eng-
land, Apr. 14, 1855. Pupil of John Sow-
den. Specialty, ivory miniatures.
CAMERON, EdG^'' S^Dler), 10 East Ohio
St., Chicago, 111.
Mural P.,W. — Born Ottawa, 111., May 26,
1862. Pupil of Chicago Academy of De-
sign; ASL of N.Y. ; Cabanel, Constant
and Laurens in Paris. Member:
Chicago SA; Cliff Dwellers. Awards :
Silver medal. Paris Exp.. 1900; Grower
prize, AIC 1909; Butler Purchase prize,
AIC 1914; Carr prize, AIC 1914; Rosen-
wald purchase prize, AIC 1917; Carr
prize, AIC 1917; "Palmes Academiques,"
Paris. 1920. Work: In Chicago
Historical Soc. ; Chicago Union League
Club; Supreme Court Library, Spring-
field, 111.; "Youth and Moonlight," Chi-
cago Commission purchase. City Hall,
1915; "Cabaret Breton," Art Institute
of Chicago.
CAMERON, Elizabeth W., 240 Hazelwood
Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: AA Pittsburgh.
CAMERON, Marie Gelon (Mrs. Edgar S.
Cameron), 10 East Ohio St., Chicago,
111.
P. — Born Paris, Prance. Pupil of Mo-
reau de Tours, Cabanel, Laurens and
Constant in Paris; and AIC. Mem-
ber: Cordon C. Award: Prize,
AIC, 1902.
CAMERON, W(illiam) R(oss), 545 New
Call Bldg.; h. 545 Duboce Ave., San
Francisco, Calif.
I., E., W.— Born New York, N. Y.,
June 14, 1893. Pupil F. L. Meyer, Xav-
ier Martinez, Nahl, E. Spencer Mackey,
Martin Griffin.
CAMFFERMAN, Margaret T., Langley,
Wash. (P.)
CAMFFERMAN, Peter M.
Wash. (P.)
Langley,
273
CAMPBELL. Anne Barraud, 1977 Bilt-
more St., Washington, D. C; summer,
Bremo Bluff. Fluvanna Co., Va.
Min. P.— Born Nelson County, Va., Aug.
13, 1879. Pupil of Alice Beckington and
ASL of N. Y., C. C. Critcher, Corcoran
Art School, Bertha E. Perrie. Mem-
ber: Wash. WCC; Wash. AC.
CAMPBELL, Blendon R., 147 West Fourth
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born St. Louis, Mo., July 28.
1872. Pupil of Constant, Laurens and
Whistler in Paris. Member: SI 1905;
Paris AAA; N.Y.Arch.Lg.l911. Award :
Third prize, Paris AAA 1900. Repre-
sented in Chicago Art Institute and
Wichita AA. Specialty, figure, land-
scapes and portraits.
CAMPBELL, Edmund S., 36 East Center
St., Park Ridge, 111.; care of Chicago
Art Institute, Chicago, 111.
P., T.— Born Freehold. N. J. Pupil of
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Member: Pittsburgh AA; NYWCC.
CAMPBELL, Floy, 4026 East 67th St.
Terrace, Kansas City, Mo.
P., L, C, W., L., T.— Born Kansas City,
Mo. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Simon
and Cottet, Paris.
CAMPBELL, Mrs. H(elena) E(astman)
Ogden, The Delaware, 520 West 122d
St., New York, N. Y.; summer. Twi-
light Park, Haines Falls, N. Y.
P., W., T.— Born Eastman, Ga. Pupil
of Chase School in New York; Grande
Chaumiere School in Paris. Member:
N. A. Women PS; S.Indp.A.; Lg. of NYA.
Work : "Portrait of Rt. Rev. Fred-
erick F. Reese, Bishop of Georgia,"
owned by the Diocese of Georgia.
CAMPBELL, Heyworth, care of Vogue,
19 West 44th St., New York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI.
CAMPBELL, Mary, Washington Semi-
nary, Washington, Pa.
P.— M ember: Cin. Woman's AC.
CAMPBELL, Pauline, 1343 Harvard St.,
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
CANDLER, Eleanor S., 85 Putnam Ave.,
Detroit, Mich. (P.)
CANDLER, Miriam L., 85 Putnam Ave.,
Detroit. Mich. (P.)
CANE, Florence, 126 Riverside Drive,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
CANNON, Beatrice, 1115 East 61st St.,
Chicago, 111.
P., W., T.— Born Louisville, Ky., July
6, 1875. Pupil of AIC. Member:
Alumni AIC.
CANNON, Mrs, Jennie Vennerstrom, 1631
La Vereda St., Berkeley, Calif.; sum-
mer, Carmel-by-the-Sea. Calif.
P., W., L. T.— Born Albert Lea, Minn.,
Aug. 31, 1869. Pupil of Bolton Brown.
Edgar Ward and William M. Chase; and
I-ondnn School of Art. Member:
San F. AA; People's Art Guild.
CANTER, Albert M., Mark Bldg., 721
Walnut St.; h. 6226 Spruce St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P., T.— Born Norma, Salem Co., N. J.,
CANTRALL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
CARLSON
June 1, 1892. Pupil of Jos. T. Pearson,
Jr. Member: Fellowship PAFA;
Graphic Sketch Club; Alumni Assoc,
School Ind. A., Phila. Work: "Vir-
g-inia Road" and "Landscape," Graphic
Sketch Club Gallery.
CANTRALL, Harriet M., 853 Grand Blvd.,
Springfield, 111.
P., T. — Born near Springfield. Pupil of
Pratt Inst., Dow, Woodbury, Townsley,
Poore, Van Laer. Member: West-
ern Arts Assoc; St. Louis AG; Spring-
field Art Assoc.
CARBEE (Scott) Clifton, 110 Tremont
St., Boston, Mass.
p.. T. — Born Concord, Vt., April 26,
1860. Pupil of Hugo Breul in Provi-
dence; Bouguereau and Ferrier in
Paris, Max Bohm in Florence. Mem-
ber: Boston AC; Copley S.1902.
CAREW, Mrs. Berta, Red Acres, Pine
Forge, Berks Co., Pa.
P. — Born Springfield, Mass., March 12.
1878. Pupil of Blashfield, Mowbray and
Chase in New York: Carlandi in Rome;
Mme. Richarde in Paris. Member:
N.A. Women PS; Pa.S.Min.P.; Royal
Soc Min.P., London.
CAREW, Frank, Pine Forge, Pa. (P.)
CARLES, Arthur B, 2007 Girard Ave.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
Awards : Harris bronze medal ($300),
AIC 1913; silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San
F., 1915; Lippincott prize. PAFA, 1917;
Stotesbury prize, PAFA, 1919. Work:
"An Actress as Cleopatra," Pennsyl-
vania Academy of the Fine Arts.
CARLES, Sara, 2007 Girard Ave., Phila-
delphia, Pa. (P.)
CARLETON, Clifford, 52 West 94th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Elizabeth-
town, N. Y.
L— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Nov. 7, 1867.
Pupil of ASL of N.Y. under Mowbray.
Member: SI 1901. Illustrated: "Pem-
broke," by Mary Wilkins: "People We
Pass," by Julian Ralph; "Their Wed-
ding Journey," by Howells.
CARLHART, Genevieve Acee, 131 River-
side Drive, New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
CARLISLE, Mary Helen, 24 West 40th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
Award : McMillin prize, N. A. Wo-
men PS, 1914.
CARLSEN, Dines, 43 East 59th St., New
York, N. Y.; summer, Falls Village,
Conn.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., March 28,
1901. Pupil of Emil Carlsen. Award:
Third Hallgarten prize, NAD 1919.
Work: "The Brass Kettle," The Cor-
coran Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C.
CARLSEN, Emil, 43 East 59th St., New
York. N. Y.
P. — Borji Copenhagen, Denmark, Oct.
19, 1853; came to United States in 1872.
Studied architecture at Danish Royal
Academy. Member: SAA 1902;
ANA 1904; NA t906; Nat.Inst.AL; NAC;
Lotos C; Fellowship PAFA (assoc);
Salma.C. 1903. Awards : Second
Inness prize, Salma.C. 1904; Shaw
Purchase, SAA 1904; gold medal, St.
Louis Exp. 1904; Webb prize, SAA 1905;
Inness medal NAD 1907; Hurd third
medal, CI. Pittsburgh, 1908; bronze
medal, Buenos Aires, 1910; Temple gold
medal, PAFA 1912; Lippincott prize
($300). PAFA 1913; silver medal NAC
1915; Sesnan gold medal, PAFA 1916;
Saltus gold medal, NAD 1916. Carnegie
prize, NAD, 1919. Work: The
Open Sea," and "Still Life," Met-
ropolitan Museum, New York; "Moon-
light on the Kattegat," Albright
Art Gallery, Buffalo; "Morning," Rhode
Island School of Design, Providence;
"The South Strand," National Gallery,
Washington; "The Lazy Sea," Brook-
lyn Institute Museum: "Still Life." Art
Institute, Chicago; "Open Sea" and
"Woods Interior," Minneapolis Insti-
tute; "Still Life," Herron Art Institute,
Indianapolis; "Still Life," Art Museum,
Worcester, Mass.; "Coast of Maine"
and "Entrance to St. Thomas' Har-
bour," and 2 still life pictures. City Art
Museum. St. Louis, Mo.; "Near Wind-
ham," Engineers' Club, New York; in
permanent collection Lotos Club, New
York; Inst, of Art, San Francisco, Cal. ;
"Summer Clouds," Pennsylvania Acad-
emy of the Fine Arts. Philadelphia;
"Moonlight on a Calm Sea," Corcoran
Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C.
CARLSEN, John H., 5230 West Congress
St., Chicago, 111.
P., E. — Born Arendal, Norway, Dec. 16,
1875. Member: Palette and Chisel
C. ; Chicago SA. Award: Palette and
Chisel Club ($100). associate prize, 1916;
gold medal, Palette and Chisel C, 1918.
CARLSON, Harry,
lyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember:
1909— 59th St., Brook-
S.Indp.A.
CARLSON, John F., care of Macbeth Gal-
leries, 450 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. ;
Woodstock, N. Y.
Ldscp.P., T. — Born in Sweden, 1875.
Member: ANA 1911; NYWCC;
AWCS; Salma. C; Wash. WCC.
Awards : First prize, Swedish Amer-
ican Exp., Chicago, 1911 and 1913; Vezin
and Isidor prizes. Salma. C, 1912; silver
medal. Wash. SA, 1913; silver medal,
P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915; Carnegie prize,
NAD, 1918. Work: "Woods in Win-
ter," Corcoran Gallery, Washington, D.
C. ; "Woodland Repose," Toledo Muse-
um; "Passing Winter," Ol^erlin College,
Oberlin, O.; "Morning Mists," Brooks
Memorial Gallery, Memphis, Tenn. ;
"Autumn Beeches," Public Art Gallery,
Dallas, Tex.; "Winter Dream Days,"
Art Association, Lincoln, Neb. In-
structor, Art Students' League Land-
scape School, Woodstock, N. Y.
CARLSON, Margaret Goddard (Mrs. John
Carlson), Woodstock. N. Y.
P.— Born Plainfield, N. J., Apr. 6, 1882.
Member: N.A. Women PS.
CARLSON, Mrs. Margaret Mitchell, 393
Throckmorton Ave., Mill Valley, Calif.
L— Born Deming, Wash., Mar. 25, 1892.
374
CARMAN
WHO*S WHO IN ART
CARTOTTO
Pupil of Ella Bush, ASL. of N.Y., Pa.
School of Design; NAD. Member:
West Coast Arts, Lag-una Beach, Calif.
CARMAN, Eva L., 939 Eighth Ave., New
York, N. Y. (Min.P.)
CARNALL, James Linton, 80 Columbia
Heights, Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
CARNELL, Althea J., 1907 North 7th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.,I.,C. — M ember: Plastic C. (treas.)
CARPENTER, Charles E., 91 Cottage St.,
Pawtucket, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
CARPENTER, Dudley Saltonstall, Mining
Exchange Bldg., La Jolla, Calif.
P., I., T.— Born Nashville, Tenn., Feb.
26, 1880. Pupil of ASL of N.Y.; Julian,
Laurens, Constant, and Aman-Jean in
Paris. Member: Denver AA.
Award : Honorable Mention, Paris
Salon, 1911.
CARPENTER, F(letcher) H., 97 Middle-
sex Rd., Rochester, N. Y. ; Summer,
Yorkville, Mich.
P., C, L., T. — Born Providence, R. I.,
June 27, 1879. Pupil of Ernest Major.
Me m b e r : Rochester AC.
CARPENTER, Fred G(reene), Art School,
Washington University, St. Louis, Mo.;
summer, Wyalusing, Wis.
P.— Born Nashville, Tenn., June 1, 1882.
Pupil of Laurens, Baschet, Simon and
Collin in Paris, Member: St.
Louis AL; St. Louis AG; 2x4 Soc.
Award: Hon. mention. Salon des Ar-
tistes Frangais, 1911; silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915; Bascomb prizes, St.
Louis AG, 1916. Work: "Day Dreams,'
Herron Art Inst., Indianapolis; "Girl
with Apples," Wednesday Club, 'St.
Louis; "La Chaise Libre," St. Louis
Museum; picture. Artists' Guild of St.
Louis; "Rosecolor, Scarlet and Black,"
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Philadelphia; "The Entry into Havana,"
"The Battle of Sacramento," Missouri
State Capitol.
CARPENTER, Helen K(nipe) (Mrs. Ed-
ward Childs Carpenter), 75 West 55th
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, "The
Salt Box," New Hartford, Conn.
I.— Born Philadelphia, Dec. 6, 1881. Pu-
pil of PAFA under Chase, Breckenridge
and AnshuLz.
CARR, Alice (Robertson), 934i^ State St.,
Santa Barbara, Calif.; h. 4312 9th Ave.,
N. E., Seattle, Wash.; summer, 3 Ala-
meda Court, Santa Barbara, Calif.
S.— Born Roanoke, Va., Oct. 3, 1899.
Pupil C. Stirling Calder, George Bridg-
man, Albert Herter. Member: ASL
of N.Y. Award : 1st prize in sculp-
ture, Studio Club of N. Y., 1920.
CARR, Michael Carmichael, 711 Missouri
Ave., Columbia. Mo.; summer, care of
E. J. Camp, Union Pier, Mich.
P., Engr., L., W. — Born San Francisco,
Cal., June 25, 1881. Pupil of Wilson
Steer, Frederick Brown, Gordon Craig.
Member: S.Indp.A. Awarded
Slade Scholarship, Slade School, Lon-
don University. Work: "Sunset,"
Public Library, Bordighiera, Italy.
CARRIGAN, William L., Falls Village.
Conn.; Century Association, 7 West
43d St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born San Francisco, Cal., 1868. Pu-
pil of Emil Carlsen. Member: Conn.
AFA. Awards : Silver medal. Wash.
SA 1914; silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San
F.. 1915.
CARSON, E. Francis, Craftsman Studios,
26 Lime St., Boston, Mass.; summer,
Provincetown, Mass.
P.— Born Waltham, Mass., Sept. 8, 1881.
Pupil of Mass. Normal Art 'School; N.
Y. ASL. Member: Copley S. ; Provi-
dence Water Color Club; Provincetown
AA.
CARTER, A. Helen, 112 West Eleventh
St., Nev/ York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
CARTER, Charles M(ilton), care of C. R.
Tuttle. 209 West Jackson Blvd., Chi-
cago, 111.
P.,T.,W. — Born North Brookfield, Mass.,
Dec. 9, 1853. Pupil of Mass. Normal
Art School in Boston. Studied in Euro-
pean schools. Member: Boston AC;
Denver AC; Ex-Director of Art Public
Schools of Denver; former State Super-
visor of Drawing for Massachusetts;
hon. pres. U. S. Section, International
Congress for the Teaching of Drawing,
Paris Exp., 1900. Member: Inter-
national Jury of Awards, Dept. of Edu-
cation, St. Louis Exp., 1903; delegate,
Dept. of Interior, to Art Congress, Lon-
don, 1908. Author of "Some European
Art Schools."
CARTER, George W., 16 East 87th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
CARTER, Mary Mein (Mrs. James New-
man Carter), 2002 Spruce St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
Min.P.,C.— Born Philadelphia, Aug. 16,
1864. Pupil of Carl Weber and C.
Faber Fellows. Member: Plastic C.
Work: In Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts, Plastic Club and Art
Club of Philadelphia.
CARTER, Pruett A., 140 Wadsworth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: Salma. C.
CARTER, Robert A., Ridgefield, N. J.
P. — Born Toronto, Canada, Mar. 25,
1860.
CARR, Gene, "The World," New York, CARTOTTO, Ercole, 200 West 57th St.
N. Y.; h. Forest Hills Gardens, L. I.,
N. Y.
I.— Born New York, Jan. 7, 1881. On
staff of the "World" since 1903. Illus-
trated: Comic series; "Step Brothers,"
"Lady Bountiful," "Dooley," and for
New York World.
New York, N. Y. ; summer, "The Mt.
Washington," Bretton Woods, N. H.
P.,T. — Born Valle Mosso, Italy, Jan.
26, 1889. Pupil of Paxton, Hale, Ben-
son, Bosley and Tarbell in Boston.
Award : Second Hallgarten prize,
NAD. 1919.
375
CARTWRIGHT
WHO'S WHO /A' ART
CAVANAGH
CARTWRIGHT, Mrs. Isabella Branson,
The Art Alliance, Rittenhouse Square,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Coatesville, Pa., Sept. 4, 1885.
Pupil of Daingerfield, Henry B. Snell,
and Frank Brangwyn. Member:
Phila. Alliance; Plastic C. Awards:
European Fellowship from Philadelphia
School of Design, 1906; Art Club of
Philadelphia Gold Medal for water
color, 1906.
CASEAU, Charles H(enry), 133 East 34th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., I., C. — Born Boston, Mass., -May 2,
1880. Pupil of Boston Museum School
of Fine Arts; Denman Ross.
CASELLA, Alfred, 1889 Lombard St., San
Francisco, Calif. (P.)
CASER, Ettore, care of O'Brien Art Gal-
lery, 670 Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111.
P., E.— Born Venice, 1880. Pupil of de
Maria in Venice. Went to Boston 1908.
A. w a r d : Silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San
F., 1915.
CASEY, F. De Sales, care of Life Pub-
lishing Co., 598 Madison Ave., New
York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: SI.
CASEY, J(ohn) J(oseph), 278 West 11th
St., New York, N. Y.
I., P. — Born San Francisco, Cal., May 4,
1878. Pupil of Tarbell and Benson in
Boston; Laurens, Julian's and Lazar in
Paris.
CASEY, Mrs. L. W., Stoneleigh Court,
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: S. Wash. A.
CASSATT, Mary, care of Durand-Ruel, 12
East 57th St., New York, N. Y.; and 10
Rue de Marignan, Paris, France.
P., Etcher— Born Pittsburgh, Pa. In-
fluenced by Manet and Degas. Stud-
ied at PAFA and in Europe. Mem-
ber: ANA 1909. Awards : Lippin-
cott prize, PAFA 1904; gold medal
of honor, PAFA 1914. Chevaher of
Legion of Honor of France, 1904.
Work: "Mother and Child," Metro-
politan Museum, New York; "La Fem-
me au Chien," Corcoran Gallery, Wash-
ington; "On the Balcony," Wilstach
Gallery, Philadelphia; "Mere et deux
Enfants," Rhode Island School of De-
sign, Providence; "At the Opera," Mu-
seum of Fine Arts, Boston; "Mother
and Child," Worcester Museum; "Ca-
resse Enfantine," National Gallery,
Washington; "Femmes et Enfant," De-
troit Museum; "The Toilet," Art Insti-
tute, Chicago; "Mother and Child,"
Luxembourg, Paris.
CASSELL, John Harmon, "Evening
World," Park Row; h. 2 West 67th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; Silvermine, Conn.
Cartoonist. — Born Nebraska City, Neb.,
1873. Pupil of AIC. Member: SI,
1905.
CASSIDY, l(ra) D. Gerald, 541 El Canimo
del Canon, Santa Fe, N. M.
P., I. — Born Cincinnati, O. Pupil of
Cincinnati Academy; NAD in New
York; ASL of N. Y. Member:
NAC ; Salma. C. ; Denver AA . Award:
Grand prize and gold medal, Panama-
Calif. Exp., San Diego, Calif., 1915.
Works : Decorations on Indian Arts
BIdg., San Diego, Cal.; decorations,
"Last of the Indians," Hotel Grama-
tan, Bronxville, N. Y. ; "Reflections,"
Freer Collection, Detroit, Mich. Repre-
sented in San Diego Museum and Mu-
seum of New Mexico; Freer Collection,
Washington, D. C; Canton (China)
Christian College; El Oriate Theatre,
Santa Fe.
CASSIDY, Laura E., 6426 Desmond Ave.,
Madisonville, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
CASTELLO, Eugene, 3728 Locust St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P., S., W.— Born Philadelphia, Jan. 12,
1851. Pupil of PAFA under Eakins.
Member: Fellowship PAFA; Salma.
C. 1904; Phila. Print C. (hon.); Phila.
ACG (hon.); Phila. Chpt. AIA 1871;
Inter. 'Soc. A. L. ; Phila. AC. Awards:
Bronze medal AAS 1904; prize, Phila-
delp...a Arts and Crafts G. 1906: ex-
hibitor's bronze medal, Ghent Exp.,
1913. Wo r k in: Historical Society of
Pennsylvania; University of Pennsyl-
vania. Correspondent, "American Art
News," "The Studio," London.
CASTERTON. Mrs. Eda Nemoede, Fine
Arts Bldg. ; h. 2823 North Albany Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
Min. P.— Born Brillion, Wis., Apr. 14,
1877. Pupil of Virginia Reynolds,
Lawton S. Parker and Chicago Acad-
emy of Fine Arts; Minneapolis Sch. of
Fine Arts; AIC; Chicago School of
Illustration; Ralph Clarkson; Students'
Hostel, Paris. Member: Am. S. Min.
P. ; Chicago S'. Min. P. Awards:
Hon. mention, International Art Union,
Paris, 1907 and 1908; silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915.
CASTLE, Montague, 247 West 36th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Mural P.
CATALANO, Guiseppi, Chiesannova,
Province of Trapani, Sicily.
E. — M ember: Chicago SE.
CAULDWELL, Leslie Giffen, 4 bis Cit6
du Retiro, Paris, France.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., Oct. 18, 1861.
Pupil of Julian Academy in Paris under
Boulanger, Lefebvre and Carolus-Duran.
Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg., 1894; Paris
AAA; rUnion-Interalliee, Paris. Spe-
cialty, portraits in pastel.
CAVACOS, E(mmanuel A.), 5 Rue Larrey,
Paris, France.
S.,P. — Born Island of Kythera, Greece,
Feb. 10, 1885. Pupil of Ephraim Key-
ser in Baltimore; Jules Coutan and
V. Peter in Paris. Member: Bait.
WCC; Assoc. des Anciens E16ves de
I'ecole Nationale des Beaux-Arts de
Paris; Inst. Social de I'Enseignement.
Awards : Rinehart Paris Scholarship,
1911-1915; Hon. mention, Paris Salon
1913. Works : "Aspiration," Enoch
Pratt Free Library; "Penseur," Pea-
body Institute, Baltimore.
CAVANAGH, J. Albert, 25 East 26th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
376
CECERE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
CHAPIN
CECERE, Gaetano, care of the American
Academy in Rome, Rome, Italy; 426
East 15th St., New York, N. Y.
S._Born New York, N. Y., Nov. 26,
1894. Pupil of H. A. MacNeil and
Beaux-Arts Institute of Design. Work:
Art in Trades Club medal for 'School
Art League of New York. Award :
American Academy in Rome scholar-
ship, 1920.
CHACE, Dorothea, 108 Dorchester Rd.,
Buffalo, N. Y.
P., S.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Feb. 3,
1894. Pupil of the Art School of the
Albright Art Gallery; ASL of N. Y. In-
structor of Art at Bennett School, Mill-
brook.
CHADEAYNE, Robert O., Firthcliffe,
N. Y. (P.)
CHADWICK, William, Black Hall, Conn.
P. — Me m b e r : Salma. C.
CHAFFEE, Mrs. Everitte S., 193 Hope
St., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
CHAFFEE, Oliver N(ewberry), Province-
town, Mass.; 141 East 21st St., New
York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Detroit, Mich., Jan. 23,
1881. Pupil of Chase, Henri, Haw-
thorne and Miller. Member: S.
Indp.A.
CHAFFITZ, Bar, 111 West 86th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp.A.
CHALFANT, J(efferson) D(avid), "Ash-
ley," Wilmington, Del.
P. — Born Pennsylvania, Nov. 6, 1856.
Pupil of Bouguereau, Robert-Fleury and
Lefebvre in Paris.
CHALFIN, Paul, 597 Fifth Ave.; h. 349
Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y.
Mural P., Arch. — Born in New York, N.
Y., Nov. 2, 1874. Member: Mural
P.; N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1911; Players.
Award : Lazarus Scholarship for mu-
ral painting, 1905.
CHAMBERLAIN, Arthur B., 16 Gladstone
St., Rochester, N. Y.
P. — Born Kitchener, Ontario, Canada,
Jan. 18, 1860. Member: Rochester
AC.
CHAMBERLAIN, Judith, 728 Montgomery
St., San Francisco, Calif.
P.— Born San Francisco, Feb. 28, 1893.
Pupil of Max Weber.
CHAMBERLIN, F. Tolies, 223 South
Catalina Ave., Pasadena, Calif.
P., S., E. — Born San Francisco, Cal.,
March 10, 1873. Pupil of D. W. Tryon
in Hartford; George de Forest Brush
and George Bridgman at ASL of N. Y.
Member: Mural P. ; Guild of Book-
workers; N.Y.Arch.Lg., 1913; Mac-
Dowell Memorial Assoc; Rome Acad.
Alumni. Awards : Hon. mention
Beaux Arts Inst, of Design, Fine Arts
Club, Pasadena; Lazarus Scholarship in
mural painting, American Academy in
Rome, 1909-1912; Avery prize, N.Y.Arch.
Lg. 1914. Represented in Peabody Inst.,
Baltimore, New Rochelle (N. Y.) Pub-
lic Library, and Detroit Institute.
CHAMBERS, C. Bosseron, Carnegie Hall;
h. 3 52 West 57th St., New York, N. Y.
P.. I., T.— Born St. Louis, Mo., May 13,
1883. Pupil of Louis Schultze at the
Berlin Academy; Alois Hrdliezka at the
Royal Academy of Vienna. Mem-
ber: Salma. C; SI; Alliance. W o r k:
Decoration and altar pieces in St. Igna-
tius' Church, Chicago; portraits in
Missouri Historical Soc, St. Louis, and
Osceola Club, St. Augustine, Fla.
CHAMBERS, C(harles) E(dward), Waldo
Ave., Riverdale-on-Hudson, New York,
N. Y.
I. — Born Ottumwa, la. Pupil of AIC;
ASL of N. Y. Member: SI 1912;
Salma. C, 1915; Guild of Free Lance A.
Award : Shaw prize, Salma. C, 1918.
CHAMBERS, Christine F., 624 South
Washington Sq., Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
CHAMBERS, Hallie Worthington (Mrs.
Kirby L. Chambers), 100 East Main St.;
h. "Kenwood Hill," Louisville, Ky.
P.— Born Louisville, Oct. 27, 1881.
Pupil of A. Margaretta Archambault
and Hugh Breckenridge. Award :
Prize for still life, Kentucky State
Fair, 1921.
CHAMBERS, Robert W(illiam), 43 East
83d St., New York, N. Y.
I.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., May 26, 1865.
Pupil of Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: Nat.Inst.AL; Century As-
soc. Illustrator for "Life," "Vogue," etc.
CHAMPLIN, Ada Belle, 640 Prospect
Blvd., Pasadena, Calif.; Carmel-by-the-
Sea, Calif.
P.— Born St. Louis, Mo. Pupil of AIC;
ASL of N. Y. Member: Cal. AC;
AIC Alumni; Laguna Beach AA.
CHAMPLIN, Hallie. See Mrs. Fenton.
CHANDLER, George Walter, 86 rue Va-
neau, Paris, France.
E. — Born Milwaukee. Pupil of Julian
Academy in Paris under Laurens.
Member: Chicago SE, Work in:
Petit Palais, Paris; Victoria and Albe'rt
Museum, London; Library of Congress,
Washington, D. C.
CHANDLER, Helen Clark, 5431/2 North
Heliotrope Drive, Los Angeles, Cal.
P., I., E., C, T.— Born Wellington,
Kan., Jan 20, 1881. Pupil of MacMon-
nies, Birge Harrison, Arthur W. Dow.
Member: San F. AA. ; Cal. SE.
CHANLER, Robert W., 147 East 19th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1914 (as-
soc); Mural P.
CHAPEL, Guy M., 3919 North Kenneth
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born in Detroit in 1871. Pupil of
AIC. Member: Palette and Chisel
C.
CHAPIN, Archibald B., 435 Clay Ave.,
Kirk wood, Mo.
I., Cartoonist. — Born Mt. Vernon, O.,
June 22, 1875.
CHAPLIN, James, care of the Seattle
Fine Arts Society, Seattle, Wash. (P.)
CHAPIN, James (Ormsbee), 232 West 14th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born West Orange, N. J., July 9,
Z77
CHAPIN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
CHASE
1887. Pupil of Julian De Vriendt, Ant-
werp Royal Academy. Member: S.
Indp.A.
CHAPIN, Lucy C, Dickinson Seminary,
Williamsport, Pa.; h. 4040 McPherson
Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
P., T. — Born Syracuse, N. Y., Jan. 18,
1873. Pupil of Baschet, Merson, Collin
and Prinet in Paris. Member:
Graduates' Club, College of Fine Arts,
Syracuse University. Works : Por-
trait of Chief Justices Ezekiel Whitman
and Prentiss Mellen, in State Gallery,
Capitol, Augusta, Me.; "Portrait of
Bishop Eveland," Dickinson Seminary,
Williamsport, Pa.
CHAPLIN, Margaret, 346 West 22d St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
CHAPMAN, Carlton T(heodore), 58 West
57th St., New York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born New London, O., Sept. 18,
1860. Pupil of NAD and ASL of N.Y.;
Julian Academy in Paris. Member:
ANA 1900, NA 1914; SAA 1892; AWCS;
A.Fund S.; Century Assoc; Lotos C;
NAC. Specialty, marines. Awards :
Silver medal, Boston, 1892; medal, Co-
lumbia Exp., Chicago, 1893; medal, At-
lanta Exp., 1895; bronze medal, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; bronze medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902. Work: "A
Rocky Coast," Toledo Museum; "Calm
in Gloucester Harbor," Brooklyn Insti-
tute Museum; "Bonhomme Richard and
Serapis," City Art Museum, St. Louis,
Mo.
CHAPMAN, Charles S., Leonia, N. J.
P., I.— Born Morristown, N. Y., 1879.
Pupil of Chase and W. Appleton Clark.
Member: Salma. C. 1908; ANA, 1919.
Awards : First Shaw prize, Salma.
C, 1910; second Shaw prize, Salma. C,
1911; Salma. C. prize, 1917; Saltus gold
medal, NAD, 1917. Work: "In the
Deep Woods," Metropolitan Museum,
New York.
CHAPMAN, C(yrus) Durand, 3323 Wis-
consin Ave., Washington, D. C.
P., I., A., W., T.— Born Irvington, N. J.,
Sept. 23, 1856. Pupil of Wilmarth and
J. G. Brown in New York; Cormon and
Constant in Paris. Member: AAS.
CHAPMAN, Esther McCord, 1600 Q St.,
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
CHAPMAN, Kenneth Milton, Museum of
New Mexico; h. 317 Acequia Madre,
•Santa Fe., N. M.
P., L, A., C, W., L., T.— Born Ligon-
ier, Ind., July 13, 1875. Pupil of AIC;
New York ASL. Works: Three
murals, Museum of New Mexico; illus-
trator of works on Natural Sciences;
writer and lecturer on Indian Art.
CHAPMAN, Minerva J(osephlne), 9 Rue
Falgui^re, Paris, France; h., care of
W. B. Chapman, Arlington Heights, 111.
P.— Born Altmar, N. Y., Dec. 6, 1858.
Pupil of AIC and Annie Shaw; Robert-
Fleury, Bouguereau, Courtois and Chas.
Lazar in Paris. Assoc. Soc. Nat. des
Beaux-Arts, Paris, 1906.
378
CHAPMAN, W. E., 18 East 90th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
CHARD, Louise Cable, 54 Melrose Place,
Montclair, N. J.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
CHARD, Walter G(oodman), Fenway
Studios, Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.; h.
Meadowood Farms, Cazenovia, N. Y.
S., C— Born Buffalo, N. Y., April 20,
1880. Pupil of Charles Grafly, School of
the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Beaux
Arts Institute of Design.
CHARMAN, Laura B., Magnolia, N. J.
S. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
CHASE, Adelaide Cole (Mrs. William
Chester Chase), 8 Marlboro St., Boston,
Mass.
Port. P.— Born Boston, 1868; daughter
of J. Foxcroft Cole. Pupil of Tarbell
at Boston Museum School; Carolus Du-
ran in Paris. Member: Copley S.
1898; SAA 1903; ANA 1906; Boston GA.
Award: Silver medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904; silver medal, jiP.-P. Exp., San F.,
1915. Work : "Thife Violinist," Museum
of Fine Arts, Boston.
CHASE, Edward L., Woodstock, N. Y.
(I.)
CHASE, Ellen Wheeler, "The Meyer
Studios," 1110 Elmwood Ave., Buffalo,
N. Y.; h. 76 Ontario St., Lockport, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Faribault, Minn. Studied
in Buffalo, New York City, Boston, un-
der Tarbell, and Rene Menard, and
Lucien Simon, Paris. Member:
Buffalo SA; Buffalo GAA.
CHASE, Elsie Rowland (Mrs. Frederick
S. Chase), 165 Grove St., Waterbury,
Conn.; summer, Middlebury, Conn.
P., I., E., C, W.— Born Saratoga
Springs, N. Y., Feb. 10, 1863. Pupil
of Yale School of Fine Arts. Mem-
ber: New Haven PCC; Hartford ACC,
NAC; S. Indp. A.
CHASE, Frank Swift, Woodstock, N. T.
P., T.— Born St. Louis, Mo., Mar. 12,
1886. Member: Allied AA; Salma.
C; Lg. of NYA. Work: "Morning
Shadows," South Carolina Art Associa-
tion, Charleston, S. C.
CHASE, Jessie Kalmbach (Mrs. Wilfrid
E. Chase), 2009 Adams St., Madison,
Wis.
Ldcsp. P. — Born Bailey's Harbor, Wis.,
Nov. 22, 1879. Pupil AIC and Frederick
Fursman. Member: Wis. Painters
and Sculptors; Madison AG.
CHASE, Joseph Cummings, Hotel Chelsea,
222 West 23rd St., New York, N. Y. ;
h. Flushing, N. Y.
P., W.. T.— Born Kents Hill, Me., May
5, 1878. Pupil of Jean Paul Laurens.
Awards: First and second prizes,
Grunwald poster competition, Paris,
1904. Work: Portraits of General
Pershing, Marechal Foch, and 140 gen-
erals, etc., of the American Expedition-
ary Forces in France. Author of "Dec-
orative Design"; "Soldiers All".
CHASE, Marion Monks, 144 Brattle St.,
Cambridge, Mass.
P.— Born Boston, Mass. Pupil of G. L.
CHASE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
CHURBUCK
Noyes and School of the Museum of
Fine Arts, Boston. Member: N. A.
Women PS; Copley S.
CHASE, Sidney Marsh, 4 Mt. Vernon St.,
Haverhill, Mass.
P., I., W. — Born Haverhill, Mass., June
19, 1877. Pupil of Woodbury, Tarbell,
Pyle and Pape. Member: Salma. C.
CHASE, Susan Brown (Mrs. V. O. Chase),
1811 Riggs Place, Washington, D. C.
P.— Born St. Louis, Mo. Pupil H. B.
Snell, C. E. Messer, Bertha Perrie, R. E.
James. Member: Wash. WCC;
N.A. Women P.S.
CHASE, Wendell W., 9a Park Sq., Bos-
ton, Mass.; h. 10 Claflin Road, Brook-
line, Mass.; summer, Provincet'n, Mass.
P., E. — Born Foxcroft, Me., Mar. 4,
1875. Pupil of George L. Noyes and
Hawthorne. Member: Boston WCC.
CHATTERTON, C(larence) K., Vassar
College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
P.— Born Newburgh, N. Y., Sept. 19,
1880. Pupil of Chase, Henri, Miller,
Mora, and Du Mond in New York.
Member: Salma.C; Chicago WCC.
Award : Isidor prize, Salma.C. 1913.
Assistant professor in art at Vassar
College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
CHAVEZ, Gilberto, care of H. Marquardt
& Co., 35 South William St., New York,
N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
CHEEVER, W. L., Box 22, Glendale, Cal.
P.— M ember: Cal. AC.
CHEFFETZ, Asa, 484 White St., Spring-
field, Mass. (P.)
CHENEY, Mary Moulton, 1912 Third Ave.,
South; 200 East 25th St., Minneapolis,
Minn.
D., T. — Born Minneapolis, Minn. Pupil
of School of the Musem of Fine Arts;
Denman W. Ross, George Elmer
Browne. Member: Attic C. of
Minneapolis. Award: Hon. Men-
tion, Minnesota 'State Fair, 1917. Di-
rector, Minneapolis School of Art.
CHENEY, Russell, 43 Hartford Road,
South Manchester, Conn.
P. — Born South Manchester, Conn., Oct.
16, 1881. Pupil Kenyon Cox, Chase,
Woodbury, Walter Palmer, ASL of N.
Y. ; Laurens in Paris. Member:
Conn. AFA.
CHERRY, Mrs. Emma Richardson, 608
Fargo Ave., Houston, Tex.
P.,T.,L.— Born Aurora, 111., Feb. 28,
1859. Pupil of ASL of N.Y. ; Julian
Academy and of Merson in Paris.
Member: ASL of N. Y. ; Denver AA.
Award : Gold medal. Western Art
Assoc, Omaha. Work: In Eliza-
beth Ney Museum, Austin, Tex.; Soc.
of Civil Engineers Club, New York
City; San Antonio Art League. Direc-
tor, Texas Fine Arts Association.
CHERRY, Mrs. K(athryn) E., Marina
Bldg.; h. 4432 Washington Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.; summer, East Gloucester,
Mass.
P., T.— Born Quincy, 111., April 27, 1880.
Pupil of St. Louis Art School, New
York York Art School. Richard Miller,
and Hugh Breckenridge. Member:
St. Louis AG; Chicago AC. Award :
Hugo Kohler Landscape Prize, St. L.
AG, 1921. "Inner Harbor," and "Nisbit
Hills," in St. Louis High Schools.
CHESNO, Jacques R., 51 West Tenth St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
CHILDS, Lillian E., 85 Washington PI.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer. Magnolia,
Min.'p.— Born Little Silver, N. J. Pu-
pil of AIC; Chase in New York.
CHILTON, William B(rent), 1961 Bilt-
more St., N. W^., Washington, D. C.
P.— Born Washington, D. C, Dec. 15,
1856. Pupil of Washington ASL.
Member: S. Wash. A.; Wash. WCC;
Wash. AC.
CHISOLM, Mary B., 1337 Lexington Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember : S.Indp.A.
CHITTENDEN, Alice B(rown), 2230 Pa-
cific Ave., San Francisco, Cal.; summer,
Wiscasset, Me.
P., T.— Born Brockport, N. Y., Oct. 14,
1860. Pupil of California School of De-
sign under Virgil Williams. Instructor
in San Francisco Institute of Art for
fifteen years. Awards : Gold medal
for flower painting, San F.Exp, of Art
and industries, 1891; silver medals,
Lewis-Clark Exp., Portland, 1905;
Alaska-Yukon Exp., Seattle, 1909.
Work: Portrait, Right-Reverend
William Ford Nicholls, Bishop of Cali-
fornia, in Episcopal Divinity School, San
Francisco; six portraits for California
Society of Pioneers.
CHITTENDEN, Katherine H., Pelham
Manor, N. Y.
P. — M ember: New Haven PCC.
CHOUINARD, Nelbert Murphy, 2606 West
Eighth St., Los Angeles, Calif.
P., Des. — Pupil of Arthur Dow, Ernest
Batchelder, Ralph Johonnot, and of
Pratt Institute. Director of the Choui-
nard School of Art of Los Angeles.
CHRISTIANSEN, P., 332 Wilson Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
CHRISTY, Howard Chandler, Hotel des
Artistes, 1 West 67th St., New York,
N. Y.; summer, "The Barracks," Dun-
can Falls, O.
I.— Born Morgan Co., O., Jan. 10, 1873.
Pupil of NAD, ASL, and Chase in New
York. M e m b e r : SI 1915. Awards:
Bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1900; hon.
mention, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
Illustrations for all the well known pub-
lishers.
CHURBUCK, Leander M., 72 Glenwood
Ave., Brockton, Mass.
P. — Born Wareham, Mass., Feb. 19,
1861. Pupil of Copley S. and Bos-
ton Art Students' Assoc. Mem-
ber: Copley S. 1905. Awards:
Gold medal, Dallas Exp., 1903; first
prize for water colors, Denver Exp.,
1909. Work: "On the Cape Ann
Shore," Municipal Gallery, Brockton,
Mass.
379
CHURCH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
CLARK
CHURCH, Charles F., 9244 South Win-
chester Ave., Chicago, 111.
P. — M ember: Chicago SA.
CHURCH, F(rederic) Edwin, 33 West 67th
St.. New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 25, 1876.
Pupil of Columbia School of Architec-
ture; painting under Twachtman, F. V.
DuMond and others. Member: Salma.
C; MacDowell C; Alhed AA.; N. Y.
Arch. Lg. (asso.) ; Lyme AA. Award :
Clark prize, NAD, 1916.
CHURCH, F(rederick) S(tuart), Carnegie
Hall, New York, N. Y.
P., I., Etcher — Born Grand Rapids, Mich.,
Dec. 1, 1842. Pupil of Chicago Academy
of Design; L. E. Wilmarth, Walter
Shirlaw, NAD in New York. Mem-
ber: ANA 1883, NA 1885; SAA
1890; AWCS; SI (hon. 1910); Lotos C;
N.Y.Etching C. Work: "The Black
Orchard" and "Circe," National Gal-
lery, Washington, D. C; "Moonrise,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York; "Fla-
mingoes," Art Museum, Montclair, N.J.;
"Sirens," Hackley Art Gallery, Muske-
gon, Mich; and "Sirens," St. Louis City
Art Museum.
CHURCHILL, Alfred V(ance), Hillyer
Gallery; h. 38 Franklin St., Northamp-
ton, Mass.
P.,T.— Born Oberlin, O., Aug. 14, 1864.
Pupil of Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: Union Internationale des
Beaux- Arts; College AA. Dir. Art
Dept., Iowa College, 1891-93; Dir.
Art Dept., Teachers College, Columbia
Univ., New York, 1897-1905; lecturer,
Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, 1902-
03; University of Chicago, 1914, 1916
and 1917; Professor of the History and
Interpretation of Art, Smith College,
Northampton, Mass., since 1907; Direc-
tor of the Hillyer Art Gallery of Smith
College.
CHURCHILL, Francis G(orten), Canal-
Commercial Bldg., New Orleans, La.
P., I., E., Arch. — Born New Orleans,
La., Feb. 12, 1876. Pupil of Cincinnati
Academy; Tulane University, New Or-
leans. Member: New Orleans
AA; La. Chapter AIA; NAC. Work
in McDermott Memorial Church and
Loyola University, and Tulane Univer-
sity Stadium, New Orleans. Author of
"Pen Drawings of Old New Orleans."
CHURCHILL, Letha E., 3919 Wyandotte
St., Kansas City, Mo. (P.)
CHURCHILL, William W., Fenway Stu-
dios, Boston, Mass.
P. — Born in Boston. Pupil of Bonnet
in Paris. Member: Boston GA; St.
Botolph Club. Award : Hon. men-
tion, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; hon.
mention, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915.
CHURCHIMAN, E(lla) Mendenhall, Union
Lane, Brielle, N. J.
P. — Born Brooklyn, N. Y. Pupil of
PAFA; Tarbell and Benson in Boston.
M e m o e r : Fellowship PAFA; Plastic
C; S.Indp.A.
CIAIVIPAGLIA, Carlo, care of the Ameri-
can Academy in Rome, Rome, Italy; 555
Newark St., Hoboken, N. J.
P. — Born in Italy. Award: Ameri-
can Academy in Rome Scholarship,
1920.
CIAVARRA, Pietro, 207 North 64th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
S. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., June 29,
1891. Pupil of Charles Grafiy, Gui-
seppe Donate, Charles T. Scott. Mem-
ber: Fellowship PAFA.
CIMIOTTI, Gustave, 51 West 10th St.;
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, Nov. 10, 1875.
Pupil of ASL of N.Y. under Mowbray,
Cox, J. Alden Weir and Robert Blum;
Constant in Paris. Member: Salma.
C. 1908; Ahed AA.
CLAGHORN, J. C, 3115 Hiatt PI., N. W.,
Washington, D. C. (P.)
CLAPP, William H(enry), Oakland Art
lery. Civic Auditorium, Oakland, Calif.
P., E., W., T.— Born Montreal, Canada.
Pupil of Jean Paul Laurens. Mem-
ber: Royal Canadian Academy; Cana-
dian AC; Pen and Pencil C, Columbus,
O.; Montreal AC; Oakland AA; San F.
AA. Work in Canadian National Gal-
lery, Montreal Art Gallery, Oakland Art
Gallery, and landscape owned by On-
tario Provincial Government.
CLARK, Adele, 519 East Franklin St.,
Richmond, Va.
P., L., T.— Pupil of D. J. Connah, Ken-
neth Hayes Miller, Henri and Chase.
Member: Richmond AC. Work:
"Portrait of R. A. Dunlop," Richmond
Chamber of Commerce.
CLARK, Allan, 436 West 24th St., New
York, N. Y.
S. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
CLARK, Alson Skinner, Comfort Island,
Alexandria Bay, N. Y. 1149 Wotkyns
Drive, Pasadena, Calif.
P.,I.,C.,T.— Born Chicago, March 25,
1876. Pupil of Simon, Cottet, Whistler,
Mucha and Merson in Paris; Chase in
New York. Member: Paris AAA;
Chicago SA; Allied AA; Chicago
AC; S. Indp. A.; Salma. C; Chicago
Cliff Dwellers; Calif. PM; Calif. AA.
Awards : Bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; Cahn prize, AIC, 1906;
bronze medal, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915.
Work: Municipal Commission pur-
chase: "The Coffee House," Art Insti-
tute of Chicago; lithographs in Hack-
ley Gallery, Muskegon, Mich.; Vic-
toria Museum, London; Union League
C, University C, Chicago; Municipal
collection, Watertown, N. Y. ; State Li-
brary, Calif.
CLARK, C. H., 432 Baldwin St., Mead-
ville. Pa.
P., T. — Pupil of Julian and Delecluse
Academies in Paris.
CLARK, Eliot C(andee), Van Dyck Stu-
dios, 939 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Ldscp. P., T., W. — Born New York,
March 27, 1883; son of Walter Clark.
Member: ANA, 1917; NAC; SPNY;
Lg. of NYA; AWCS; Allied AA; Conn.
AFA; Salma. C. ; Int.Soc.A.L.; MacD.C;
A.Fund S.; NYWCC. Award: Third
380
CLARK
WHO'S WHO IN ART
CLEMENT
Hallgarten prize, NAD 1912. Work:
"March," Maryland Institute, Balti-
more; "Santa Maria del le Salute,"
Bloomington (Ind.) Art Assoc; "Roll-
ing Country," owned by ex-President
WoodroW Wilson; Teacher Art Stu-
dents' League, 1912-1914. Author
"Alexander Wyant," and writes for art
niiigazines.
CLARK, Elsie Southwick (Mrs. C. Water-
bury Clark), Rodin Studios, 200 West
57th St.; h. 210 West 90th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., T. — Born Providence, R. I., Dec. 31,
1881. Studied in Paris.
CLARK, Freeman, 107 West 64th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Holly Springs, Miss. Pupil of
Chase; Wiles; ASL of N. Y.; N. Y.
School of Art. Represented in River-
side Branch Public Library, New York,
N. Y.
CLARK, Harriette A., 27 West 67th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Min. P. — Born Depere, Wis., March 4,
1876, Pupil of Laurens, Rov^t. Baschet
and Mme. Debillemont-Chardon in
Paris. Work: Miniatures ex-Presi-
dent Porfirio Diaz and Madame Diaz at
Pan-American Bldg., Washington, D. C.
CLARK, Henry Hunt, 15 Kirkland Rd.,
Cambridge, Mass.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
CLARK, Herbert Francis, 3034 R St., N.
W., Washington, D. C.
P., I., E. — Born Holyoke, Mass., Sept.
18, 1876. Pupil, R. L School of Design,
Providence; Corcoran Art School.
Washington, D. C. Member: Wash.
SA; Wash. Landscp. C.
CLARK, Homer, 1506 Forty-sixth St.,
Southwest, Seattle, Wash. (P.)
CLARK, Maud J., 392 West Utica St.,
Buffalo, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Buffalo SA.
CLARK, Roy C, 734 Seventh St., N. E.,
Washington, D. C.
Landsp. P. — Born Sheffield, Mass., April
3, 1889. Pupil of Edgar Nye. Mem-
ber: S. Indp. A.
CLARK, Sarah L., 523 Wilson Bldg., 15th
and Chestnut Sts.; h. 1228 Locust St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I., T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil
of Chase and Carlson. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA. Specialty, pathological
and surgical drawings.
CLARK, Vera I. See Mrs. V. C. Place.
CLARKE, Corneille (Mrs. C. Irvine
Clarke), 625 North 31st St., Richmond,
Va.
D., T.— Pupil of Phila. School of De-
sign. Instructor in Applied Arts, John
Marshall High School, Richmond.
CLARKE, Fred B., 126 East 75th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Pupil of Augustus Saint Gaudens.
CLARKE, J. F. IVlowbray. See Mowbray-
Clarke.
CLARKE, Rene, 46 Baylev Ave., Yonkers,
N. Y.; 250 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma.C.
CLARKE, Una C. See Mrs. Arthur P.
Hunt.
CLARKSON, Ralph (Elmer), 410 South
Micnigan Ave.; h. 225 Dearborn St.,
Chicago, 111.; summer, Oregon, 111.
Portrait P., T. — Born Amesbury, Mass.,
Aug. 3, 1861. Pupil of School of Boston
Museum; Julian Academy under Le-
febvve J'nd Boulanger in Paris. M e m-
b e r : ANA 1910; Chicago SA; Municipal
Art Lg. of Chicago (pres.); NYWCC;
Port. P.; Chicago WCC. Member of
Municipal Art Commission of Chi-
cago (pres.); State Art Commission
(chairman). Instructor AIC. Awards:
Cahn prize, AIC 1909; hors concours
(jury of awards), P.-P.Exp., San F.,
1915. Work: "A Daughter of Ar-
menia," Art Institute of Chicago.
CLAUS, May Austin (Mrs. W. A. J.
Claus), 410 Boylston St., Boston, Mass.;
summer; Provincetown, Mass.
P.— Born Berlin, N. Y., Aug. 18, 1882.
Pupil of School of Boston Museum and
of W. A. J. Claus.
CLAUS, W(illiam) A. J., 410 Boylston St.,
Boston, Mass.; summer, Provincetown,
Mass.
Port. P. — Born Maintz, Germany, June
14, 1862. Pupil of Grundmann in Bos-
ton; Julian Academy in Paris. Work:
"Old Pioneer," Boston Art Club; "Gov.
Greenhalge," State H'ouse, Boston;
"Carl Faelten," Faelten Hall, Boston;
"Dr. Eben Tourjee," N.E. Conservatory
of Music, Boston; "Dr. Stowell," Pres.
Potsdam College, Potsdam, N. Y. ; altar
pieces at the Church of St. Francis de
Sales, Boston; portraits of prominent
natives painted in India, 1884 to 1887.
CLAWSON, Charles Howard, 40 So. 8th
St., Richmond, Ind.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati AC.
CLAWSON, W. R., Hotel Emery, Cincin-
nati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati AC.
CLAY, Mrs. Mary F. R., 1734 Pine St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
CLAYTER, Frederick, 3439 Fifth Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
CLELAND, T(homas) M(aitland), 70
Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.; h. Scar-
borough-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Dec, P., W.— Born New York, N. Y.,
Aug. 18, 1880. Member: Boston
SAC; Salma. C; Guild of Free Lance
A. Awards: Medal, Boston SAC,
1920; 2 gold medals and bronze medal.
Am. Inst, of Graphic A., 1920. Work:
Altar painting in Church of the Mes-
siah, Glens Falls, N. Y.
CLEMENT, Edward H(enry), 324 Wash-
ington St.; studio, 733 Little Bldg., Bos-
ton, Mass.; h. 5 River St., Concord,
P.,W.* — Born Chelsea, Mass., April 19,
1843. Pupil of Boston Art Students'
Assoc; New School of Design; and of
Louis Kronberg. Editor in Chief "Bos-
ton Transcript," 1881 to 1906.
381
CLEMENTS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
COATS
CLEMENTS, Gabrielle de Veaux, 1748 N.
St., Washington, D. C; summer, Lanes-
ville, Gloucester, Mass.
P., T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., 1858.
Pupil of Robert-Fleury and Bouguereau
in Paris. Me m b e r : Fellowship PA
FA; Wash.WCC; S.Wash.A. Award:
Second Toppan prize, PAFA; Mary
'Smith prize, PAFA 1895. Work:
Painting in St. Patrick's Church, Wash-
ington, D. C. Mural paintings: St.
Paul's Chapel, Baltimore; St. Matthews
Church, Sparrow Point, Md., Etchings
in National Museum, Washington, D. C.
CLEMENTS, George H., 33 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Member: NYWCC; Boston SW
CP; Boston WCC; Salma.C, 1904.
CLEMENTS, R(osalie) Thomson, 107
East 59th St., New York, N. Y.; sum-
mer, "Hiddenfield," Ogunquit, Me.
P. — Born Washington, D. C, Jan. 5,
1878. Pupil of E. F. Andrews in Wash-
ington; F. Luis Mora and Thomas Fo-
garty in New York. Member: NAC;
NSC.
CLEMENTS, Ruth. See Mrs. J. A.
Farrell.
CLEPHANE, Lewis Painter, 1115 I St.;
1225 K St., Washington, D. C.
P.— Born Washington, D. C, Feb. 8,
1869. Pupil of Birge Harrison; Alex-
ander Robinson in Holland. Mem-
ber: 'S. Wash. A.; Wash. WCC; Wash.
AC; S.Indp.A.; Wash. SFA.
CLERE, Vera, 605 West 115th St., New
York.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
CLIME, Winfield Scott, North Chevy
Chase, Md.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Nov. 7, 1881.
Pupil of Drexel Inst., Philadelphia;
Corcoran Art School, Washington.
Member: S. Wash. A.; Wash. WCC;
Wash.AC.
CLINEDINST, B(enjamin) West, 137
East 66th St., New York, N. Y.; h.
Pawling, N. Y.
I., P., T.— Born Woodstock, Va., Oct. 14,
1859. Pupil of Cabanel and Bonnat in
Paris. Member: ANA 1894, NA
1898; SAA 1891; AWCS; Century Assoc.
Awards: Evans prize, AWCS 1900;
silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; silver medal, Charleston Exp,, 1902.
CLIVETTE, Merton, 1 Sheridan Square,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
CLOPATH, Henriette, Chalet Art Stu-
dio; h. 1211 Boston Ave., South, Tulsa,
Okla.
P., W., L.., T. — Born Switzerland.
Award: Gold medal, University of
Okla., 1916. Writer and lecturer on
modern painting.
CLOSSON, William B(axter) (Palmer),
77 Newtonville Ave., Newton, Mass.;
summer. Magnolia, Mass.
P.. formerly Wood Engr. — Born Thet-
ford, Vt., Oct. 13, 1848, Pupil of Lowell
Inst, in Boston; traveled in Europe.
Member: Boston AC; Copley S; S.
Wash. A.; Wash, AC; Conn. AFA; Al-
lied AA; AI Graphic A; Union Inter-
nationale des Beaux-Arts et des Let-
tres; NAC (life). Awards: For
wood engraving: Gold, silver and bronze
medals, Mass. Charitable Mechanics
Assoc. ; third class medal, Paris Salon,
1882; silver medal, Paris Exp., 1889;
medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893;
diploma, Graphic Arts Exp., Vienna;
silver medal, Pan-Am, Exp., Buffalo,
1901; St. Louis Exp., 1904. Proofs
of engravings are in National Gallery,
Washington; Boston Museum of Fine
Arts; New York Public Library;
Worcester Art Museum; Springfield
(Mass.) Public Library; Carnegie Insti-
tute, Pittsburgh; Herron Art Institute,
Indianapolis; Albright Art Gallery, Buf-
falo. Painting in Evans collection. Na-
tional Gallery and Gallaudet College,
Washington, D. C; National Arts Club,
New York.
CLOUGH, Jane B., 1020 West 56th St.,
Kansas City, Mo. (P.)
CLUSMANN, William, 3831 West Adams
St., Chicago, 111.
P, — Born North Laporte, Ind,, 1859, Pu-
pil of Benczur at Royal Academy in
Munich, Member: Chicago SA; Chi-
cago WCC. Awards : Hon. mention,
Stuttgart, Germany, 1884; Grower prize
($100), AIC, 1913; Tuthill prize ($100),
AIC, 1919,
CLUTE, Beulah Mitchell (Mrs. Walter
Marshall Clute), 2614 Channing Way,
P.,I,,L.— Born* Rushville, 111. Pupil of
ASL of N.Y.; AI Chicago. Member:
Artists' Guild, Chicago; AIC Alumni
Assoc; Cal. Book Plate Soc. Designer
for The Three Redwoods Studio, Berk-
ley. Specialty, bookplates.
CLYMER, Edwin Swift, Lanesville P. O.,
Gloucester, Mass.
P.— Born Cincinnati, O., 1871. Pupil of
PAFA. Member: Fellowship PAFA;
Phila.Sketch C; Phila.WCC. Work
in Reading, Pa., Museum of Art.
COALE, Griffith B(aily), 241 West Biddle
St., Baltimore, Md.; 19 rue Daguerre,
P.— Born Baltimore, Md., May 21, 1890.
Studied with M. Heymann, Munich;
Richard Miller and Laparra in Paris.
and in Italy and Spain, Work: "Por-
trait of Cardinal Mercier," Maryland
Historical Society,
COAN, Helen E., 204 North Burlington
Ave., Los Angeles, Cal.
P., I., C, W., T.— Born Byron, N. Y.
Pupil of aSL of N. Y., Frederick Freer
and William M, Chase, Member:
California Art C, Award: Medals for
oil and water color, Alaska-Yukon-Pa-
cific Exposition, Seattle, 1909; medal
and diploma, San Diego Exp., 1915.
COAST, Oscar R., Santa Barbara, Cal.;
Salmagundi Club, 45 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Born Salem, O., 1851. Studied in
Paris and Rome. Member: Salma.
C,1897. Specialty, landscapes.
COATS, Randolph Lasalle, care of the
Art Museum, Cincinnati, O. (P.)
382
COBB
WHO'S WHO IN ART
COLE
COBB, Ethelyn Pratt, 213 Bryant St.,
Buffalo. N. Y. (P.)
COCHRAN, Allen D., Woodstock, N. Y.
P.— Born Cincinnati, O., Oct. 23, 1888.
Pupil of Kenyon Cox and Birge Harri-
son. Member: Salma.C.
COCKCROFT, Edith Varian (Mrs. Chas.
L. Wevand, 17 East 39th St.; h. 33 E]ast
61st St., New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Ogunquit, Me.
P., C, D.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., 1881.
Member: N. A. "Women PS; Con-
temporary; Salon d'Automne, Paris.
Awards : Hon. mention Inter. Art
Union, Paris, 1909 and 1910; Saltus prize,
N. A. Women PS, 1916. Specializes in
batik costumes and decorations.
COCKRELL, Dura (Brokaw) (Mrs. E. R.
Cockrell), Texas Christian Univ., Ft.
Worth, Texas.
P C. W., Tv.. T. — Born Tiscomb. Iowa,
Feb. 16, 1877. Pupil of William M.
Chase and Kenneth Hayes Miller.
Member: Ft. Worth AA; Ft. Worth
Painters Club. Award : Bronze
medal. Woman's Forum, Dallas, Tex.,
1919.
CODMAN, Edwin E., 166 Ontario St.,
Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
COE, Ethel Louise, care of Art Institute,
Chicago, 111.; h. 1223 Elmwood Ave.,
Evanston, 111.
P., I., T.— Born Chicago, 111. Pupil of
AIC; Hawthorne and Sorolla. Mem-
ber: Chicago SA; Chicago AC;
Cordon C. Award: Young Fort-
nightly prize, AIC 1911. Work: In
Sioux City Art Museum. Instructor
AIC; also University of Chicago.
COFFIN, Mrs. Esther L., 234 Central
Park West, New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: NYWCC.
COFFIN, Sarah Taber (Mrs. William H.
Coffin), Chestnut Hill, Mass.
P. — Born Vassalboro, Me., June 1, 1844.
Pupil of Dr. Rimmer, R. Swain Gifford.
W. Sartain, Frank Duveneck and
Charles Woodbury; ASL of N. Y. under
C. Y. Turner, and Ross Turner in Bos-
ton. Member: Copley S., 1899.
Work: In Moses Brown School,
Providence, R. I.
COFFIN, W. Haskell, 80 West 40th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Studied at Corcoran School of Art,
Washington, and in Paris.
COFFIN, William A(nderson), 58 West
57th St., New York, N. Y.
Ldscp.P.,W. — Born Allegheny, Pa., Jan.
31, 1855. Pupil of Bonnat in Paris.
Member: ANA 1898, NA 1912; SAA
1886; N. Y. Arch Lg., 1888; Lotos C;
'Soc. des Artistes Francais (hon., 1915);
Soc. National des Beaux-Arts (hon.,
1915); Fraternity des Artistes (hon.
pres. 1916); AFAS; Century Asso. Di-
rector of Fine Arts, Pan-Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901. Aw a r d s : Second
Hallgarten prize, NAD, 1886; bronze
medal, Paris Exp., 1889; Webb prize,
SAA, 1891; gold medal, AC Phila.,
1898: silver medal. Charleston Exp.,
1902; silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
Chevalier, Legion of Honor, France,
1917; chairman, American Artists' Com-
mittee of One Hundred, French Soldier-
Artists War Relief Fund, 1914-22; spe-
cial testimonial gold medal, Societe des
Artistes Frangais, 1916; plaquette de la
Fraternite des Artistes, 1916; president
exhibition committee of American paint-
ings and sculpture by invitation of
French Government at Luxembourg
Museum. Paris. October and November,
1919. Work: "The Rain" and "A De-
cember Night," Metropolitan Museum,
New York; "At Break of Day," Buffalo
Fine Arts Academy; "September," Na-
tional Gallery, Washington. D. C. ; "A
Maple in Spring." Municipal Gallery,
Venice, Italy; "Oaks — October," Munic-
ipal Art Gallery, Montclair, N. J.; "A
Thunderstorm" and "October Morning."
Brooklyn Institute Museum; "Central
Park and the Plaza." Brooks Memorial
Art Gallery, Memphis, Tenn.; "Septem-
ber Morning," Yale School of Fine
Arts.
COHEN, Evelyn, 465 West End Ave.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
COHEN, George W., 16 East 87th St., New
York. N. Y.
P.— M ember: Salma.C, 1899.
COHEN, Isabel, 83 Irving PL, New York,
N. Y. (P.)
COHEN, Nessa, 2094 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
S.— Born New York. N. Y. Pupil of
James E. Eraser. Member: N. A.
Women PS: Lg. of NYA; S.Indp.A.
Work: "Sunrise," Havana. Cuba;
Groups of Indians of Southwestern
United States, Am. Museum of Natural
Hist., New York.
COHEN- KIRK, Frank, 251 South Fifth
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
COLBURN, Eleanor Ruth (Mrs. Joseph
Elliott Colburn), 3028 Michigan Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Dayton, O., 1866. Pupil of
AIC. Member: Chicago SA;
(assoc); Chicago WCC. Award: Mu-
nicipal AL Prize purchase, AIC 1908.
Work: "An Offshore Wind," Art In-
stitute of Chicago.
COLBY, Eugene C, 29 Rutgers St., Roch-
ester. N. Y.
P., T.— M ember: Rochester AC.
COLBY, Frank A., 70 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
COLBY, Josephine Wood (Mrs. Franklin
G. Colby). The Tamaracks, Andover,
N. J.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., Jan. 26,
1862. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; NAD;
Will Low, Carroll Beckwith, William
Sartain, John W. Alexander. Mem-
ber: NYWCC: NYSoc.C; NAC: SPNY.
Work in Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts, Phila.; Walker Gallery,
Liverpool, England; Manchester Art
Gallery, England.
COLE, Alphaeus P(hilemon), 33 West
67th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Jersey City Heights, N. J.,
July 12, 1876. Pupil of Constant and
383
COLE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
COLMAN
Laurens in Paris. Member : Conn.
APA; NYWCC; Salma.C. Award:
Hon. mention, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; hon. mention. Conn. AFA. 1919.
COLE, Annie Elizabeth (Mrs. Myron Asa
Cole), The Christiana, 1829 California
St., Washington, D. C,
P.— Born Providence, R. I., Dec. 9, 1880.
Pupil of Henry W. Moser, Edgar Nye,
and Bertha E. Perrie. Member*
Wash. WCC.
COLE, IVIrs. Bianche Dugan, 1109 Mag-
nolia Ave., Los Angeles, Cal.
P.— M ember: Cal. AC.
COLE, Emily Beckwith, 220 Beacon St.,
Hartford, Conn.
S., T. — Born New London, Conn., Jan.
2, 1896. Pupil of Louis Gudebrod.
Member: Hartford ACC.
COLE, Gladys, 6207 Brooklyn Ave., Seat-
tle, Wash. (P.)
COLE, IVIrs. Jessie (Duncan) Savage, 81
Wickes Ave., Nepperham, Yonkers, N.
Y.
P. — Born Pass Christian, Miss., May 25,
1858. Pupil of Wyatt Eaton; John La
Farge.
COLE, Margaret W.. 33 West 67th St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
COLE, Thomas Casilear, 154 West 55th
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, Christ
Church Rectory, Hudson, N. Y.
Port. P. — Born Staatsburgh-on-Hudson,
N. Y., July 23, 1888. Pupil of Tarbell,
Benson and Hale in Boston; Julian
Academy under Baschet and Laurens in
Paris.
COLE, Timothy, Ferris Lane, Pough-
keepsie, N. Y.
Wood Engr. — Born London, England,
April 6, 1852; brought to United States
In 1857; settled in Chicago. Pupil of
Bond and Chandler in Chicago. M e m-
ber: ANA 1906, NA 1908; Nat. Inst.
AL; Society of Painters, Sculptors and
Gravers, London (hon.); Guild of
Craftsmen, London (hon.); AI Graphic
A. Awards: Gold medal and di-
ploma, Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893:
gold medal, Paris Exp., 1900; gold
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
grand prize, St. Louis Exp., 1904; gold
medal, NAC, 1916. Work: "Italian
Masterpieces"; Dutch, Flemish, Eng-
lish, Spanish and French masters;
"Masterpieces in American Galleries."
Represented in Carnegie Institute, Pitts-
burgh, and City Art Museum, St. Louis;
Chicago Art Inst., Metropolitan Museum,
Boston Art Museum, Washington Na-
tional Gallery, etc.
COLEMAN, C(harles) C(aryl), Villa Nar-
cissus, Island of Capri, Italy; and "The
Players," 16 Gramercy Park; and 58
West 57th St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., 1840. Studied
in Paris and Rome. Member: ANA
1865; Players C; NAC; London AC.
Awards : Bronze medal, Columbian
Exp., Chicago, 1893; silver medal, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901. Work:
"Early Moonlight— Capri," "The Anti-
quary," and "The Capri Girl," Buffalo
Fine Arts Academy; "Vesuvius from
Pompeii," Detroit Institute; "Oil Press,
Anacapri-Capri," Fine Arts Academy,
Buffalo.
COLEMAN, Glenn O.. 154 East Park St.,
Long Beach, L. L, N. Y.
P., I., T.— Born Springfield, O., July
18, 1887. Pupil of Henri and Chase.
Member: S.Indp.A.
COLEMAN, Ralph P(allen), 524 Walnut
St.; h. 311 East Dorset St., Philadel-
phia, Pa.
I.— Born Philadelphia, June 27, 1892.
Pupil of Philadelphia School of Ind.
Art. Illustrated "The Man with Three
Names" and "Drums of Jeopardy" by
McGrath; "Nobody's Man" by Oppen-
heim, etc., and illustrates for many
magazines.
COLES, Ann Cadwailader, 164 Waverly
PI., New York, N. Y. ; summer, Saluda,
N. C.
P., L, C— Born Columbia, S. C, Aug. 4,
1882. Pupil of C. A. Whipple, A. V.
Tack and F. Luis Mora. Member:
Alliance; S.Indp.A. Work: "Gen. M.
C. Butler," Confederate Museum, Rich-
mond, Va.
COLLES, Gertrude, 939 Eighth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Port. P. — Born Morristown, N. J., Aug.
20, 1869. Pupil of Laurens in Paris;
George de Forest Brush and B. R.
Fitz in New York. Work: Former
Senator Jacob Miller, State House,
Trenton, N. J.
COLLETTE, Maurice, 381 Fourth Ave.,
New York. N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
COLLINS, Mrs. Corinne Cunningham,
2012 O St., TVashington, D. C. (P.)
COLLINS, Frank H., 500 Park Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P., T. — Director of drawing, elementary
public schools of New York.
COLLINS, Marjorie S., 701 Nottingham
Road, Wawaset, Wilmington, Del. (Min.
P.)
COLLVER, Ethel Blanchard (Mrs. Leon
Collver), Fenway Studios; 125 Common-
wealth Ave., Boston, Mass.
Port. P., C, T.— Born Boston. Mass.
Pupil of Tarbell, Benson, and Hale In
Boston; Academic Colarossi, Nnudin,
Guerin, in Paris. Member: Copley
S., 1901.
COLMAN, R. Clarkson, Studio-by-the-
Sea, Laguna Beach. Calif.
P.— Born Elgin, 111., Jan. 27. 1884.
'Studied in Chicago, and with Laurens
and Julian in Paris. Member: Ten
Painters Club of Calif.; Calif. AC; San
Diego Art Guild; Laguna Beach Art
Asso. Award: Texas Cotton Palace
Exposition, 1910; gold medal. Riverside
Fair, 1917; popular prize, Laguna Beach
Asso., 1920; cash prize, Sacramento
State Fair, 1920. Represented in Pub-
lic Library, Ajo, Arizona; Public
Library. Waco, Texas; Santa Monica
Woman's Club.
384
COLSON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
CONN AWAY
COLSON, Frank V., 198 Dartmouth St.,
Boston, Mass.; summer, Mansfield,
Mass.
P., I., E., T. — Born Boston, Oct. 24,
1894. Pupil of Benson, Hale, Bosley,
William James and Paxton. Mem-
ber: Boston SE.
COLT, Morgan, New Hope, Pa.
P., C. — Born 'Summit, N. J., Sept. 11,
1876. Pupil, Scliool of Arch., Col. Uni-
versity, and W. L. Lathrop. Mem-
ber: Salma.C; Rochester AC.
COLTMAN, Ora, 10714 Deering Ave.,
Cleveland, O.
P., S.— Born Shelby, O., 1860. Pupil of
ASL of N.Y. ; Julian Academy in Paris;
Magidey Schule, Munich. Member:
Cleveland So. of Artists (vice-pres.).
COLTON, Mary Russell Ferrell, Llanfair
& Wister Roads, Ardmore, Pa.
P.— Born Louisville, Ky.. Mar. 25, 1889.
Pupil of Eliot Uaingerfield. Member:
Phila. WCC; Plastic C; Wash. WCC;
Phila. Alliance.
COLWELL, Elizabeth, 1373 East 57th St.,
Chicago, 111.
I.,Etcher,C. — ^^Born in Michigan, May 24,
1881. Pupil of Vanderpoel and Olson-
Nordfeldt in Chicago. Member: Chi-
cago SE; N. Y. SE. ; Chicago Cordon C.
Award: Hon. mention, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915. Represented in Print
Dept., Chicago Art Institute.
COMAN, Charlotte B(uell) (Mrs. J. B.
Coman), 20 West 75th St., New York,
N. Y.
lidscp.P.— Born Waterville, N. Y., 1833.
Pupil of James R. Brevoort in New
York; Harry Thompson and Emil Ver-
nier in Paris. Member: ANA 1910;
NYWCC; N. A. Women PS; SPNY; Art
Workers' C. Awards: Bronze medal,
California Mid-Winter Exp., San Fran-
cisco, 1894; prize, N.Y. Woman's AC;
Shaw memorial prize, SAA 1905; second
prize. S.Wash.A. 1906; Burgess prize,
N.Y. Woman's AC, 1907; McMillin prize,
N.Y. Woman's AC, 1911. Work:
"Early Summer," National Gallery,
Washington, D. C; "Clearing Off,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York.
COMBS, Frances Hungerford, The Well-
ington, Washington, D. C.
P. — M ember: Wash. WCC.
COM INS, Alice R. (Mrs. F. B. Comins),
care Old Colony Trust Co., 222 Boylston
St., Boston, Mass. (P.)
COMINS, Eben F., 203 Fenway Studios,
30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.; summer.
East Gloucester, Mass.
Port.P., W., L., T.— Born Boston, Mass.
Pupil of Beaux-Arts in Paris and Den-
man Ross in Boston. Member:
Calif. AC; Boston AC; Copley S.
Award : Hon. mention, Conn. AFA,
1919; first prize, Hartford Exhibition,
1921.
COMSTOCK, Enos B(enjamin), 178 High-
wood Ave., Leonia, N. J.
P.. I., W. — Born Milwaukee, Dec. 24,
1879. Pupil John H. Vanderpoel, Fred-
erick W. Freer. Author and Illustrator
of "Tuck-Me-In Stories," "When
Mother Lets Us Tell Stories," "Fairy
Frolics." etc. Illustrated "She and Al-
lan," "When the World Shook," "The
Ancient Allan," etc.
COMSTOCK, Frances Bassett, 178 High-
wood Ave., Leonia, N. J.
P., S., I.— Born Elyria, O., Oct. 16,
1881. Pupil of Gari Melchers, Frederick
W. Freer and John Vanderpoel. Mem-
ber: NYWCC
CONANT, Arthur P., 520 East Fourth St.,
Cincinnati, O. (P.)
CONANT, Marjorie, 129 East 10th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. Duxbury, Mass.
P.— Born Boston, Mass., Sept. 14. 1885.
Pupil of Hale, Benson and Tarbell.
Member: Concord AA; Duxbury AA;
Lg. of NYA; N.A.WomenP.S.
CONARD, Grace Dodge, Art Institute,
Chicago; h. 297 Keystone Ave., River
Forest, 111.
P.. C. T.— Born Dixon, HI., Apl. 10,
1885. Pupil of AIC. Member: Chi-
cago ASL; Chicago AG. Instructor AIC.
CONE, Mrs. Grace C, 194 East McMillan
St., Mt. Auburn, O.
P. — M ember: Cin. Woman's AC.
CONGDON, Adairene Vose (Mrs. Thomas
R. Congdon), Villa Vose Studios, Camp-
bell, N. Y.
P. — Born New York. Pupil of ASL of
N.Y.; I/'hermitte and Collin in Paris.
Frank Brangwyn i,i London. Mem-
ber: Paris A. Woman's AA.; Chicago
SE. Work in Petit Palais, Paris; Li-
brary of Congress, Washington, D. C;
New York Public Library.
CONKLING, Mrs. Mabel, 26 West 8th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Burleigh
Hill, Boothbay, Me.
P.. S.— Born Boothbay, Me., Nov. 17,
1871. Pupil of A. Saint Gaudens, F.
MacMonnies, A. Injalbert; Collin and
Whistler. Member : Amer. Numismat-
ic S.; Art Workers' Club; N. A. Women
PS. Work: In Chicago AI and Plas-
tic C. Phila. Specialties — Portraits and
sculpture.
CONKLING, Paul, 5 McDougal Alley; 26
West 8th St., New York, N. Y.; summer,
Boothbay, Me.
P., S.— Born New York, Oct. 24, 1871.
Pupil of Falguiere, MacMonnies.
CON LEY, Sarah Ward, 2104 TVest End
Ave., Nashville, Tenn.
P., S., I., A., C, W., T..— Born Nash-
ville, Tenn., Dec. 21, 1861. Pupil of
Bouguereau, Julian and F. A. Bridg-
man in Paris; Ferrari in Rome. Mem-
ber: Nashville Art Association.
Work : AVoman's Building, Centen-
nial Exp.. Nashville, Tenn.; mural dec-
orations in Battle Creek Sanitarium.
CON L ON, George, 1230 St. Paul St.; 15
West Eager St., Baltimore, Md.
S. — Born in Maryland. Pupil of Injal-
bert and Bartlett in Paris. Mem-
ber: Char.C Award : Rlnehart
Scholarship, 1911-1915.
CONNAWAY, Jay, 20 Rue Durantln.
Paris, France; h. 1649 North Alabama
St.. Indianapolis, Ind.
P.— Born Liberty, Ind., Nov. 27, 1893.
385
CONNELL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
COOK-SMITH
Pupil of Chase in New York, and Wm.
R. Reese, and studied in Paris. Mem-
ber: ASL of N. Y.
CONNELL, Edwin D., 56 Rue de Sevres,
Clamart, France.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., Sept. 3,
1859. Pupil of Bouguereau, Robert-
Fleury and Julien Dupre in Paris.
Member: Societe Internationale des
Beaux- Arts; Paris AAA. Awards:
Hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1899; medal,
second class, Orleans Exp., 1905; first
class medal, Toulouse Exp., 1908; silver
medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915. Work:
"Cattle," Toledo Museum of Art.
CONNELLY, Eugene L., Davis Theatre,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
CONNELLY, Marc, 1591/2 East 83rd St.,
New York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: SI.
CONNER, Jerome, 322 North Carolina
Ave., S. E., Washington, D. C.
S.— Born in Ireland, Oct. 12, 1875. Self-
taught. Member: S.Wash.A.
CONNER, J(ohn) R(amsey), Bryn Athyn,
Pa.
P.— Born Radnor, Pa. Pupil of PAFA.
Award: Bronze medal, P.-P.Exp.,
San F., 1915. Work: "The Fisher-
man," Pennsylvania Academy of the
Fine Arts, Philadelphia; "Under the
North Light," Des Moines Asso. of
Fine Arts; "A Cottage Interior," Cal-
ifornia C, Los Angeles.
CONNICK, Charles J., 9 Harcourt St.,
Boston, Mass.; h. 157 Webster St., West
Newton, Mass.
C, D. — Born in Springboro, Pa., Sept.
27, 1875. Studied in Pittsburgh, Bos-
ton, England and France. Member:
Mural P.; Boston SAC; Boston Arch.
C; Copley S.; Boston AC. Award :
Gold medal, P.-P. Exp., San F.,'l915;
Logan medal, 1917; Soc. of Arts and
Crafts medal, Boston, 1920. Stained
glass window in Fourth Presbyterian
Church, Chicago; Chapel and Synod
House, St. John the . Divine Cathedral,
New York; Boston University Chapel;
Asylum Hill Congregational Church,
Hartford, Conn.; St. Mark's Church,
Minneapolis; Princeton University; St.
James Cathedral, Seattle, Wash; All
Saints' Church, Peterborough. N. H. ;
Christ Church, Glendale, Ohio; First
Presbyterian Church, Greensburgh, Pa.
CONOVER, Kate, 60 Clairmont Ave.,
Detroit, Mich. (P., T.)
CONREY, Lee F., 644 Riverside Drive,
New York, N. Y.
I.— Born St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 11, 1883.
Pupil St. Louis School of Fine Arts.
Member: SI. Illustrations for
"Cosmopolitan," "McClure's," "Mun-
sey's" Magazines.
CONROW, Wilford S(eymour), 30 East
57th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born South Orange, N. J., June 14,
1880. Pupil of Jean-Paul Laurens,
Morisset, P. Tudor-Hart, Hambidge.
Member: Lg. of NYA; Salma.C;
Wash. AC. Work: "Portrait of
Cephas Brainerd," Y. M. C. A., New
York City; "Portrait of Henry Clay
Cameron," Whig Hall, Princeton Uni-
versity, Princeton, N. J.; Portraits of
Major E. Alexander Powell, Miss Clara
J. Gordon, Dr. Wm. H. Dull, mural
painting of George Washington, Na-
tional Gallery of Art, Washington, D.
C; Portrait of Prof. Wm. N. Goodyear,
Cosmos Club, Washington.
CON ROY, George I., 793 Gravesend Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
CONVERSE, Lilly S., 10 Rue Desbordes,
Valmore, Paris, France.
P.— Born Petrograd, Oct. 14, 1888.
Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller.
CONWAY, John S., P. O. Box 231, Tena-
fly, N. J.
P., S.— Born Dayton, O., Feb. 21, 1852.
Pupil of Conrad Diehl, Jules Lefebvre,
Boulanger, A. Millet. Me m b e r : N.
Y. Arch. Lg., 1892; NSS. Work:
"Soldiers' Monument," mural decoration,
Chamber of Commerce, Milwaukee.
CONWAY, William John, 1394 Lincoln
Ave., St. Paul, Minn.
P., S.— Born St. Paul, Oct. 26, 1872.
Pupil of Colarossi Academy under Col-
lin, Courtois and Prinet in Paris.
Member: Whistler Club; Art Work-
ers' Guild; Minnesota State Art Soc;
Artists* Soc, St. Paul Inst. (pres.).
COOK, Daniel, 104 Saunders St., Cincin-
nati, Ohio; summer, Dayton, Ohio.
P.— Born Cincinnati, May 15, 1872.
Pupil Nicholas Gysis, Cincinnati Art
Academy. Member: Munich Art
Club; Cincinnati AC. Instructor at
University of Cincinnati. Works :
"A Rainy Day," University of Cincin-
nati; mural decorations Cincinnati
Music Hall.
COOK, l(sabel) Vernon (Mrs. Jerome
Cook), 39 West 67th St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y. Pupil of ASL
of N. Y. and Chase; Blanche and Si-
mon in Paris. Member: N. A. Wom-
en PS.
COOK, John A., 16 Savward St.; h. 8
Highland St.; summer, 67 E. Point
Road, Gloucester, Mass.
P. — Born Gloucester, Mass., March 14,
1870. Pupil of DeCamp, E. L. Major
and Douglas Volk. Member: 'S.
Indp. A.
COOK, May Elizabeth, 1550 Clifton Ave.;
h. 1546 Richmond Ave., Columbus, O.
S.— Born Chillicothe, O., Dec, 1881.
Pupil of Paul Bartlett; Ecole des
Beaux-Arts and Colarossi Academy in
Paris. Member : Columbus Lg. of
Artists; Am. Ceramic Soc. (assoc. );
Plastic C; Union Internationale des
Beaux-Arts et des Lettres, Paris. Rep-
resented in Carnegie Library, Colum-
bus, O.; Ohio State University, Colum-
bus, O.
COOK-SMITH, Jean Beman, Shelton Ho-
tel, Jamaica, Long Island, N. Y.
P.. S., I.— Born New York, Mar. 26,
1865. Pupil of AIC; Chase; studied in
Holland. France and Italv. Member:
N. A. Women PS. Work: "The Maya
Frieze", San Diego Museum, Calif.
386
COOKE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
COPELAND
COOKE, Abigail W., 15 Pitman St., Prov-
idence, R. I. , „ ^ .
P.— Pupil of R. I. School of Design,
George W. Whittaker and Sydney R.
Burleigh. Member: Providence AC;
Providence WCC. Work in Provi-
dence AC.
COOKE, CHARLES H., 1841 Kenilworth
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Toledo, O. Pupil of AIC.
Member: Palette and Chisel C. ;
AIC Alumni Asso.; S. Indp. A.
COOKE, Edna, care of Arts and Crafts
Guild, 235 South 11th St.; h. 4049 Locust
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
I.— Born Philadelphia, June 19, 1891.
Pupil of Hugh Breckenridge and
Henry McCarter. Member: Phila.
Alliance; Fellowship PAFA. Illustrated
stories by Mrs. J. H. Ewing, and stories
for many magazines.
COOKE, Jessie Day, 1841 Kenilworth
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P., I., T. — Born Atchison. Kan., May 16,
1872. Pupil of Vanderpoel, Freer,
Pauline Dohn. Member : Alumni
Asso. AIC.
COOLEY, Blanche Marshall. See Ratliff,
Mrs. Walter B.
COOLIDGE, Bertha, 133 East 40th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Min. P.— Born Lynn, Mass., Aug., 1880.
Pupil of Boston Museum School under
Tarbell and Benson; Bourgois in Paris;
Grueber in Munich. Member: G.
Boston A.; Soc. de la Miniature, Paris;
Pa.Soc. of Min. P.
COOLIDGE, Georgette E. (Mrs. Walter
G. Coolidge), Lyndon, Vt.
P. — Born Brooklyn, N. Y., March 17,
1850. Pupil of Mrs. A. Van Clef Dodg-
shun and Robert Rascovitch.
COOLIDGE, John, 826 California Bldg.;
h. 3459 S. Arlington St., Los Angeles,
Calif.
P., I., W.— Born Pennsylvania, Dec. 6,
1882. Pupil Chase, Cecilia Beaux, T. P.
Anshutz. Member : Calif. AC.
COOLIDGE, (Mary) Rosamond, 307 Fen-
way Studios, Boston, Mass.; h. 206 Bel-
mont St., Watertown, Mass.
P. — Born Watertown, Mass., May 18,
1884. Pupil of W. D. Hamilton and
E. C. Tarbell in Boston. Member:
N. A. Women PS.
COOLIDGE, Mountfort, 126 Pennsylvania
St., Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.; sum-
mer, Ogunquit, Me.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., June 12, 1888.
Pupil of Robert Henri.
COON, Howard A., Westerly, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
COONAVALE, Robert, 637 Vanderbilt
Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S. Indp. A.
COONSMAN, Nancy, 6171 Delmar Blvd.,
St. Louis, Mo.
S.. A., T.— Born St. Louis, Aug. 28, 1888.
Pupil of Zolnay and Grafly. Member:
St. Louis AG. Award: Bronze medal,
Missouri State Fair; Bridge prize, St.
Louis AG, 1919; Ives prize, St. Louis
AG, 1920. Work: Kincaid Fountain,
St. Louis Public Library; "Maiden-
head," City Art Museum, St. Louis;
Toledo Museum of Art.
COOPER, Colin Campbell, 222 West 59th
St., New York, N. Y. ; Santa Barbara,
Calif.
P.— Born Philadelphia. Pupil of PAFA;
Julian and Delecluse Academies in
Paris. Member: ANA 1908, NA 1912;
NYWCC; AC Phila.; Phila.WCC;
AWCS; Fellowship PAFA; Lotos C;
SPNY. S p e c i a 1 1 y — Street scenes.
Awards : Bronze medal, Atlanta
Exp., 1895; Wm. T. Evans prize, AWCS,
1903; Sesnan prize, PAFA, 1904; gold
medal, ACP, 1905; silver medal, Buenos
Aires Exp., 1910; Beal prize, NYWCC,
1911; gold medal for oil painting and
silver medal for water colors, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915; Hudnut prize,
NYWCC, 1918; Lippincott prize, PAFA,
1919. Work: "Broad Street, New
York," Cincinnati Museum; "The Flat-
iron, New York," Dallas (Tex.) Art As-
sociation; "Grand Basin, World's Fair,"
and "The Plaza, New York," St. Louis
Museum of Fine Arts; "Basilika, Que-
bec," Boston Art Club; "Procession at
Bruges," Art Club of Philadelphia;
"The Rialto," Lotos Club, New York;
"Broadway in War Time," Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadel-
phia; "Fifth Avenue, New York,"
owned by the French Government.
COOPER, F. G., 425 Tremont Ave., West-
field, N. J.
I. — Born McMimville, Ore., Dec. 29,
1883. Member: SI. 1910; Salma.C;
AI Graphic A. ; Guild of Free Lance
Artists. Illustrations for "Autobiogra-
phy of Methusaleh," "Collier's," "Life,"
Keith's, Proctor's (theater posters),
posters for Food Administration.
COOPER, Mrs. J. H., 1215 Eighth Ave.,
West. Seattle, Wa.sh. (P.)
COOTES, F. Graham, 1947 Broadway;
h. 50 West 67th St., New York, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Staunton, Va., Apr. 6, 1879.
Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller, Robert
Henri and F. V. Du Mond in New
York. Member: SI 1910. Illustra-
tions for "The Shepherd of the Hills,"
etc. Designs covers for magazines.
COPELAND, Charles, Studio Bldg., 110
Tremont St., Boston, Mass.; h. 53 Gray
Cliff Road, Newton Centre, Mass.; sum-
mer, Thomaston, Me.
P., I. — Born Thomaston, Me., Sept. 10,
1858. Member: Boston AC; Boston
SWCP.
COPELAND, Joseph Frank, 320 South
Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa.; h., 58 For-
rest Ave.. Drexel Hill, Pa.
P..C.,T.— Born St. Louis, Mo., Feb. 21,
1872. Member: Phila.Sketch C;
Phila.WCC. Instructor Pennsylvania
Museum School of Industrial Art.
COPELAND, M. Baynon, Comptoir Na-
tional, 2 Place de I'Opera, Paris,
France.
Port.P. — Born El Paso, Tex. Pupil of
Kenyon Cox in New York; Ferdinand
387
COPPEDGE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
COTTON
Humbert and R. Miller in Paris; Shan-
non in London.
COPPEDGE, Mrs. Fern, 4011 Baltimore
Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.; summer, Glou-
cester, Mass.
P.— Born Decatur, 111., July 28, 1888.
Pupil of William M. Chase, John Carl-
son, and ASL of N. Y.; AIC; PAFA.
Member: N. A. Women PS; Plastic
C. ; Phila. Alliance; Fellowship PAPA;
ASL of N. Y. Awards: H. O. Dean
prize. Artists of Kansas City and vicin-
ity, 1917; E. Shield prize, 1918. Work:
"The Thaw," Detroit Institute of Art;
"Winter on the Schuylkill," Pennsyl-
vania State Capitol.
COPPINI, Pompeo, 7444 Blackstone Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
S.— Born Florence, Italy, May 19, 1870.
Pupil of Augusto Rivalta in Florence;
came to America in 1896; citizen of
United States since 1901. Represented
in the United States by 29 public monu-
ments, 16 portrait statues and about 75
portrait busts, and in Mexico City by
the Washington Statue, gift from
Americans to Mexico.
CORBETT, Bertha. See Mrs. Melcher.
CORBETT, Gail Sherman (Mrs. Harvey
Wiley Corbett), 443 West 21st Street,
New York, N. Y.
S. — Born Syracuse, N. Y. Pupil of
Augustus Saint Gaudens. Member :
NSS 1907; Am.Numismatic 'Soc.
Award : Hon. mention for sculpture,
and bronze medal for medals P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915. Work: Hamilton White
Memorial and Kirkpatrick Fountain,
Syracuse, N. Y. ; bronze doors, Audito-
rium and Municipal Building, Spring-
field, Mass.; Springfield medal, Boston
Museum.
CORNELL, Grace, 33 Alsop St., Jamaica,
L. I., N. Y.
P. — ^M ember: N.A.Women PS.
CORNER, Thomas C(romwell), 260 West
Biddle St., Baltimore, Md. ; h. 20 Merry-
mount Rd., Roland Park, Md.
P.— Born Baltimore, Feb. 2, 1865. Pupil
of Weir and Cox in New York; Lefebvre
and Constant in Paris. Member:
Charcoal C.
CORNOYER, Paul, Gloucester, Mass.
P., T.— Born St. Louis, Mo., 1864. Pupil
of Lefebvre, Constant and Louis Blanc
In Paris. Member: ANA 1909;
Salma.C. 1902; Allied AA; NAC (life).
Awards : First prize, Paris AAA
1892; gold medal, St. Louis Assoc, of
Painters and Sculptors 1895; Evans
prize, Salma.C. 1905; Inness prize,
Salma.C. 1906; Shaw purchase, Salma.C.
1908; hon. mention, Phila. AC, 1917.
Work: "After the Rain," Brooklyn
Institute Museum; "Madison Square,"
fi^Tt Association, Dallas, Tex.; St. Louis
A.rt Museum; "Rainy Day, Columbus
Circle," Newark Art Assoc.
CORNWELL, Dean, 1931 Broadway, New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Provincetown,
Mass.
L— Born Louisville, Ky., Mar. 5, 1892.
Pupil of Harvey Dunn. Member: SI.
Awards : 1st Illustration prize, Wil-
mington SFA., 1919 and 1921. Illus-
trated: "Torrent," "Kindred of the
Dust," "Rivers End," "Valley of Silent
Men," "Find the Woman," etc..
CORNWELL, Martha J(ackson), Virginia
Ave., West Chester, Pa.
P., S.— Born West Chester, Jan. 29,
1869. Studied at Phila. School of De-
sign, and ASL of N. Y. ; and with Saint
Gaudens, H. Siddons Mowbray and Geo.
deForest Brush. Member: ASL of
N. Y.; Fellowship PAFA. Specialty,
portrait bronzes.
CORNWELL, William Caryl, 26 East 8th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Lyons, N. Y., Aug. 19, 1851.
Pupil of Lefebvre, Boulanger, and Ju-
lian Acad., Paris. Member: Salma.C;
NAC. Inventor of Cornwell luminos.
CORSON, Katherine Langdon (Mrs.
Walter Heilner Corson), Corson's, Pa.;
P. O. Plymouth Meeting, Pa.
Ldscp. P., I. — Born Rochdale, England.
Pupil of Emil Carlsen, H. Bolton Jones
and F. C. Jones in New York. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; Fellowship
PAFA; Plastic C. Award: Medal.
Atlanta Exp., 1895. Work: "A^cross
the Cove," Hamilton Club.
CORTRIGHT, Hazel Packer, St. Martin's,
Philadelnhia, Pa.; Saunderstown, R. I.
P.— M ember: Plastic C .
CORWIN, Charles Abel, Salmagundi Club,
45 Fifth Ave; 2486 Grand Concourse,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Newburgh, N. Y., Jan. 6,
1857. Pupil of Frank Duveneck.
Member: Chicago SA; Salma.C.
1905. Awards : Cahn prize, AIC
1900; hon. mention, Chicago SA; partici-
pant in Fine Arts Bldg. prize, AIC 1914.
Work in Piedmont Gallery, Berkeley,
Cal.
CORY, F. v., Canyon Ferry, Mont. (P., L)
CORY, Kate T., Prescott, Arizona.
P. — Born in Illinois. Pupil of Cooper
Union and ASL of N. Y. Member:
N. A. Women PS; S. Indp. A. Repre-
sented by collection of pictures in the
Smithsonian Institute, Washington,
D. C.
COSTELLO, Val, 518 West 54th St., Los
Angeles, Cal.
P.— M ember: Calif. AC.
COSTIGAN, John E., Orangeburg, N. Y.
P.— M ember: AWCS; NYWCC;
Salma. C. Award: Third Hallgarten
prize, NAD, 1920; Isador prize, Salma. C,
1920.
COTHARIN, Kate Leah, 657 Bovlston St.,
Boston; summer, Rockport, Mass.
P.— Born Detroit, Mich., Oct. 27, 1866.
Pupil of J. M. Dennis in Detroit. Spe-
cialty pastel landscapes in miniature.
COTTON, John W(esley), 1137 San Rafael
Ave.. Glfindale, Calif.
P., I., E., C. — Born Ontario, Canada,
Oct. 29, 1868. Pupil of E. Marsden Wil-
son in London; AI Chicago. Mem-
ber: Ontario SA; Chicago SE; ANA,
1916; Calif. PM; Calif. AC; Calif. WCC.
A wa r d s : DeWolf prize, Chicago SE,
1915; hon. mention for etchings, P.-P,
388
COTTON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
COWDERY
Exp., San F., 1915. Etchings: In
New York Public Library, Congres-
sional Library, Washington; Art Insti-
tute of Chicago; National Gallery,
Ottawa; Art Museum, Toronto.
COTTON, William, 132 East 19th St., New
York, N. Y.; summer, Newport, R. I.
P.— Born Newport, July 22, 1880. Pupil
of Cowles Art School in Boston; Julian
Academy under Laurens in Paris.
Member: Mural P.; Port. P.; ANA,
1916. Awards : Hon. mention, AC.
Philadelphia., 1905; first Hailgarten
prize, NAD, 1907; meda], Dallas, Tex.,
1909; purchase prize, Boston AC, 1916.
COUARD, Alexander P(ernot), R. D. 42,
Norwalk, Conn.
P.— Born New York, Sept. 6, 1891. Pupil
of Homer Boss, George Bridgman, F. V.
Du Mond. Member: S. Indp. A. ;
Brooklyn WCC.
COUCH, Frank B., St. Lawrence Co.,
Pierrepont, N. Y. (P.)
COULTER, Mary J. (Mrs. F. J. Coulter),
628 Montgomery St., San Francisco,
Cal.
P., E., C. — Born Newport, Ky. Pupil
of Cincinnati Art Academy under Duve-
neck, Nowottny and Meakin, AI Chi-
cago; Lionel Walden and C. W. Haw-
thorne; studied in Florence, Italy.
Member: San F. AA; Provincetown
AA; Chicago SE; Calif. SE. A w a r d s :
Silver medal for pottery and overglaze
at the Lewis and Clark Exp., Portland,
Ore., 1905; Atlan Ceramic prize, AI
Chicago, 1909; bronze medal for porce-
lain; bronze medal for jewelry and
hon. mention for textiles, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915.
COUPER, Mrs. B. King, Pine St., Spar-
tansburg, S. C; summer, Marietta, Ga.
P., S.— Born Augusta, Ga., Feb. 23, 1867.
Pupil of Chase, Daingerfleld, Du Mond
and Cox. Member: Mississippi AA;
Atlanta AA. Prize: Atlanta Exp., 1895.
COUPER, William, 105 Upper Mountain
Ave., Montclair, N. J.
S.— Born Norfolk, Va., Sept. 20, 1853.
Pupil of Thomas Ball and Cooper Inst,
in New York; studied in Munich and
Florence, where he lived twenty-two
years. Member: NSS; N. Y. Arch.
Lg. A w p. r d : Bronze medal. Pan-
Am.Exp., Buffalo, 1901. Work: "A
Crown for the Victor," Art Museum,
Montclair, N, J.
COUSE, E(anger) Irving, 58 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, Taos,
New Mexico.
P.— Born Saginaw, Mich., Sept. 6, 1866.
Pupil of NAD in New York; Bouguereau,
Robert-Fleury and Ecole des Beaux-
Arts in Paris. Member: ANA 1902,
NA 1911; -NYWCC; AWCS; Salma.C;
Lotos C. (hfe); NAC (life); Taos SA;
Allied AA; SPNY. Awards: Shaw
prize for black and Vvhite at Salma.C,
1899; second Hailgarten prize, NAD
1900; Proctor prize, Salma.C. 1900; hon.
mention, Paris Exp., 1900; hon. men-
tion, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo. 1901; first
Hailgarten prize, NAD 1902; Osborne
competition prize ($500), 1903; two
bronze medals, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
Lotos C. purchase prize, 1910; Isidor
gold medal, NAD 1911; Carnegie prize
($500), NAD 1912; silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915; Altman prize, NAD,
1916; Isidor prize ($100), Salma.C. 1917;
Ranger Fund purchase price, NAD,
1921; Lippincott prize, PAFA, 1921.
Specialty, Indians. Work : "Elkfoot,"
Nat'l Gallery, Washington; "The Forest
Camp," Brooklyn Institute Museum;
"Medicine Fires." Dallas (Tex.) Museum;
"Under the Trees," Smith College,
Northampton Mass.; "The Tom Tom
Maker," Lotos Club, New York; "Sheep
at Evening," St. Paul (Minn.) Mu-
seum; decoration, "Adoration of the
Shepherds," Grace Church, Harrisburg,
Pa.; "Shappanagons Chippewa Chief,"
and "San Juan Pottery," Detroit Insti-
tute; "Song of the Flute," National
Arts Club, New York; "Indian Court-
ship," Art Museum, Montclair, N. J.;
"Indian Love Song," Brooklyn Institute
Museum; "Making Pottery," Ft. Worth
(Tex.) Museum; "The Peace Pipe,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York, N.
Y. ; "A Vision of the Past," "Making
Medicine" and "The Water Shrine,"
Youngstown CO.) Museum; "Wild Tur-
key Hunters," Santa Barbara (Calif.)
Museum; "Shrine of the Rain Gods,"
Toledo Museum; "Apache Water Bot-
tle," Nashville, Tenn., Museum.
COUTTS, Gordon, 406 Pacific Ave., Pied-
mont, Calif.
P., T.— Born Aberdeen, Scotland, Oct. 3,
1880. Pupil of Lefebvre, Robert-Fleury,
and Dechenaud in Paris. Work: "Too
Late," Art Gallery, Adelaide, Australia;
"Portrait of Sir I. Reid, Premier of New
South Wales," National Art Gallery,
Sydney, Australia; "Portrait of Sir
James Patterson, Premier of Victoria,"
Melbourne, Australia, Art Gallery.
COVE, Mrs. John Alfred, 99 Taber Ave.,
Providence, R. L
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
COVERT, John R., 15 West 29th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
COVEY, Arthur (Sinclair), 163 West 23rd
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer. Rock-
port, Mass.
E., P.— Born Bloomington, 111., June 13,
1877. Pupil of Vanderpoel, Karl Marr,
Frank Brangwyn. Member: N.Y.SE;
Chicago SE; Salma.C; Mural P.; Arch.
Lg. of N.Y.; P-G. Awards : First,
second and third Shaw prizes, Salma.C,
1910, 1911, 1912; bronze medal for etch-
ing, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915. Works:
"The Spirit of the Prairies" and three
mural panels. "Wichita Public Library;
"The Great Wheel," etching in Library
of Congress; mural decorations. Orange
Hospital.
COWAN. Sarah E., 35 West 10th St., New
York, N. Y.
Min. P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS;
Am. S. Min. P.
COWDERY, Corene, 232 East Pearson St.,
Chicago, 111.
P.— M ember: S. Indp. A.
389
CO WELL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
CRAMER
COWELL, Joseph G(oss), 221 Columbus
Ave., Boston, Mass.; h. Urentham,
Mass.
P.— Born Peoria, 111., Dec. 4, 1886. Pupil
of Bricigman, DuMond, Tarbell and
Benson; Laurens in Paris. Member:
Boston AC, Boston Arch. C. Murals jn
St. Mary's Cathedral, Universalist
Church. Y. M. C. A., Peoria, 111.; the-
ater, Holyoke, Mass.; theaters in Bos-
ton. Stained glass windows, St. Mary's
Cathedral, Peoria, 111.
COWEN, A. Marian, Chatham Hotel,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
COWEN, Pare E., Chilmark, Martha's
Vineyard, Mass. (I.)
COWLES, Cornelia. See Mrs. Vetter.
COWLES, Edith V., 152 West 57th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I., C, T. — Born Farmington, Conn.,
May 17, 1874. Pupil of John T. Nie-
meyer; Bruneau and Mme. Laforge in
Paris. Illustrated: "House of Seven
Gables," by Hawthorne; "Old Virginia,"
by Thomas Nelson Page; "Friendship,"
by Emerson. Has five stained glass
windows in St. Michael's Church,
Brooklyn. Director of Craft Work at
the "Lighthouse for the Blind."
COWLES, Genevieve A(lmeda), 152 West
57th St.. New York, N. Y.
P.,I.,C.,T. — Born Farmington, Conn.,
Feb. 23, 1871. Pupil of Niemeyer at
Yale Art School; Robert B. Brandegee
at Farmington. Specialty, mural deco-
rations and stained glass windows.
Work: "Charge to St. Peter,"
chapel of Conn. State Prison (wax
mural).
COWLES, IVIildred, 152 West 57th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
COWLES, Russell, 44 Gramercy Park,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Algona, la., Oct. 7. 1887.
Member: NAC; Mural P. A w a r d :
American Academy in Rome Fellow-
ship, 1915-1920.
COX, Allyn, 130 East 67th St., New York,
N. 'Y.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., June 5,
1896. Pupil of his father, Kenyon Cox;
NAD; George Bridgman. Member:
N. Y. Arch. Lg. ; Mural P. Awarded
Fellowship American Academy in Rome,
1916. Work: Overmantel in Public
Library, Windsor, Vt.
COX, Eva, North Union St., Kokomo, Ind.
(P.)
COX, Louise (Howland King) (Mrs.
Kenyon Cox), 130 East 67th St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Windsor, Vt.
P. — Born San Francisco, Cal., June 23,
1865. Pupil of NAD; ASL under Ken-
yon Cox in New York. Member:
ANA 1902; SAA 1893; Mural P. 1919.
Awards : Third Hallgarten prize,
NAD, 1896; bronze medal, Paris Exp.,
1900; silver medal. Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; Shaw Memorial prize, SAA,
1903; silver medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904. Specialty, children's portraits.
Work : "May Flowers," National
Gallery, Washington.
COX, Nancy. See Mrs. McCormack.
COXE, R(eginald) Cleveland, 1320 Fifth
Ave., Seattle, Wash.
P., E., W.. T.— Born Baltimore, Md.,
July 21, 1855. Pupil of Bonnat and
Gerome in Paris.
COY, Anna, 118 No. Main St.; h. 127 No.
3d St., Rockford, 111.
P., T.— Born Rockford. 111. Pupil of
Chase, F. V. Du Mond, Henri and Alex-
ander Robinson, Gallery director, Rock-
ford Art Guild.
COY, C. Lynn, 245 W^est North Ave., Chi-
cago. 111.
S.— Born Chicago, 111., Oct. 31, 1889.
Pupil of AIC. Member: Palette and
Chisel C; Alumni AIC; Chicago SA.
COYNE, Will(iam), 123 East 88th Street,
New York, N. Y.
P.. I., E.— Born New York, Feb. 14,
1896. Pupil of John Sloan. Member:
S.Indp.A.; Soc. of N. Y. Artists; Beaux-
Arts Institute. Illustrations for "New
York Evening Post," "New York Call,"
"The Bookman."
CRAIG, Anna Belle, Dilworth Hall, Penn-
sylvania College for Women; h. 6202
Walnut St.. Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., Mar. 13, 1878.
Pupil of Pittsburgh Sch. of Design;
ASL of N. Y., Chase, Shirlaw, Henry
G. Keller, Martin G. Borgard, and
Howard Pyle. Member: Pittsburgh
AA. Illustrates in "Harper's," "St.
Nicholas," "Metropolitan," and books
for children.
CRALG, Charles, Colorado Springs, Colo.
P. — Born on farm, Morgan Co., O., Nov.
1, 1846. Pupil PAFA. Specialty, In-
dians and cowboys.
CRAIG, Netta, 3125 O St., Washington,
D. C; summer. Washington Grove, Md.
P. — Pupil of Corcoran School of Art
and PAFA. Member: Wash. S. A.
CRAIG, Thomas B(igalow), 337 Montrose
Ave., Rutherford, N. J.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 14,
1849. Self-taught. Member: ANA
1897; Salma.C.1902; A.Fund S.; Chicago
WCC. Specialty, landscape with cat-
tle. Work: "Evening," Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia.
CRAM, Allan G(ilbert), care of Marble-
head P. O., Mass.
P.,I.,E.,T.— Born Washington, D. C,
Feb. 1, 1886. Pupil of Woodbury, Chase
and Shurtleff. Award : First Bur-
gess prize, Newport WCC 1914.
CRAMER, Florence Ballin (Mrs. Konrad
Cramer), 163 East 72d St.; summer.
Woodstock, N. Y.
P., C, T.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y. Pupi!
of Du Mond, Brush and Harrison.
Member: N. A. Worn en PS.
CRAMER, Konrad, 163 East 72nd St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Woodstock,
N. Y.
P., E., C, L., T.— Pupil of Bolton
Brown and studied in Europe. Direc-
tor of Woodstock School of Applied Art.
390
CRAMOND
WHO'S WHO IN ART
CRISE
CRAMOND, Mrs. Virginia Gruner, 2038
Weyer Ave., Norwood, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
CRAMPTON, R(ollin) McN(eii), 52 West
36th St., New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Madison, Conn.
P., I. — Born New Haven, Conn., Mar.
9, 1886. Pupil of Thomas Benton, Yale
Art School, ASL of N. Y. Work:
"Portrait of Frau Busnell" in Union
League Club.
CRANE, Ann (Mrs. Bruce Crane), Studio
Arcade, Bronxville, N. Y.
P. — Born New York City. Pupil of
Twachtman in New York; Merson in
Paris. Member: N. A. Women PS.
CRANE, A. Wilbur, North Pelham, N. Y.
(P.)
CRANE, Bruce, Studio Arcade, Bronx-
ville, N. Y.
Ldscp.P.— Born New York, N. Y., Oct.
17, 1857. Pupir of A. H. Wyant.
Member: ANA 1897, NA 1901; SAA
1881; AWCS; A.Fund S.; Salma.C.1888;
Lotos C; Union Internationale des
Beaux-Arts et des Lettres. Awards:
Webb prize, SAA 1897; bronze medal,
Paris Kxi)., 1900; Inness medal, NAD
1901; silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; silver medal, Charleston Exp.,
1902; gold medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
third prize, C.I.Pittsburgh 1909; Saltus
medal, NAD 1912; silver medal, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915; Shaw prize ($500),
Saima.C, 1917; Ranger Purchase Fund,
NAD, 1919. Wo r k : "Autumn Up-
lands," Metropolitan Museum, New
York; "November Hills," Carnegie In-
stitute, Pittsburgh; "Autumn," Na-
tional Gallery, Washington; "March,"
Brooklyn Institute Museum; "Autumn
Hills," Montclair (N. J.) Gallery;
"Springtime," Peabody Institute, Balti-
more; "November Hillsides," Corcoran
Gallery, Washington, D. C; "Last of
Winter," Fort Worth (Tex.) Museum;
"Autumn Meadowland," Hackley Art
Gallery, Muskegon, Mich.; "December
Uplands," Syracuse, N. Y., Museum of
Art,
CRANFORD, Kenneth, Tompkins Cove,
N. Y. (P.)
CRANK, James H., Interlaken, N, J, (I.)
CRANMER, Frances. See Mrs. F. C.
Greenman.
CRAVEN, Laura. See Mrs. L. C. Lewis.
CRAWFORD, Arthur R(oss), 2028 Lin-
com St., Evanston, 111.
P., C, Dec— Born Marilla, Manistee Co.,
Mich., July 29, 1885. Pupil of Chicago
Academy of Fine Arts under W. J.
Reynolds and W. P. Henderson. M e m-
ber: ASL of Chicago (life).
CRAWFORD, Brenetta Hermann (Mrs.
Earl Stetson Crawford), "The En-
closure," Nutley, N. J.
P., I., T.— Born Toledo, O., Oct. 27, 1875.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Colarossi
and Carmen Academies in Paris,
Member: Port. P. Professor of life
drawing and composition at School of
Applied Design for Women, New York,
N. Y.
CRAWFORD, Dorsey Gibbs, 3709 Ross
Ave., Dallas, Texas. (P.)
CRAWFORD, Earl Stetson, "The Enclo-
closure," Nutley, N. J.; care of the
Salmagundi Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P., I., W. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., June
6, 1877. Pupil of PAFA; in Paris at
Academic Delecluse, Academie Julian
and Ecole des Beaux-Arts. Member:
Paris AAA; SI 1911; T.Sq.C; Port.P.
(sec.-treas.); Societe des Arts et Let-
tres; Les Amis des Artistes; Saima.C.
Mural decorations in United States
Court, San Francisco. Author, "Gent-
ler Side of Whistler."
CRAWFORD, Esther Mabel, 716 North
Avenue 66, Los Angeles, Calif.
P., C, T.— Born Atlanta, Ga., Apl. 23,
1872. Pupil of Whistler, Dow, Beck.
Member: San F. AA; Calif. AC;
Calif. P.M. Award : Bronze medal,
San Diego Exp., 1915.
CRAWFORD, Isabel, 89 South 10th St.,
Minneapolis, Minn.
P., I. — A ward: Commercial art prize
($25), Minneapolis Inst., 1915.
CRAWLEY, Ida J., 31 Park Ave., Ashe-
viile, N. C.
P., W., L. — Born Pond Creek, London
Co., E. Tenn., Nov. 15, 1867. Pupil of
Corcoran Art School; Johannes Oertell
in Germany; Sir Frederic Massi in Paris.
Member: Amer. A. Union, Paris.
Awards : Gold medal, Appalachian
Exp., Knoxville; silver medal, East
Tenn. Art Assoc. Works: 15 paint-
ings, First National Bank, Champaign,
111.; two paintings in Gayosa Hotel,
Memphis, Tenn. ; painting in University
School, Memphis; two paintings. Uni-
versity, Fayetteville, Ark.
CRENIER, Henri, Shore Acres, Mamaro-
neck, N. Y.
S.— Born Paris, France, Dec, 1873.
Member: NSS, 1912; N. Y. Arch. Lg.
1913. Award: Hon. mention, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915. Work: "Boy
and Turtle," Metropolitan Museum;
pediments and caryatides of City Hall,
San Francisco, Cal.
CRESSWELL, Charles T., 10 So. 18th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Phila.AC; Fellowship
PAFA.
CRESSY, Bert, Compton, Calif.
P.— M ember: Calif. AC; Los Angeles
Modern AS.
CRESSY, Meta, Compton, Calif.
P. — M ember : Calif. AC; Los Angeles
Modern AS.
CRILEY, Theodore, Carmel-by-the-Sea,
Cal.
P. — Born Lawrence, Kan., March 26,
1880. Pupil of Menard, Lucien Simon,
in Paris.
CRISE, Stewart Stroud, 123 East 29th
St.; h. 138 East 31st St., New York,
N. Y.
P., I. — Born Winona, Minn., June 20,
1S86. Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller.
Member: ASL of N. Y. ; NAC ; S.
Indp.A.; League of N. Y. Artists;
NYWCC.
391
CRISP
WHO'S WHO IN ART
CRUIKSHANK
CRISP, Arthur, 1947 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Mural P. — Born Hamilton, Canada, Apr.
26, 1881. Pupil of ASL of N.Y. Mem-
ber: N.Y.Arch.Lg.l911; Mural P.;
Players' C; NYWCC; AWCS; Allied
AA. Award : Collaborative prize,
N.Y.Arch.Lg., 1914; bronze medal,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915; first Hallgar-
ten prize, NAD, 1916; gold medal, N. Y.
Arch. Lg., 1920. Work: "Ham-
let," "As You Like It," "Taming of
the Shrew," and four Allegorical paint-
ings in Belasco Theatre, New York;
two allegorical lunettes, The Play-
house, New York; two mural paintings
in Robert Treat Hotel, Newark, N. J.;
picture in National Gallery, Ottawa,
Canada; mural decoration for auditori-
um of Greenwich House, New York, N.
Y. ; wall hanging for Hotel Du Pont,
Wilmington, Del.; picture for Canadian
War Records; mural paintings. Houses
of Parliament, Ottawa, Canada. In-
structor, ASL of N. Y.
CRISSEY, Thomas Henry, Powers St.,
New Canaan, Conn.
P., C— Born Stamford, Conn., May 26,
1875. Pupil of George Bridgman,
Walter Florian, Edward Dufner. Mem-
ber: S.Indp.A.; N.Y. Soc. of Artists.
CRITCHER, Catherine C(arter), 3 St.
Matthews' Alley; h. 1727 K St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
P.,T. — Born in Westmoreland Co., Va.
Pupil of Richard Miller and Charles
Hoffbauer in Paris. Member: S.
Wash. A.; Wash. WCC; N. A. Women
PS. Award : Bronze medal. Wash.
SA 1914.
CROCKER, Marion E., 136 Cypress St.,
Brookline, Mass.
P. — Born Boston, Mass. Pupil of Tar-
bell in Boston; Kenyon Cox in New
York; Constant and Laurens in Paris;
George Hitchcock in Holland. Mem-
ber: Copley S., 1888.
CROCKER, W(illiam) H., 50 Hamilton
Terrace, New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Lyme, Conn.
P.— Born New York City, Aug. 25,
1856. Pupil of Robert Vonnoh and
Charles Rosen. Member': Salma.
C, 1900. Editor, "The American Archi-
tect"; Associate Editor, "Building
Age."
CROCOV, P. G., 17 Gist St., Pittsburgh,
Pa.
P. — M em b e r : Pitts. AA.
CROM, Lillian Hobbes, Schwenksville,
Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
CROiMENWETT, Clare, 641 O'Farrell St.,
San Francisco, Caiif.
E.— M ember: Calif. PM.
CROOKS, Forrest C, Carversville, Pa.
I.— Born Goshen, Ind., Oct. 1, 1893.
Pupil of George Sotter and Arthur
Sparks. Illustrates for "Scribner's,"
"Pictorial Review," "Collier's Weekly,"
"Woman's Home Companion," "Cen-
tury," etc.
CROOKS, John Marion, Astoria, Ore. (P.)
CROSBY Katharine V(an) R(ensellaer),
103 East 75th St., New York, N. Y.;
summer, Tuxedo Park, N. Y.
S., T. — Born Colorado Springs, Colo.,
Sept. 1, 1897. Pupil of Jess M. Lawson.
Member: N. A. Women PS; S.
Indp. A.
CROSBY, Raymond Moreau, 252 Boylston
St., Boston, Mass.; h. Yarmouthport,
I.— Born Grand Rapids, Mich., 1877.
Studied in Italy and France. Mem-
ber: SI 1904; Players' C; Century
Assoc; St. Botolph C. On staff of
Life.
CROSS Amy, Hotel Grenoble, 7th Ave.
and 56th St., New York, N. Y.
P., T. — Born Milwaukee. Wis., April 5,
1856. Pupil of Cooper Inst., R. Swain
Gifford. WilUam Sartain and ASL of N.
Y.; Hague Academy in Holland under
Jacob Maris and Albert Neuhiiys; Julian
Academy in Paris. Member:
NYWCC. Awards : Silver medal at
Hague Academy, 1893; silver medal,
Atlanta Exp., 1895; bronze medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902.
CROSS, Anson K(ent), Ashland, Mass.
P.,T.,W. — Born Lawrence, Mass., Dec. 6,
1862. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art School.
Member: Boston AC; Copley S.
Awards: Bronze medal, Mass. Char-
itable Mechanics Assoc, Boston, 1892.
Member of Faculty, Boston Museum
School since 1891. Received medal,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915, for method of
teaching drawing and painting. Author
of several books on art education.
CROSS, Sally, 120 Riverway, Boston,
Mass.
P.,T. — Born Lawrence, Mass. Pupil of
De Camp and Ross Turner in Boston.
Member: Pa.S.Min.P.; NYWCC; Aiti.
S. Min. P.; G. Boston A. Award:
Silver medal for miniatures, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915.
CROSSMAN, Abner, 658 Woodland Park,
Chicago, 111.
P. — Born St. Johnsbury, Vt., June 14,
1847. Pupil of William Hart in New
York; F. W. Moody in London. M e m-
b e r : Chicago WCC.
CROSSMAN, William H(enry), 64 West
55th St., New York, N. Y.
P., E.— Born New York, N. Y., Aug. 7,
1896. Pupil of Henri, Lie, Bridgman
and Hawthorne. Member: Salma.
C. ; ASL of N. Y. Work: mural
painting, "Brig" in Harvey School, New
York City.
CROUCH, Emily H., 102 George St., Prov-
idence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence WCC.
CROWELL, Margaret, Avondale, Pa.
I., P., S.— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil
of PAFA. Member: * Fellowship
PAFA.
CROWLEY, Mrs. Gray Price. See Mrs.
Gray Price Merrels.
CRUIKSHANK, Helen". See Mrs. H. C.
Davis.
392
C RUMMER
WHO'S WHO IN AUT
CURRIER
CRUMMER, Mary, 302 Suffolk St., Guil-
ford, Baltimore, Md.
P., E., C. — Born Baltimore, Md. Mem-
ber: Baltimore WCC (treas.).
CRUMP, Leslie, 801 Ocean Ave., Brook-
lyn, New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: NYWCC.
CRUNELLE, Leonard, 6016 Ellis Ave.;
h. 2034 East 73d St., Chicago, 111.
S.— Born Lens, France, July 8, 1872.
Pupil of Lorado Taft and AIC. Mem-
ber: Chicago SA; Cliff Dwellers Club;
State Art Commission. Awards :
Medal and diploma, Atlanta Exp., 1895;
special prize, AIC autumn, 1904; bronze
medal and diploma, St. Louis Exp.,
1904; Chicago SA medal; AIC 1911.
Work: "Squirrel Boy," Art Insti-
tute of Chicago.
CUCUEL, Edward, 5 Klarstrasse, Munich,
Bavaria; 16 Kreuzplatz, Zurich, Switz-
erland; 19 Rue Vavin, Paris, France.
P., I. — Born San Francisco, Cal., Aug. 6,
1875. Pupil of Constant, Laurens and
Gerome in Paris; Leo Putz in Munich.
Member: Soc.Nat.des Beaux-Arts
(Assoc), Paris; Isaria and Ausstelier-
Verbund Munchner Kunstler, Munich.
Award : Silver medal, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915.
CULBERTSON, Linn, 1131-22d St., Des
Moines, la.
P., T. — Born Princeton, la., Sept. 29,
1890. Pupil of Charles Atherton Gum-
ming. Member: Iowa AG. Award :
First prize ($100), Des Moines Women's
Club, 1914.
CULBERTSON, Queenie, 4120 Forest
Ave., Norwood, Cincinnati, Ohio.
P., I., W.— Born San Angelo, Texas.
Pupil of Frank Duveneck. Member:
Cincinnati Woman's AC; Three AC.
CULIN. Alice Mumford R. See Roberts.
CULTER, Richard, 211 Secor Lane, Pel-
ham Manor, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI.
CUMMING, Charles Atherton, City Li-
brary; h. 680 Eighteenth St., Des
Moines, la.
P., L., T.— Born in Illinois, March 31,
1858. Pupil of Boulanger, Lefebvre and
Constant in Paris. Founder and in-
structor, Gumming School of Art, Des
Moines; and head of department of
Graphic and Plastic Arts, State Uni-
versity, Iowa City, la; founder, Iowa
Art Guild. Work: Mural painting,
"Departure of the Indians from Fort
des Moines," in Polk County Court
House; portraits in the State Histori-
cal Gallery, Des Moines, la.
CUMMINGS, E. E., 107 Bedford St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
CUNEO, Rinaldo, Ross, Marin Co., Calif.
P., T. — Born San Francisco, Cal., July
2, 1877. Member: San F. AA.
Work: "Belle Vue, France," Memo-
rial Museum, San Francisco; "A Sum-
mer Day," Palace of Fine Arts, San
Francisco.
CUNNING, John, 64 West 104th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
CUNNINGHAM, Corinne. See Mrs. Col-
lins.
CUPRIEN, F(rank) W., The Viking Stu-
dio, Laguna Beach, Cal.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., 1871. Pupil
of Carl Weber in Philadelphia; studied
in Munich, Dresden, Leipzig and Paris.
Member: Leipzig AA; Fort Worth
AA; California AC; Laguna Beach AA.
Awards : Gold medal, Berliner Aus-
stellung; first prize, Cotton Carnival,
Galveston, Tex., 1913; silver medal, San
Diego Exp., 1915; silver medal, San
Diego Exp., 1916; hon. mention. Phoe-
nix (Ariz.) State Fair, 1916; bronze
medal, Sacramento State Fair, 1918;
prize, Sacramento Fair, 1920; popular
prize, Laguna Beach Art Asso., 1921.
Work: "Homeward Bound," del
Vecchio Gallery, Leipzig.
CURRAN, Charles C(ourtney), 39 West
67th St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Hartford, Ky., Feb. 13, 1861.
Pupil of Cincinnati School of Design;
ASL and NAD in New York; Julian
Academy under Constant, Lefebvre and
Doucet in Paris. Member: ANA
1888; NA 1904; NYWCC; AWCS; SAA
1888; Salma.C; Lotos (life). Awards :
Third Hallgarten prize, NAD, 1888;
hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1890; Clark
prize, NAD, 1893; medal, Columbian
Exp., Chicago. 1893; second Hallgarten
prize, NAD, 1895; silver medal, At-
lanta Exp., 1895; hon. mention, Paris
Exp., 1900; silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; Carnegie prize, SAA,
1904; silver medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904; first Corcoran prize, S. Wash. A.
1905; first prize ($500), Osborne com-
petition, 1905; Altman prize ($1,000),
NAD, 1919. Work: "Perfume of
the Roses," National Gallery. Wash-
ington; "The Breezy Day," Pennsyl-
vania Academy, Philadelphia; "The
Golden Hour," Museum of Art, Colum-
bus; "Building the Dam," Art Associa-
tion, Richmond, Ind.; "The Jungfrau"
and "The Swimming Pool," Toledo
(O.) Museum of Art; "Children Catch-
ing Minnows," Buffalo (N. Y.) Fine
Arts Academy; "Imprisoned Jewel,"
Art Museum, Montclair, N. J.
CURRIER, C(yrus) B(ates), 2134 Ivar
Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
P., L— Born Marietta, O., Dec. 13, 1868.
Pupil of Julian Academy, Paris. Me m -
b e r : Salma. C.
CURRIER, George H., 18 Vesta Road,
Dorchester Centre, Ma^s.
P. — M ember: Boston AC.
CURRIER, Walter Barron, R. D. 1, Box
490, San Gabriel, Calif.
P., E., A., C, W., L., T.— Born Spring-
field, Mass., May 3, 1879. Pupil of Dow,
Eben Comins, Kenyon Cox. Mem-
ber: Calif. AC; Calif. PM.; Laguna
Beach AA. Work: "The Land of
the Afternoon" and "Dalton Canyon,"
Lincoln High School, Los Angeles;
"Sunset Glow from Bigbear," "The
Phantom," "Sunrise in San Leandro
393
CURRY
WHO'S WHO IN ART
DAGGETT
Hills," Exposition Park Galleries, Los
Ang-eles. Writer and lecturer on Art
Education. Head of Fine and Voca-
tional Art Depts., Lincoln High School,
Los Angeles, Calif.
CURRY, Noble, care of C. I. Brobeck,
893 Locburne Ave., Columbus, O. (P.)
CURTIS, Constance, Van Dyck Studios,
939 Eighth Ave.; h. 331 West 76th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Port. P., T. — Born Washington, D. C.
Pupil of ASL and William M. Chase in
New York. Member: ASL of N. Y.;
A. Workers C. (pres.); N. A. Women
PS; Alliance.
CURTIS, Elizabeth, 399 Park Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, N. Y. Pupil of
Twachtman and Chase.
CURTIS, George V., 5 West 16th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — Born at Southampton, England, in
1859. Pupil of Legros, Benjamin Con-
stant. Member: S.Indp.A. Award:
First medal, 1910, Societe des Artistes
Francais de Seine et Marne. Repre-
sented in Musee de Melun; large mural
paintings in the Church, Villemomble.
CURTIS, Ida Maynard, care Back Bay
Branch of Old Colony Trust Co., Boston,
Mass. ; summer, Carmel, Calif.
P.— Born Lewisburg, Pa.,- Jan. 12, 1860.
Pupil of Hawthorne, Ross, Maynard,
Simon, Jolley. Member: Copley
S.; Calif. AC; Provincetown AA.
CURTIS, Nathaniel Cortiandt, 706 Title
Guaranty Bldg.; h. 5305 Camp St., New
Orleans, La.; summer, Auburn, Ala.
P., Arch., W., L., T. — Born Southport,
N. C, Feb. 8, 1881. Pupil of William
R. Ware. Member: AIA; N. O. AA;
Arts and Crafts Club of N. O. De-
signed buildings for Alabama Polytech-
nic Inst., Auburn, Ala.
CURTIS, Sidney W., 112 Hicks St.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma.C.
CURTIS, William Fuller, 331 West 76th
St., New York, N. Y.; summer, Ash-
field, Mass.
P.,I.,C.— Born Staten Island, N. Y., Feb.
25, 1873. Pupil of Julius Rolshoven, Le-
febvre and Robert-Pleury in Paris.
Member: Wash. WCC. Awards :
Third Corcoran prize, S. Wash. A.,
1902; first Corcoran prize, Wash. WCC,
1903; silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
Work: Panels for altar for Church
of St. Michael and All Angeles, Gene-
seo, N. Y. ; decorative panels. Cosmos
Club, Washington, D. C.
CUSHMAN, Alice, 919 Pine St., Philadel-
phia, Pa.
Ldscp.P. — Born Philadelphia, Sept. 27,
1854. Pupil of NAD in New York. Ross
Turner in Boston. Member: Plastic
C; Phila. WCC; N. A. Women PS; Fel-
lowship PAFA (assoc). Award :
Woman's Exposition of the Carolinas,
1897. Specialty, water colors.
CUSHMAN, Lillian S. See Mrs. Charles
Lyman Brown.
CUSTER, E. A., 4045 Baltimore Ave.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
CUSTIS, Eleanor Parke, 626 East Capitol
St., Washington, D. C.
P. — Born ^Vashington, D. C, July 28,
1897. Pupil of Corcoran Art School.
Member: Wash. WCC.
CUTLER, Carl Gordon, Fenway Studios,
Boston, Mass.; h. 24 Central Ave., New-
tonville, Mass.
P. — Born Newtonville, Mass., Jan. 3,
1873. Pupil of Constant and Laurens in
Paris. Member: Boston AC; Cop-
ley S.
CZERWINSKI, K. G., 548 East 136th St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
DABO, Leon, 28 West 63d St., Manhattan;
h. 72 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, New
York, N. Y.
Ldscp. and Mural P., L. — Born Detroit,
Mich., July 9, 1868. Pupil of Daniel
Vierge, Pierre Galland, Ecole des Beaux-
Arts and Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: Pastelists; Hopkin C. of
Detroit; NAC (life); Allied Artists, Lon-
don, England; Royal Society of Arts and
Sciences, London, England; Les Mireil-
les, Avignon, France; Les Amis des
Arts, Aries, France; Societe des Amis
du Louvre, Paris, France; School Art
League of N. Y. Art Director, Arbuckle
Institute, Brooklyn, New York. Work:
"Moore Park," Luxembourg Museum,
Paris; "The Cloud," Metropolitan Mu-
seum, New York; "The Hudson," Na-
tional Gallery, Washington, D. C; "The
Ocean," Imperial Museum of Art, Tokyo,
Japan; "Gray Cloud," National Gallery,
Ottawa, Canada; "Hudson in Winter,"
Museum of Art, Boston; "Lawn Party,"
Art Institute, Chicago; "Silver Light,"
Brooklyn Institute Museum, New York;
"Rondout," Herron Art Institute, In-
dianapolis; "Dawn," City Art Museum,
St. Louis; "Sea Shore," Institute of Arts,
Detroit; "Woodstock," Museum of Art,
Toledo; "Sun and Mist," Museum of Art,
Montclair, N. J.; "The Hudson, Even-
ing," Poland Springs (Me.) Museum;
"The Ocean at Nassau," Art Associa-
tion, Milwaukee; "Dawn, the Hudson,"
Art Association, Muncie, Ind.; "Nassau
Beach," Hackley Art Gallery, Muskegon,
Mich.; "After the Storm," Art Associa-
tion, Saginaw, Mich.; "Cooper's Lake,"
National Arts Club, New York; "The
Spring," Arbuckle Institute, Brooklyn,
New York; "The Storm," Museum Avig-
non, France; "Dawn, St. Andrews,"
Montreal (Can.) Art Association;
"June," Tuskogee Institute, Ala.; "Be-
fore the Storm," Museum of Lyons,
France. Mural: "Ascension," ceil-
ing-triforium gallery (16 panels) and
altar (4 panels) Church of St. John the
Baptist, Brooklyn, New York; ten his-
torical paintings, Flower Memoiial Li-
brary, Watertown. N. Y.
DAGGETT, Grace E., 449 Edgewood Ave.,
New Haven, Conn.
S.— M ember: N. H. PCC.
DAGGETT, Maud, 530 South Orange
Grove; h. Columbia Hill, South Pasa-
dena, Cal.
S. — Born Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 10,
394
DAGGY
WHO*S WHO IN ART
DANIELL
1883. Pupil of Lorado Taft. Mem-
ber: Cal. AC. A w a r d: Silver medal,
Pan.-Cal. Exp., San Diego, 1915.
Work: Fountain, Hotel Raymond,
Pasadena; drinking fountain; Medal-
lion and Memorial Fountain, "Castelar
St. Creche" Building, City of Los An-
geles.
DAGGY, Augustus, 179 Grumman Ave.,
Norwalk, Conn.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
DAHLER, Warren, 625 West 127th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Helena, Mont., 1887. Pupil of
N. Y. School of Art and NAD.
Member: Mural P. Award:
Prize collaborative competition, N. Y.
Arch. Lg., 1915. For three years
director of painting at the Herter
Looms, New York.
DAHLGREEN, Charles W., 409 North
Cuyier Ave., Chicago, 111.
Ldscp.P.,E.,T.— Born Chicago, Sept. 8,
1864. Pupil of AIC. Member: ASL
of Chicago; Chicago SA; Art Service
League. Award : Hon. mention,
P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915; Rosenwald
and Carr prizes, AIC, 1919; Chicago
Municipal Art Lg. purchase prize, 1920.
Represented: Library of Congress,
Washington, D. C; Chicago AG; inter.
Soc. AL. and New York Public Library.
DAINGERFIELD, Elliott, 222 West 59th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., I., T., W., L. — Born Harper's Ferry,
Va., March 26, 1859; came to New York
in 1880. Studied in New York. Mem-
ber: ANA 1902, NA 1906; NYWCC;
SAA 1903 ; Lotos C. ; NAC. Awards :
Silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; Clarke prize, NAD, 1902. Work:
"Christ Stilling the Tempest," and
"Slumbering Fog," Metropolitan Mu-
seum, New York; "Storm Breaking
Up," Toledo Museum; "The Child of
Mary," National Gallery, Washington;
"The Midnight Moon," Brooklyn Insti-
tute Museum; mural decorations in
Lady Chapel of Church of St. Mary the
Virgin, New York; "An Arcadian Hunt-
ress" and "Swirling Mists," City Art
Museum, St. Louis; "The Valley of the
Dragon," Chicago Art Institute.
DALAND, Katharine Maynadier, 17 Ray
St., Waterbury, Conn.
1.— Born Boston, Mass., April 28, 1883.
Pupil of Vesper Lincoln George in Bos-
ton. Member: Copley S. 1 1 1 u s -
t r at e d : "Ballads of the Be-Ba-Boes,"
"Lyrics of Eliza," etc.
DALLAM, Elizabeth Forbes, 715 Pine
St., Philadelphia, Pa.; summer, Chester
Springs, Pa.
P., T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 9.
1879. Pupil of Anshutz, Breckenridge
and McCarter. Awards: Two Eu-
ropean travelling scholarships, PAFA.
DALLIN, Cyrus E(dwin), 69 Oakland
Ave., Arlington Heights, Mass.
S., T., W.— Born Springville, Utah, Nov.
22, 1861. Pupil of Chapu and Dampt in
Paris. Member: NSS 1893; ANA 1912;
N. Y.Arch.Lg.;ACPhila.l895; Boston AC;
St. Botolph C.1900; Royal Soc.of Arts,
London; Boston GA. Instructor, Mass.
Normal Art School. Awards : Gold
medal American Art Assoc, New York,
1888; hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1890;
first class medal and diploma, Columbian
Exp,, Chicago, 1893; silver medal, Mass.
Charitable Mechanics Assoc, 1895;
silver medal, Paris Exp., 1900; silver
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
gold medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
third class medal, Paris Salon, 1909;
gold medal, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915.
Work: "Signal of Peace," Lincoln
Park, Chicago; "Sir Isaac Newton,"
Library of Congress, Washington;
"Pioneer Monument," Salt Lake City;
"Medicine Man," Fairmount Park,
Philadelphia; "Soldiers' and Sailors'
Monument," Syracuse, N. Y.; "Appeal
to the Great Spirit," and marble relief
"Julia Ward Howe," Museum of Fine
Arts, Boston; "The Hunter," Arlington,
Mass.; "Alma Mater," Washington
University, St. Louis, Mo.; "The
Scout," Kansas City, Mo.; "Captured
but Not Conquered," Cleveland School
of Art, etc
DALY, Matt. A., 4166 Forest Ave., Nor-
wood, O.
P.— Born Cincinnati, O., Jan 13, 1860.
Pupil of Duveneck, Noble and Nowattny.
Member: Cincinnati AC.
DAMIANAKES, Cleo, 327 Lenox Ave.,
Oakland, Calif.
P., E.— Born Berkeley, Calif. Mem-
ber: Calif. SE, Chicago AG. Work:
Mural decorations, Berkeley High
School Auditorium.
DAMROSCH, Helen T(herese), 154 W.
55th St.; h. 181 West 75th St., New
York, N. Y.; summer, Seal Harbor, Me.
P., I., C, T.— Born, New York, N. Y.,
May 26, 1893. Pupil of George de For-
est Brush and Jonas Lie.
DANA, W(iliam) P(arsons) W(inches-
ter), 57 Onslow Gardens, London, S.W.,
England.
P. — Born Boston, Mass., Feb. 18, 1833.
Pupil of Ecole des Beaux-Arts in
Paris under Picot and Le Poittevin.
Member: ANA 1862, NA 1863.
Awards : Third class medal, Paris
Exp., 1878; bronze medal, Paris Exp.,
1889. Has lived in Europe since 1870.
Work: "Off the French Coast— Moon-
light Effect," Pennsylvania Acadeni^^
Philadelphia,
DAN DO, Susie May, 126 Brooks Ave.,
p.. T.— Born Odell, 111., Sept. 6, 1873.
Pupil of William L. Judson in Cali-
fornia. Member: Cal. AC. Award:
Silver medal, Panama-Cal. Exp., San
Diego, 1915.
DANFORTH, Marie. See Mrs. Page.
DANIEL, Mell, 175 Claremont Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
DANIELL, William Swift, 2620 Manitou
Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.; summer, La-
guna Beach, Calif.
P.— Born San Francisco, April 26, 1865.
Pupil of Laurens in Paris. Member:
Calif. AC.
395
DANIELS
WHO*S WHO IN ART
DAVIDSON
DANIELS, J. B., 1805 Young St.; h. 619
Walnut St., Cincinnati, O.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., May 2,
1846. Pupil of Lindsay. Member:
Cincinnati AC.
DANIELS, Julia, 105 East 117th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
DAN NAT, William T., 45 Avenue de
Villiers, Paris, France.
P.— Born New York, 1853. Pupil of
Munich Academy and of Munkacsy.
Member: Paris SAP (pres.); Nat.
Inst.A.L. Awards: Third class medal,
Paris Salon, 1883; gold medal, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901. Legion of Honor
1889. Officer 1897. Commander 1901.
Work: "The Woman in Red" and
"The Contrabandist," Luxembourg Mu-
seum, Paris, France; "A Quartette,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York; "In
a Sacristy in Aragon," Art Institute,
Chicago; "Eva Haviland," Boston Mu-
seum.
DARLING, George Channing, 204 Lexing-
ton Ave., Providence, R. L
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
DARLING, Jay Norwood (J. N. Ding),
2320 Terrace Rd., Des Moines, la.
I.— Born Norwood, Mich., Oct. 21, 1876.
Member: NAC; Cartoonist for Des
Moines Register and New York Tribune.
DARLINGTON, Mary O'Hara, 809 Devon-
shire St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
DARRAGH, Marion, 257 South 13th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (Min. P.)
DART, Harry G(rant), Amsden Studio,
Cleveland, O.
P., L, W. — Born Williamsport, Pa., Nov.
3, 1870. Member; SL
DASBURG, Andrew (Michel), 428 Lafay-
ette St., New York, N. Y, ; summer,
Taos, N. M.
P., T.— Born Paris, France, May 4, 1887.
Pupil of Cox. Member: Modern
Artists of America.
D'ASCENZO Myrtle Goodwin (Mrs.
Nicola D'Ascenzo), 425 West Price St.,
Germantown, Pa.
P. — Born North Tunbridge, Vt., Dec. 31,
1864. Pupil of Pennsylvania School of
Industrial Art. Member: Phila.
WCC; Plastic C.
D'ASCENZO, Nicola, 1602 Summer St.;
h. 425 West Price St., Germantown, Pa.
P.,C. — Born Torricella, Italy, Sept 25,
1871. Pupil of Mariani and .Jacovacci in
Rome. Member: Fellowship PAFA;
T Sq.C; Phila.Sketch C; N.Y.Arch.
Lg.l902; Mural P.; AC Phila.; Phila.A.
Crafts.G.; NAC; Friends of Medallion,
Awards : Columbian Exp., Chicago,
1893; gold medal, T.Sq.C; prize Amer-
icanization through Art Exhib., Phila.,
1916. Work: Stained glass, Chapel
of the Intercession, New York; mural
decoration. Municipal Buildings, Spring-
field, Mass.; stained glass, Washington^
Memorial Chapel, Valley Forge; Mosaic
frieze. Cooper Library, Camden, N. J.
Specialty, mural decoration and stained
glass.
DASCHBLACH, A. C, Cornell Ave., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
DATZ, Abraham, 530 West 186th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
DAUGHERTY, James (Henry), 59 South
Washington Sq., New York, N. Y.
P., L, E., T.— Born Ashville, N. C,
June 1, 1886. Pupil of Frank Bran-
gwyn ; PAFA. Member: Mural P. ;
Modern Artists of America; N. Y. Arch.
Lg. Work: Murals in State Theatre,
Cleveland; decoration in Safety Insti-
tute, New Xork; recruiting posters for
U. S. Navy.
DAUGHERTY, Nancy L., Kittanning,
Pa.
P.— M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
DAUTEL, John Daniel, 52 Ridgewood
Road, South Orange, N. J.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
DAVENPORT, E(dith) Fairfax, Zellwood,
Orange Co., Fla.; h. 220 Olive St., Kan-
sas City, Mo.
P.— Born Kansas City, July 13, 1884.
Pupil of Collin, Laurens and Ecole des
Beaux Arts in Paris. Awards :
Medal of Queen Elizabeth of Belgium
for war poster.
DAVENPORT, Henry, 114 East 84th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Wainscott,
L. L, N. Y.
P., L„ T.— Born Boston, Mass., April 1,
1882. Pupil of Ecole des Beaux Arts,
Dechenaud, Charles Hawthorne, George
Elmer Browne. Member: Paint
and Clay Club; S. Indp. A. Assistant
professor, History of Art, Yale School
of Fine Arts.
DAVEY, Clara, Santa Fe, N. M. (P.)
DAVEY, Randall, Santa Fe, N. M.
P.— M ember: Port. P.; S. Indp. A.
Awards : Second Hallgarten prize,
NAD 1915; hon. mention, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915. Work : "Flowers," and
"Portrait of a Young Lady," Art Insti-
tute of Chicago; "Old Sea Captain,"
Corcoran Gallery, Wash., D. C.
DAVIDSON, Clara D. See Mrs. Simpson.
DAVIDSON, George, 11 East 14th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Butka, Russian Poland, May
10, 1889. Pupil of F. C. Jones and Doug-
las Volk. Award : American Acad-
emy in Rome scholarship, 1913-1916.
DAVIDSON, Harry, 320 West 18th St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
DAVIDSON, Jo., 23 Macdougal Alley,
New York, N. Y.; h. Port Washington,
L. I., N. Y.
S.— Born in New York. Mar. 30, 1883.
Pupil of Brush and jviaciNeil.
DAVIDSON, John M., 234 East 2nd St..
Xenia, Ohio.
P.— Born Hamilton, O., Apr. 20, 1876.
Pupil of Chase and Du Mond. Mem-
ber: Cincinnati AC.
DAVIDSON, Oscar L. Died January 3,
1922.
P.— Born Fithian, 111., March 2. 1S75.
Member: Indiana Illustrators' Club.
396
DAVIES
WHO'S WHO IN ART
DAVIS
DAVIES, Arthur B., 53 AVest 39th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. Rockland Lake,
N. Y.
P.— Born Utica, N. Y , Sept. 26, 1S62.
Pupil of Dwif^iit William '^ .at iJtica;
studied in New York and Chicago.
Member: NYWCC; Am. PS (pres.).
Award : Silver medal, Pan- Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; hon. mention, Carnegie
Inst., Pittsburgh, 1913; first W. A.
Clark prize ($2,000), and Corcoran gold
medal, 1916. Work: "Dream"
and "Girdle of Aries," Metropolitan
Museum, New York; "Maya, Mirror
of Illusions," Art Institute, Chicago;
"Night's Overture" and "Spring in a
Valley," Minneapolis Institute of Art;
San Francisco Art Institute; "Every
Saturday," "Autumn Landscape," "The
Place of the Mothers" and "Children of
Yesterday," Brooklyn Institute Museum;
"Recall of Spring," R. I. School of De-
sign, Providence.
DAVIESS, Maria Thompson, 1894 Acklen
Ave., Nashville, Tenn.
P., C, W., L., T.— Born Harrodsburg,
Ky., Nov. 25, 1872. Pupil of Blanche,
Mucha, L'hermitte, Delecluse. Mem-
ber: Nashville Art Club; NAC.
DAVIS, -Cecil Clark, 19 East Pearson St.;
h. 847 North Michigan Ave., Chicago,
111.; summer, Marion, Mass.
P.— Born Chicago, July 12, 1877. Mem-
ber: Chicago SA; Chicago AC.
\. w a r d : Portrait prize. Municipal AL,
1918; gold medal. Salon, Rio de Janeiro,
1920.
DAVIS, Charles H(arold), Mystic, Conn.
Ldscp.P. — Born Amesbury, Mass., Jan.
7, 1856. Pupil of Otto Grundmann and
Boston Museum School; Boulanger and
Lefebvre in Paris. Member: SAA
1886; ANA 1901, NA 1906; Copley S; Lo-
tos C; NAC. Awards: Gold medal,
American Art Assoc, New York, 1886;
hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1887; $2,000
prize, American Art Assoc, New York,
1887; silver medal, Paris Exp., 1889;
hors concours, Paris Salon; Palmer
prize, AIC 1890; medal, Mass. Char-
itable Mechanics Assoc, Boston, 1890;
medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893;
grand gold meaal, Atlanta Exp., 1895;
bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1900; Lip-
pincott prize, PAFA 1901; silver medal,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; second
Corcoran prize, S.Washington A, 1902;
silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
Harris bronze medal ($300), AIC 1914;
gold medal, P. P.Exp., San F.,_1915; Alt-
man prize (.n.OOU), NAD 191* ; Sesaan
gold medal, PAFA, 1919; second W. A.
Clark prize ($1,000), and Corcoran sil-
ver medal, Corcoran Gallery, Washing-
ton, 1919; Saltus medal, NAD, 1921.
Work: "August" and "Evening,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York, N. Y.;
"The Deepening Shadows," Corcoran
Gallery, Washington, D. C; "Moonrise
at Twilight," Carnegie Institute, Pitts-
burgh, Pa.; "Clouds," Museum of
Fin'e Arts, Boston, Mass.; "At Sunset,"
Art Museum, Worcester, Mass.; "Sum-
mer," National Gallery, Washington,
D. C; "The Brook," Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia,
Pa.; "Close of Day" and "Twilight,"
Art Institute, Chicago, 111.; "In April,"
Hackley Art Gallery, Muskegon, Mich.;
"Early Summer," Minneapolis Institute
of Arts; "Clouds and Hills," City Art
Museum, Sc. Louis, Mo.; "The Time
of the Red Winged Blackbird," 'Syra-
cuse Museum of Art.
DAVIS, C(harles) H(enry). Died De-
cember 27, 1921.
Ldscp.P. — Born Cambridge, Mass., Aug.
28, 1845. Member: Wash.WCC;
Newport AA. Rear Admiral U. S.
Navy, retired.
DAVIS, Charles Percy, City Art Museum,
St. Louis, Mo.
P., I.,C.,T.— Born Iowa City, la. Pupil
of Chase and Beckwith in New York;
Bouguereau, Ferrier and Robert-Fleury
in Paris. Member: Boston SA Crafts
(master craftsman); 2x4 Soc. Cura-
tor, City Art Museum since 1914.
DAVIS, Earl R., P. O. Box 1532, Provi-
dence, R. I.
P.— Born Jan. 17, 1886. Member:
Providence AC; Providence WCC; S.
Indp. A.
DAVIS, Harry, Davis Theatre, Pittsburgh,
Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
DAVIS, Helen S., Clinton Hotel, East
Orange, N. J.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
DAVIS, Irene Ewing, 25 West Roy St.,
Seattle. W^ash. (P.)
DAVIS, Leonard M., 15 Gramercy Park,
New York, N. Y.
Ldscp. P. — Born Winchendon, Mass.,
May 8, 1864. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.;
Julian Academy under Laurens, Lefeb-
vre and Benjamin-Constant, and of
Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Mem-
ber: NAC; Salma.C. Specialty, since
1898, Alaska scenes. Award : Silver
medal for 127 Alaska paintings P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915. Work: "David-
son Glazier," "The Charm of the Yu-
kon" and "Autumn Cottonwood," Wash-
ington State Art Association Museum,
Seattle, Wash.; "Peril Straits," Mu-
nicipal Art Gallery, Seattle, Wash.;
"The Aurora Borealis," Museum of
New Mexico, Santa Fe, N. M.
DAVIS, Stuart, care of Whitney Studio
Club, 4t}i St., New York, N. Y. ; sum-
mer, East Gloucester, Mass.
P., I.— Born Philadelphia, Dec. 7, 1892.
Pupil of Robert Henri. M e m b e r :
S. Indp. A.
DAVIS, Warren B., 7 West 42d St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — A wards: Inness prize 1905, Evans
prize, 1906 and 1916, and Isidor prize,
1911, at Salma.C. Mem b e r : Sal-
ma.C.
DAVIS, William Steeple, Orient, L. I.,
N. Y.
Marine P.. E.. W.— Born Orient, N. Y.,
May 7, 1884. Member: Brooklyn SA.
Work: Etchings in print collection
of the Toledo Museum of Art.
397
DAVIS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
DE BOY ED ON
DAVIS, W(illiam) Triplett, 3521-13th St.,
N. W., Washington, D. C.
P., I.— Born Washington, D. C. Pupil of
Corcoran Gallery School of Arts and of
Lucien Powell. Member: S.Wash.A.
DAVISON, E. L., Commercial Bank,
Wichita, Kan. (P.)
DAVISSON,. H(omer) G(ordon), Fort
Wayne, Ind.
P., T. — Born in rcandolph Co., Indiana,
1866. Pupil of PAFA; Corcoran School
of Art in Washington; AS'L of N. Y.;
studied three years in Europe. Director
Fort Wayne School of Art, 1911-17.
DAVOL, Joseph B., Ogunquit, Me.
Marine P., T.— Born Chicago, 111., Aug.
25, 1864. Pupil of Benjamin-Constant
and Laurens in Paris, Member: Sal-
ma.C; Fellowship PAFA. Award:
Silver medal, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915.
DAWES, Edwin M., Reno, Nevada,
P.— Born Boone, la., April 21, 1872. Self-
taught. Member: Minneapolis SFA;
Attic C, Minneapolis; Calif, AC,
Awards : Hon. mention 1909, gold
medal 1913, second award 1914, all given
by Minnesota State Art Society; bronze
medal, St. Paul Institute of Art, 1915.
Works: "By the River," State Art
Society, St, Paul, Minn.; "Dawn in
Sweet Grass Mountains," Public Library,
Owatonna, Minn.; "Channel to the
Mills," Minneapolis Institute.
DAWLEY, Herbert M., Chatham, N. J.
S., W,— Born Chillicothe, 0„ March 15,
1880, Pupil of ASL of Buffalo, N. Y.
M ember: Buffalo SA. Award :
Fellowship prize, 1915, Buffalo SA.
DAWSON, George Walter, Dept. of Ar-
chitecture, University of Pennsylvania;
h.. University Dormitories, West Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P.,T. — Born Andover, Mass., March 16,
1870. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art School
in Boston; PAFA, Member: Phila,
WCC (pres.); Phila, Alliance; T. S'q.
C; NYWCC; Chicago WCC. Professor
of drawing at Univ. of Pa. Specialty,
landscapes and flowers.
DAWSON-WATSON, San Antonio, Tex.
P., Engr., T, — Born London, England,
July 21, 1864; came to U,S. in 1893; set-
tled in St, Louis 1904, Pupil of Mark
Fisher in London; Carolus Duran, Char-
tran, Collin, Aime Morot and Leon
Glaize in Paris, Member: St.
Louis AG; St. Louis AL; 2x4 Soc,
Awards : Silver medal, Lewis and
Clark Exp., Portland, Ore., 1905; silver
and gold medals, Sedalia, Mo.; three
first prizes and one second, Illinois
State Fair, 1916. Work: "Light
Breeze," painting and also mezzo-
tint. City Art Museum, St. Louis;
"The Open Book," decorative panel,
Wichita High School; "Rainbow in
Winter," Central High School and Barr
Branch Library, St. Louis; Oakland
(Cal.) Museum; Library, Houston, Tex.;
"The Wheatfield," 'Springfteld (111.) Art
Assoc, Teacher in St, Louis School of
Fine Arts, 1904-1915. Author and di-
rector of pageant at Brandsville, Mo.,
1916, Director, San Antonio Art Guild,
1918-19.
DAY, Bertha C. See Mrs, D. M. Bates.
DAY, Francis, West Stockbridge, Mass.
P,— Born LeRoy, N, Y„ Aug. 12, 1863,
Pupil of ASL of N.Y,; Ecole des Beaux-
Arts, Hebert and Merson in Paris,
Member: SAA 1891; ANA 1906;
Salma.C,1888. Award: Third Hall-
garten prize, NAD 1895, Work:
"Fairyland," Art Museum, Montclair,
N, J,
DAY, Hallie, 220 West Hardin St,, Find-
lay, O,
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
DAY, Helena, Swarthmore, Pa,
P. — M ember: Phila. WCC.
DAY, iVlrs. Howard. See Martha Willson,
DAY, Mrs. Mabel K., 5206 Woodlawn PL,
Pittsburgh, Pa,
P,— M ember: Pitts. AA.
DAY, Mary Barker, 158 Whitney Ave.,
New Haven, Conn.
P. — M ember: New Haven PCC.
DAYTON, F. E., 259 W^est 11th St., New
York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: SI,
DAYTON, Mrs. Helena, 259 West 11th
St., New York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI.
DEAN, Elizabeth M. (Mrs. Samuel B,
Dean), 107 Winthrop St,, Roxbury,
Mass.
P. — Born Cambridge, Mass, Pupil of
Ludovici in London and Lazar in Paris;
Duveneck and H, D, Murphy in Boston.
Member: Copley S„ 1896.
DEAN, Grace Rhoades, x683 Indiana Ave.,
Toledo, O,
P, — M ember: N, A, Women PS.
DEANE, Lillian Reubena, 1446 Stanley
Ave., Los Angeles, Caiif.
Min.P.— Born Chicago, Sept. 24, 1881.
Pupil of AIC; J. Wellington Reynolds
and Virginia S. Reynolds.
DEANE, Lionel, 96 Fifth Ave.; h, 320
Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y.
P., Arch. — Born in Canada, July 9, 1861.
Pupil of Rimmer, San Francisco School
of Design, Ernest Narjot.
DEBEREINER, George, 347 Wood Ave,,
Clifton, Cincinnati, O.
P,,C,— Born Germany, 1860, Studied
AIC; Holland and Germany. Mem-
ber: Cincinnati AC.
DE BEUKELAER, Mrs. Laura Halliday,
1346 College Ave., Topeka, Kan.
S.— Born Cincinnati, O., 1885. Pupil of
Cincinnati Art Academy; St. Louis Sch.
of Fine Arts. Member: Cincinnati
Woman's AC. Work in: State Nor-
mal School, Geneseo, N. Y.; Y. W. C. A.,
Newark, N. J.; Washburn College, To-
peka, Kan.
DE BOUTHILLIER, Guy, 18 Story St.,
Cambridge, Mass.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
DE BOYEDON, O(scar) H(ugh), Mont-
rose, N. Y. ; summer, 19 Quai Voltaire,
Paris, France.
S., C. — Born Porto Alegre, Brazil, June
398
DE CAMP
WHO'S WHO IN ART
DE KRUIF
13, 1882. Pupil of Bourdelle in Paris.
Member: L'Union Internationale
des Beaux- Arts, Paris; Lg. of N. Y. A.
DE CAMP, Joseph (Rodefer), 120 River-
way Studios, Boston, Mass.; h. Med-
ford, Mass.; summer, North Haven, Me.
P.— Born Cincinnati, O., Nov. 5, 1858. Pu-
pil of Duveneck at Cincinnati Academy;
Royal Academy in Munich. Member:
Ten American Painters; Nat. Inst. AL;
AC Phila.; Port. P.; Boston GA. In-
structor School of Boston Museum of
Fine Arts. Awards : First prize. City
Hall decorative competition, Philadel-
phiru; Temple gold medal, PAFA, 1899;
hon. mention, Paris Exp., 1900; gold
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; second
Clark prize, Corcoran AG 1909; Beck
medal, PAFA, 1912; gold medal, AC
Phila. 1915; Lippincott prize, PAFA,
1920. Work: "The New Gown,"
Wilstach Gallery, Philadelphia; "Woman
Drying Her Hair," Cincinnati Mu-
seum; "The Guitar Player," Boston
Museum of Fine Arts; "Sally," Worces-
ter Museum; "Dr. Horace Howard Fur-
ness" and "Little Hotel," Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia; "Frank Du-
veneck," Cincinnati Museum; "Daniel
Merriman," Worcester Museum.
DECAMP, Rena, 2821 Reading Rd., Avon-
dale, Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
DECKER, Mrs. E. Bennett, 2106 O. St.,
N. W., Washington, D. C.
Min.P., I. — Born Washington, D. C, Feb.
28, 1869. Pupil of William H. Whitte-
more. Member: Wash.FAS; Wash.
AC. Microscopic drawings for Smith-
sonian Institution.
DECKER, Harold, 505 William St., East
Orange, N. J.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
DE CORDOBA, Mathilde, The Rem-
brandt, 152 West 57th St.; h. 1190 Mad-
ison Ave.. New Yoik, N. Y.
P., E.— Born New York City. Pupil of
Whittemore, Cox and Mowbray in New
York; Aman-Jean in Paris. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; Barnard C,
Graver-Printers of London; Cercle In-
ternational des Arts, Paris. Work:
Prints in Luxembourg, Paris, and Li-
brary of Congress, Washington, D. C.
DECOTO, Sarah (Horner), Irvington,
Calif.
P. — Born Irvington, Calif., Aug. 12,
1863. Studied in Paris.
DE FOE, Etheilyn Brewer (Mrs. Louis
De Foe), 250 West 88th St., New York,
N. Y.
Min.P. — Born in New York City. Pupil
of Whittemore and Mowbray in New
York. Member: N, A. Women PS;
Barnard Club.
DE FOREST, Lockwood, 1815 Laguna St.,
Santa Barbara, Calif.
P.. Arch.. W.— Born New York, .Tune 23,
1850. Pupil of Corrodi in Rome; F. E.
Church in New York. Member: ANA
1891, NA 1898 (treas. 1899-1907) ; A.Fund
S; Artists' Aid S; N. Y. Arch. Lg. ; N. Y.
Soc. C; Boston SAC; Century Assoc;
NAC. Founded Associated Artists with
L. C. Tiffany and Mrs. C. Wheeler,
1878. Awards : Medal, for carv-
ings. Colonial Exp., London, 1886;
medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893;
bronze medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
Specialty, landscapes, also interior
decorator, and founded workshops at
Ahemedabad, India. for revival of
woodcarving. Work: "The Rameseum
Thebes," Smith College, Northampton.
Mass.; "Mission Canyon, Santa Bar-
bara," Herron Art Institute, Indianap-
olis. Published "Indian Domestic Ar-
chitecture." 1SS5; "Illustrations of De-
sign." 1912.
DE FRANCHVILLE, Mrr.e. A. L., 53 West
39th St., New York, N. Y. (P.)
DE FRANCISCI, Anthony, 24 West 60th
St., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born in Italy, June 13, 1887. Pupil
of George T. Brewster and A. A. Wein-
man in New York. Member: YS ;
NSS; N. Y. Arch. Lg. (asso.); Ameri-
can Numismatic Soc. (asso.). Repre-
sented: Cincinnati Museum, Numis-
matic Soc. Galleries. Teacher in Beaux
Arts Inst.
DE GROOT, Adriaan M(artin), 92 Fifth
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Port. P.— Born S'liedrecht. Holland, Aug.
10, 1870. Studied in Holland and Ger-
many. Member: S.Indp.A.; Lg. of
NYA. Works : "Portrait of Col.
Roosevelt," owned by "The Outlook";
"We Have Room for but One Flag,"
Girls High School, Brooklyn.
DE HAVEN, Elizabeth, 257 West 86th
St., New York, N. Y. (P.)
DE HAVEN, Franklin, 257 West 86th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Ldscp.P.— Born Bluffton, Ind., Dec. 26,
1856. Pupil of George H. Smillie in
New York. M e m b e r : ANA, 1902 ; NA,
1920. Salma.C. 1899; NAC. Awards:
Tnness prize, Salma.C, 1900; Shaw prize,
Salma.C. 1901; hon. mention, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902; silver medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904; Vezin prize, 1916;
silver medal, NAC, 1921. W o r k : "The
Gloaming" and "Indian Camp near
Custer," Brooklyn Institute Museum;
"Castle Creek Canyon, South Dakota,"
National Gallery, Washington, D. C.
DE KOSENKO, Stepan, 33 West 67th St.;
h. 18 East 40th St., New York, N. Y.
S., D. — Born in Tiflis, Caucasus, Rus-
sia, 1865. Pupil of Ecole des Art Dec-
orative, Paris. Member: Phila. AC;
NAC; Arch. Lg. of N. Y. Designer
in decorative art.
DE KRAFFT, Marjorie, 22 Berkeley Rd.,
Merion, Pa.
P. — M ember: Plastic C.
DE KRUIF, Henri G(ilbert), Cyress <«:
Magnolia Aves., Laguna Beach, Calif.;
627 San Fernando Bldg., Los Angeles,
Calif.
P., E. — Born Grand Rapids, Mich., Feb.
17, 18S2. Pupil of Gifford Beal, F. Luis
Mora, Frederick Richardson and Ernest
Haskel. Member: Calif. AC; Los
Angeles Modern AS; Laguna Beach A A;
ASL of N. Y. Calif. PM.; Calif. WCS.
399
DEKRYZANOVSKY
WHO'S WHO IN ART
DENNY
DE KRYZANOVSKY. Roman, 48 Adams
Ave.. West. Detroit, Mich.
P. — Born Balta, Russia, Jan. 22, 1885.
Pupil of E. Renard, E. Tournes, P.
Gouzguet. Member: Scarab C, De-
troit. Awards : Rolshoven prize,
1915, and Frank Scott Clarke prize, 1918,
Detroit Institute of Arts. Work:
"Kismet," Detroit Institute of Arts.
DE LACY, Eva., 43 West 60th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
DE LAMOTTE, Caroline J(ones), (Mrs.
Octave John De Lamotte), McNary, La.
P., T.— Born Pikesville, Md., Sept. 3,
1889. Pupil of C. Y. Turner, Ephraim
Keyser, Charles H. Webb. Member:
S.Indp.A. Awards : First prize for
charcoal drawing and first prize for
water-color, La. State Fair, Shreve-
port, La., 1917; first prize for charcoal
portrait; first prize for origmal design
and first prize for water-color collec-
tion at Donaldsonville, La., 1917.
Work: In M. E. Church, Le Compte,
La.
DE LAND Clyde Osmer, 603 Baker Bldg.,
1520 Chestnut St.; h. 22 N. St. Bernard
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
L, P.— Born Union City, Pa., Dec. 27,
1872. Pupil of Drexel Inst, under How-
ard Pyle in Philadelphia. Work :
Painting, "First American Flag," City
of Somerville, Mass.; "First Continen-
tal Congress," Carpenters' Hall, Phila-
delphia; illustrated, "The Count's
Snuff-Box," etc.
DE LESLIE, Paul, 246 Fulton St., Brook-
klyn, N. Y.
I. — Born Moscow, Russia, Dec. 14, 1892.
Member: Guild of Free Lance A.
DELGADO, O. Colon, Arccileo, Porto
Rico.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
de LIMON de ARCE, Mrs. A., Arrcileo,
Porto Rico, Cuba.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
DELLFANT, Max, 610 Quinnipiac Ave.,
New Haven, Conn.
S.— M ember: N. H. PCC.
DEL MAR, Francesca, 39 West 67th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., T., W., L.— Born Washington, D. C.
Pupil of Collin, Fleury and Bouguereau
in Paris; Rolshoven in London. Work:
Mural decorations at Caroline Rest
(hospital) Hartsdale, N. Y. ; paintings
of New Zealand and South Sea Islands
for the American Museum of Natural
Histx)ry.
DE MELERO, Elviro M. Calle H. No.
148, Vedado, Havana, Cuba.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
DEL MUE, M(aurice) (August), 563 South
41st Ave., San Francisco, Calif.; sum-
mer, Susie Lake, Fallen Lake P. O.,
Calif.
P. — Born Paris, France, Nov. 4, 1878.
Member: San F. AA. Award :
Silver medal Panama-Pacific Exp., San
Francisco, 1915. Work : "Late After-
noon in the Sierras", Comparative
Museum of Art; "West Winds", Golden
Gate Park Museum, San Francisco,
Calif.
DE MAINE, Harry, 160 W. 13th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — Born Liverpool, England. Dec. 23,
1880. Pupil of Castellucho in Paris;
F. V. Burridge in London. Member:
Salma. C.
DE MANCE, Henri, 332 East 69th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, West Hur-
ley, Ulster Co., N. Y.
P. — Born Hamburg Germany, Oct. 5,
1871. Pupil of Lenbach. Member:
S.Indp.A.; Lg. of NYA. Work:
"Portrait of a Man," "Grapes of the
Hudson," Schiller Museum, Marbach.
DE MAR, John L., 1954 N. 31st St., Phil-
adelphia, Pa.
I.— Born Philadelphia, Sept. 22, 1865.
Cartoonist on "Philadelphia Record"
since 1903.
DE MARIS, Walter, Westwood, N. J.
I.— Born Cetlarville, N. J., Aug. 24, 1877.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.
DE METRICS, George, 201 South Elev-
enth St., Philadelphia, Pa. (S.)
DEMING, Adelaide, Litchfield, Conn.
Ldscp.P., C, T. — Born Litchfield, Conn.,
Dec. 12, 1864. Pupil of ASL of N.Y.;
Pratt Inst., Chase, Lathrop and Snell.
Member: N. A. Women PS; New
Haven PCC; NYWCC; Conn. AFA,
Awards: Beal prize, NYWCC 1908;
Burgess prize, N. Y. Woman's AC 1908.
Represented in Litchfield Public Library.
DEMING, E(dwin) W(illard), Cosmos
Club, Washington, D. C.
P., S., I. — Born Ashland, O., Aug. 26,
1860. Pupil of ASL of N.Y.; Lefebvre
and Boulanger in Paris. Member:
N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1902; Mural P.; S.Wash.
A.; Wash. AC; NAC. Specialty In-
dian and animal subjects. Awards :
Silver medal, AAS 1892; bronze medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904; bronze medal for
sculpture, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915.
Work: Two mural paintings, Morris
High School, New York City; "Brad-
dock's Defeat" and "Discovery of Wis-
consin," mural decorations, Wis. His-
torical Soc, Madison, Wis.; "The
Fight" and "Mutual Surprise," two
bronzes, Metropolitan Museum. New
York; "The Watering Place," "Pueblo
Buffalo Dance" and "Sioux War
Dance," Art Museum, Montclair, N. J.;
"Mourning Brave," National Museum,
Washington, D. C.
DEMUTH, Charles, care of Daniel Gal-
lery, 2 West 47th St., New York, N. Y.
(P.)
DENNIS, Charles W(arren), 323 Cottage
St., New Bedford, Mass.; summer.
South Brewster, Mass.
P.— Born New Bedford, Feb. 25, 1898.
Pupil of Harold Brett, Howard E. Smith,
Frederick Bosley. Member: S. Indp.
A.; Lg. of N.Y.A.
DENNY, Milo B., 380 Eighth Ave., West
Cedar Rapids, la.; summer, Wapil View
Place, Waubeek, la.
P.— Born Waubeek, la.. Apl. 21, 1887.
Pupil of AIC; N. Y. ASL.
400
DENSLOW
WHO'S WHO IN ART
DEWEY
DENSLOW, Dorothea Henrietta, 3 Sum-
ner St., Hartford, Conn.; summer,
Camp Yokum, Becket, Mass.
S._Eorn New York City, Dec. 14, 1900.
Pupil of H. C. Denslow. M ember:
Conn. AFA.
DEREMEAUX, Irma, Van Dyck Studios,
939 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y.
I.— M e m b e r : SI 1912 (assoc).
DERRICK, William R(oweil), 58 West
57th St., New York, N. Y.
P., C. — Born San Francisco, Cal. Pupil
of Bonnat, Boulanger and Lefebvre in
Paris. Member: NAC; Conn, AFA;
Lotos C. ; Chicago AG: SPNY. Award:
Prize ($100), Conn.AFA, 1916. Work :
"The Plaza," National Gallery, Wash-
ington.
DESCH, Frank H., 222 West 23rd St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer Province-
town, Mass.
P., I.— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil of
Chase and Hawthorne. Member :
F'ellowship PAFA; Salma. C. ; Province-
town AA.
DESERENS, Alma, "The Wilhelm,"
Avondale, Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
DESSAR, Louis Paul, 27 West 67th SL,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Becket Hill,
Lyme, Conn.
P. — -Born Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 22,
1867. Pupil of NAD in New York; Bou-
guereau, Robert-FIeury and Ecole des
Beaux-Arts in Paris. Member: SAA
1898; ANA 1900, NA 1906; Salma.C.1895;
Lotos C; A.Fund S. Awards: Third
class medal, Paris Salon, 1891; medal,
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; hon.
mention, C.I.Pittsburgh, 1897; second
Hallgarten prize, NAD 1899; first Hall-
garten prize, NAD 1900; bronze medal,
Paris Exp., 1900; silver medal, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902. Work: Re-
turn to the Fold" and "The Watering
Place," National Gallery, Washington;
"Wood-Cart." Metropolitan Museum,
New York; "Early Morning" and "Eve-
ning at Longpre," Art Museum, Mont-
clair, N. J.
DESVARREUX-LARPENTEUR, James,
19 Rue de Sevres, Paris, France.
P.— Born Baltimore, Md., Oct. 20, 1847.
Pupil of Van Marcke and Ecole des
Beaux-ArLs in Paris. Award : Gold
medal, Alaska-Yukon Exp., 1909. Spe-
cialty, landscapes with cattle or sheep.
DETHLOFF, Peter H(ans), 130 South 9th
St., East, Salt Lake City, Utah; h. 5509
Lexington Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
P. — Born Barnsdorf, Germany, Sept. 8,
1869. Pupil of William Gaethe and
Christian von Schneidau. Awarded
three first prizes at Utah State Fair
Association. W o r k : Fresco ceiling,
St. Mary's Academy Chapel, Salt Lake
City, Utah.
DE THULSTRUP, TlTure, 33 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y.
I., P.— Member: SI 1901 (hon.);
AWCS; Century Assoc. Awards:
Hon. mention for drawings, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
DETWILLER, F(rederick) K(necht),
Carnegie Hall, 56th St. and 7th Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Noank,
Conn.
P., I., E., A.— Born Easton, Pa., Dec. 31,
1882. Pupil of Ecole des Beaux Arts,
Paris; Instituto di Belle Arti, Florence;
Columbia Univ., New York. Mem-
ber: Paris Ame. Students C; Paris
AAA; Brooklyn WCC; A. Aid S. ; Brook-
lyn Soc. Artists; Con. AFA; Guild of
Amer. Painters; Phila. Print C; Salma.
C; S.Indp.A.; Brooklyn SE. Award :
Shaw prize for etching, Salma. C, 1920.
Represented in the National Gallery,
Washington, D. C; Impei'ial War Mu-
seum, London.
DEVINE, Bernard, Willard, Me.
P.— Born Portland, Me., Oct. 19, 1884.
Pupil of George Bridgman and Robert
MacCameron in New York; Laurens
and Lionel Walden in Paris. Mem-
ber: Paris AAA.
DeVOLL, F. Usher, 19 Arcade Building,
Providence, R. I.
P. — Born Providence, R. I., Dec. 15,
1873. Pupil of R. L School of Design;
Chase, Mowbray, Hawthorne and Henri;
Laurens in Paris. Member: Provi-
dence AC; Salma. C; Providence WCC;
Conn.AFA; Inter.Soc.AL; Lg. of NYA.
Award : Silver medal, P.-P.Exp.,
San F., 1915. Work: "Autumn Land-
scape," R. I. School of Design, Provi-
dence; "Spring," Art Club, St. Johns,
New Brunswick; "Winter in New Eng-
land," Delgado Museum, New Orleans,
La.; "Winter in the Berkshires," New-
comb College, New Orleans, La. Spe-
cialty, landscape.
DEWEY, Alfred J., 34 West 39th St.,
New York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI.
DEWEY, Charles M(elville), 222 West
23d St., New York, N. Y.
Ldscp.P. — Born Lowville, N. Y., July 16,
1849. Pupil of Carolus-Duran in Paris.
Member: ANA 1903, NA 1907; Nat.
Inst. A. L.; Lotos C. Awards: Silver
medal Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
Work : "Edge of the Forest," Corco-
ran Gallery, Washington; "The Grey
Robe of Twilight," Fine Arts Academy,
Buffalo; "The Harvest Moon" and "The
Close of Day," National Gallery, Wash-
ington; "Old Fields," Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia; "Amagansett
from the Fields," "Evening Landscape"
and "November Sunset," Brooklyn In-
stitute Museum; "The A^alley Road,"
Art Museum, Montclair, N. J.; "Home-
ward," Minneapolis Institute of Arts;
"The Sun Shower," Metropolitan Mu-
seum of Art.
DEWEY, Charles S., 2708 Lake View
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Cadiz, O., Nov. 10. 1S80. Self,
taught. Member: Chicago SA.
DEWEY, Julia Henshaw (Mrs. C. M.
Dewey), 222 West 23d St., New York,
N. Y.
P., I.— Born Batavia, N. Y. Pupil of
Charles Melville Dewey. Member:
N. A. Women PS; NAC.
401
DEWING
WHO'S WHO IN ART
DIETERICH
DEWING, Maria Oakey (Mrs. Thomas
W. Dewing), 12 West 8th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, Oct. 27, 1845.
Pupil of NAD and John La Farge in
New York; Couture in Paris.
Awards : Bronze medal, Columbian
Exp., Chicago, 1893; bronze medal,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
DEWING, T(homas) W(ilmer), 12 West
8th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Boston, May 4, 1851. Pupil
of Boulanger and Lefebvre in Paris.
Member: ANA 1887, NA 1888; Ten
American Painters; Nat. Inst. A. L. Spe-
cialty, small figures. Awards :
Clarke prize, NAD 1887; silver medal,
Paris Exp., 1889; gold medal, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901;- gold medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; gold medal. Interna-
tional Exp., Munich, 1905; Lippincott
prize, PAFA, 1906; first medal, C.I.Pitts-
burgh, 1908. Work: "Summer," Na-
tional Gallery, Washington; twenty-two
oil paintings, two screens, one silver
point, a pastel, Freer Collection, National
Gallery, Washington, D. C; "The Reci-
tation," and "Lady in Green and Gray,"
Art Institute, Chicago; "The Letter,"
"Tobit and the Angel," and "Girl at
Desk," Metropolitan Museum, New
York; "Lady with a Mask," Corcoran
Gallery, Washington, D. C; "Writing a
Letter," Toledo Museum; "Lady with a
Macaw," Fine Arts Academy, Buffalo;
"Lady in Gold," Brooklyn Institute Mu-
seum; "Lady in Gray," R. I. School of
Design, Providence; "Lady in Yellow,"
"Lady in Green," and "Lady with
Lute," City Art Museum, St. Louis;
"Lady in Black and Rose," Carnegie
Institute, Pittsburgh; "A Musician,"
Luxembourg Museum, Paris.
DE WITT, Jerome Pennington, Clinton
Studios, 253 W. 42d St., New York, N.Y.
P., I., C, L., T. — Born Newark, N. J.,
May 27, 1885. Pupil of Pratt Institute
under Prellwitz, Beck, Moschcowitz
and Paddock. Member: Lg. of
NYA.
DE WOLF, Wallace L., 109 North Dear-
born St., Chicago, 111.
P., E,, W.— Born Chicago, 111., Feb. 24,
1854. Self-taught. Member: AIC;
Chicago SA; Municipal A. Lg. ; Chicago
SE; Calif. AC; Calif PM; Chicago Art
Commission. Work: "Lake Louise,"
Springfield Art Assoc; "Coast Scene,
Santa Barbara," Union League Club,
Chicago; "Hermit Range, Glacier, B.
C." South Park Commission.
DEXTER, Mary L., 526 Astor St., Mil-
waukee, Wis.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
DEYOUNG, H(arry), A(nthony), 59 East
Van Buren St.; h. 135 West 115th St.,
Chicago, 111.
Landscp. P. — Born Chicago, 111., Aug.
5, 1893. Pupil of AIC, F. de Forrest
Schook. Member: Palette and
Chisel Club.
DIAL, May, Bryn Mawr, Washington.
(P.)
DICK, G(ladys) R(oosevelt), 818 Madison
Ave., New York, N. Y. ; summer, Glen
Head, L. I., N. Y.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., March 10,
1889. Pupil of George Bridgman.
DICKENSON, S. T., 1029 Connecticut St.,
Lawrence, Kan. (P.)
DICKINSON, Sidney E(dward), 152 West
55th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Wallingford, Conn., Nov. 28,
1890. Pupil of Bridgman, Volk and Chase.
Member: Eclectics; Allied AA.
Award : Third Hallgarten prize,
NAD, 1917. Wo r k : "Self Portrait."
Corcoran Gallery, Washington; "Un-
rest," Chicago Art Inst.; "The Young
Painter," "The Black Cape," City Art
Museum, St. Louis. Instructor ASL of
N. Y.
DICKMAN, Charles J(ohn), 628 Mont-
gomery St.; h. Bohemian Club, Post
and Taylor Sts., San Francisco, Cal.
P. — Born Demmin, Germany, May 4,
1863. Pupil of Laurens and Constant
in Paris. Member: San F. AA. Mu-
ral decoration in Syndicate Bldg., Oak-
land, Cal.
DIEDERICH, (Wilhelm) Hunt, 8 East
85th St., New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Woodstock, N. Y,
S., A. — Born Hungary, May 3, 1884.
Member : Salon d'Automme, Paris.
DIEDRICKSEN, Theodore, Jr., 343 York
'St., New Haven, Conn.
E., I.— Pupil of Yale School of Fine Arts;
Baschet and Gervais in Paris. Mem-
ber: New Haven PCC. Instructor in
drawing, Yale School of Fine Arts, New
Haven, Conn.
DIELMAN, Ernest B(enham), 154 West
55th St.; 140 West 55th St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born New York City, Apl. 24, 1893.
Pupil of Volk.
DIELMAN, Frederick, College of the City
of New York, Convent Ave. and 140th
St.; 41 West 10th St., New York, N.
Y.; h. Ridgefield, Conn.
P., I., C, Etcher, T. — Born Hanover,
Germany, Dec. 25, 1847; came to the
United States in childhood. Pupil of
Diez at the Royal Academy in Munich.
Member: ANA 1881, NA 1883 (pres.
1899 to 1909); AWCS; SAA 1905; SI
(hon.) 1910; Mural P.; Nat.Inst.AL;
Century Assoc; Salma.C. (hon.). Pres.
Fine Arts Fed. of N. Y. 1910 to 1915.
Professor of drawing in the College of
the City of New York since 1903. Di-
rector, Art Schools of Cooper Union.
Work: Two mosaic panels, Library of
Congress, Washington, D. C; "Thrift,"
"Law" and "History," Albany (N. Y.)
Savings Bank; six mosaics in Iowa
State Capitol, Des Moines; "A Page,"
Art Museum, Montclair, N. J.
DIETERICH, Louis P., 347 North Charles
St.; h. 824 Edmondson St., Baltimore,
Md.
Port. P. — Born in Germany, Apr. 8,
1842. Member: Char. C.
DIETERICH, Waldemar Franklin, 347
North Charles 'St., Baltimore, Md.
Port. P., I., T.— Born Baltimore, Nov.
10, 1876. Pupil of Constant and Lau-
402
DIETRICH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
DODGE
rens in Paris. Member: Charcoal
C, Baltimore; ASL of N. Y. Instruc-
tor, Maryland Institute, Baltimore.
DIETRICH, Albert M., 6 Garrison Bldg.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
DIETSCH, C. Percival, Saybrook Park,
sf— Born 'New York City, May 23, 1881.
Member: Alumni Ame. Academy
in Rome; NSS 1910; N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1911.
Award: Rinehart Scholarship m
sculpture, American Academy in Rome,
1906 to 1910; hon. mention, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915. Work: Besso Memorial
Monument in Rome; panels for Rice
Institute, Houston, Tex.; "Athlete,'
Peabody Inst., Baltimore.
Dl FILIPPO, A., 306 Rivington St., New
York, N. Y. (S.)
DILLAWAY, Theodore M., 218 Tremont
St., Boston, Mass.; h., 85 Warwick Road,
Melrose Highlands, Mass.
P., T.— M ember: Boston AC. Di-
rector of Manual Arts in Boston Pub-
lic Schools.
DILLAYE, Blanche, 1726 Chestnut St.;
Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I., Etcher. — Born Syracuse, N. Y.
Pupil of PAFA; etching under Stephen
Parrish; painting under Garrido in
Paris. Member: NYWCC; Phila.
WCC; Fellowship PAFA; Plastic C;
N. A. Women PS; Phila. AC. Awards :
Silver medal for etching, Atlanta Exp.
1895; silver medal, AAS 1902; silver
medal for etchings. International Exp.,
at Lorient, France, 1903; gold medal for
water color. Conservation Exp., Knox-
ville, Tenn., 1913. Work : "Still Even-
ing in the Little Street," W. C. Art
Collection. Univ. of Syracuse, N. Y.;
"Arrangement in Green" (oil), Syracuse
Museum of Fine Arts.
DILLER, Mary Black, 902 Pine St., Phila-
delphia, Pa. (P.)
DINSMORE, E. J., 364 West 23rd St.,
New York, N. Y. (I.)
DISMANT, Marion, care of Miss Seal,
The Boxstall, Ft. Washington, Pa. (I.)
DIX. Eulabee (Mrs. Alfred Le Roy
Becker), 57 West 75th St., New York,
N. Y.
Min.P.— Born Greenfield, 111., Oct. 5,
1879. Pupil of St. Louis School of Fine
Arts. Studied in New York, London and
Paris. Member: Pa. S. Min. P.; A.
S. Min. P.
DIXON, Francis S(tiiwell), 90 Percy St.,
Flushing, N. Y.
P.— Born New York City, Sept. 18, 1879.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Member:
Allied AA; Conn. AFA; Salma.C.
DIXON, John J. A., 2508 Jefferson St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
DIXON, Maynard, 273 Valencia St., and
care of Bohemian Club, Post and Tay-
lor Sts., San Francisco, Calif.
P., I. — Born Fresno, Cal., Jan. 24, 1875.
Self-taught. Member: SI 1912; N.Y.
Arch.Lg. (assoc); Mural P.; San Fran-
cisco AA; Bohemian C; Salma.C;
Southwest Soc, Los Angeles. Award:
Bronze medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
Work: Mural paintings — "The Pio-
neers," Southwest Museum, Los An-
geles; four lunettes. Southern Pacific
Depot, Tucson, Ariz. Illustrations:
London's "Men of Forty Mile" and
"Son of the Wolf"; Coolidge's "Hid-
den Water" and "The Texican";
Brady's "The West Wind," etc.; nu-
merous short stories for magazines.
Specialty, Far West subjects, chiefly in
Arizona; also posters.
DOBSON, Margaret (Anna), Teachers'
College, Syracuse University; h. 714
Ostrom Ave.. Syracuse, N. Y.
P., T. — Born Baltimore, Md., Nov. 9,
1888. Pupil of Weir, Vonnoh, Breck-
enridge and Cecilia Beaux. Member:
Md. Inst. Alumni A.
DODD, M(ark) D(ixon), 106 Columbus
Heights, Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.;
summer, Ogunquit, Me.
P., E.— Born St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 28,
1888. Pupil of ASL of N. Y., and
Charles Hawthorne.
DODGE, Arthur B., 230 South Norman-
die Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
P.— M ember: Calif. AC; Calif. PM.
DODGE, Chester L., The Fleur-de-Lys, 7
Thomas St.; h. 29 Waterman St., Prov-
idence, R. I.
P., I.— Born Salem, Me., May 21, 1880.
Studied at R. I. School of Design and
ASL of N. Y. Member: Providence
AC; Providence WCC.
DODGE, Frances F. (Mrs. A. C. Dodge),
care of Fairbanks, Morse & Co., St.
Paul Minn.; summer, care of Mr.
Jamieson, R. D., White Bear Lake,
Minn.
P.— Born Lansing, Mich., Nov. 22, 1878.
Pupil of Duveneck, Meakin, Wessel.
Member: Cincinnati Woman's AC;
MacD. C. of Cincinnati; Cincinnati
Grafters.
DODGE, Ozias, Norwich Town, Conn.;
summer, Center Harbor, N. H.
P., Etcher. — Born Morristown, Vt., Feb.
14, 1868. Pupil of Yale School of
Fine Arts; ASL of N. Y.; Ecole
des Beaux-Arts under Gerome in
Paris. Member: Chicago Soc. of
Etchers; New Haven PCC; Calif. PM.
Bachelor of Fine Arts, Yale Univ. Di-
rector of Norwich (Conn.), Art School
1897-1910. Work: Etchings in Con-
gressional Library, Washington, and
New York Public Library.
DODGE, W. De Leftwich, 51 West lOtl-
St.; h. 155 East 79th St., New York,
N. Y.
Mural P.— Born Liberty, Va., 1867.
Studied in Munich and with Gerome
in Paris. Member: Mural P.
Awards : Gold medal, Prize Fund
Exhibition, New York, 1886; bronze
medal, Paris Exp., 1889; medal, Co-
lumbian Exp., Chicago, 1893. W o r it :
Majestic Theatre, Boston; Empire
Theatre, New York; hotels Astor, Al-
gonquin, Devon and Waldorf-Astoria,
New York; "Ambition," ceiling in Li-
brary of Congress, Washington; Mo-
saics, Hall of Records, New York; mu-
ral paintings, Panama-Pacific Exp., San
Francisco. 1915.
403
DOELGER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
DOUGHERTY
DOELGER, Frank J., 430 Irving Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
DOHERTY, Mrs. Lillian C, 12 Rhode
Island Ave., N. W., Washington, D. C.
P. — Pupil of Corcoran School of Art,
Washington, D. C. ; Rhoda H. Nicholls;
C. W. Hawthorne, and studied in Eu-
rope. Member: Wash. SA.
DOHN, Pauline. See Mrs. Rudolph.
DOKE, Sallie George (FulIIIove) (Mrs.
Fred Doke). Lometa. Texas.
P.— Born Keachie, La. Pupil of Cin-
cinnati Acad., and Chicago Acad. FA.
Member: S. Indp. A. Award:
Gold medal at Dallas, 1916.
DOLINSKY, Nathan, 709 Willoughby
Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. ; summer. Hun-
ter, N. Y.
P., T. — Born in Russia, Aug. 9, 1889.
Pupil of NAD. Member: Salma. C;
N. Y. Arch. Lg. ; Mural P.
DONAH EY, James H., "Plain Dealer".
Cleveland; h; 1887 Hillside Ave., East
Cleveland, O.
I., C, W., L., Cartoonist.— Born West-
chester, O., Apl. 8, 1875. Pupil of
Cleveland School of Art. Member:
Cleveland AA.
DONAHUE, William Howard, Nanuet,
Rockland Co., N. Y.
P.— Born New York City, Dec. 21, 1881.
Pupil of Henry R. Poore, E. L. Warner.
P. A. Bicknell. Member: Brooklyn
SA; Salma C; Wash. AC.
DONALDSON, Alice Willets, 313 West
20th St.. New York, N. Y. ; h. Huguenot
Park, S. I., N. Y.
P., I., C— Born in Illinois, Sept. 28,
1885. Pupil of Cincinnati Academy.
Member: Alumni Pa. Museum School
of Industrial Arts; NYWCC; AWCS.
Colored frontispieces and covers for
"Touring Great Britain," and "The
Book of New York," by Robert Shackle-
ton, etc.
DONALDSON, Mrs. Anne D,, Chagrin
Falls, O.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
DONALDSON, Mrs. John A., 24 Herron
Ave., Bm.sworth, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
DONATO, Giuseppe, 501 South Broad St.;
h. 1512 South 9th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
S. — Born Maida, Calabria, Italy, March
14, 1881. Pupil of Philadelphia Indus-
trial Art School under Grafly and J.
Liberty Tadd and PAFA under Grafly;
Ecole des Beaux-Arts; Julian and Cola-
rossi academies in Paris. Member:
NSS 1909; N.Y.Arch.Lg.; Paris AAA;
Union Internationale des Beaux-Arts
et des Lettres; Fellowship PAFA.
Awards : Stewardson scholarship,
PAFA, 1900 (first time awarded) ; Cres-
son European scholarship, PAFA, 1903-
1905 (first time awarded). Work:
"The Quaker," City Hall, Philadelphia;
and in Pennsylvania Academy of the
Fine Arts.
DONDO, Mathurin M., 526 West 122nd St.;
h. Columbia University, New York, N. Y.
P., W., L., T.— Born Mar. 8, 1884. Pupil
of Hawthorne, Henri, Bellows and Schu-
404
macher. Member: Lg. of N.Y.A.:
5. Indp. A.
DONLEVY, Alice H(eighes), 308 East
173rd St., Bronx, New York, N. Y.
P., C. I., L., W. — Born Manchester,
England, Jan. 7, 1846. Pupil of Women's
-.^rt School of Cooper Union, New York.
Prize for tapestry. Columbian Exp., Chi-
cago, 1893; second prize for Illumina-
tion, Phila. Sketch Club.
DONLON, Louis J.,- care Connecticut
Academy of the Fine Arts, 904 Main
St., Hartford, Conn.
P.— M ember: Conn. AFA. Award:
Dunham prize, Conn. AFA, 1914.
DONLY. Eva Brook, 115 East 27th St.,
New York. N. Y.
P.— Born Simcoe, Ontario. Canada, Apl.
30, 1867. Pupil of F. M. Bellsmith, and.
John Ward Stimson. Member:
NYWCC; NAC; Gamut Club; Newark So-
ciety of Keramic Arts: N. A. Women PS;
Pen and Brush C; Wash. AC; Lyceum
Club of London. Works : "Arrival
of U-Boat 'Deutschland' at Norfolk,
Va.," owned by United States Govern-
ment; "Elba Beach, Bermuda," "Beach,
Lake Erie," National Gallery, Washing-
ton, D. C.
DOOLITTLE. Harold L., 127 North Cata-
lina Ave., Pasadena, Calif.
E.— M ember: Calif. PM.
DORAN, Robert C, 304 West 52nd St.,
New York, N. Y.
Dec.,P.,E. — Born Dallas, Tex., Nov.
13, 1889. Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Mil-
ler in New York.
DOSKOW, Israel, 452 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Russia, Nov. 30, 1881. Pu-
pil of PAFA. Member: Salma.C;
SL
DOUGHERTY, Louis R., 27 Norw^ood
Ave.. Stapleton. S. I. N. Y.
S. — Born Philadelphia, Dec. 24, 1874.
Pupil of PAFA and Drexel Inst. M e m-
b e r : The Scumblers, Phila. ; Fellow-
ship PAFA.
DOUGHERTY, Parke C(ustls), 49 Boule-
vard du Montparnasse; h. 47 Rue Va-
vin, Paris, France.
P. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 11,
1867. Pupil of PAFA; Julian Academy
in Paris. Member: AC Phila.;
Fellowship PAFA 1916; Paris AAA; In-
ter.Soc.A.L., Paris. Awards : Third
prize, Paris AAA; third class medal,
Inter.Exp. Toulouse, France.
DOUGHERTY, Paul, care of Knoedler &
Company, 556 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
Marine P. — Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept.
6, 1877. Studied alone in Paris, London,
Florence, Venice and Munich. Mem-
ber: SAA 1905; ANA 1906, NA 1907;
Nat. Inst. A.L.; Lotos C; Salma.C. 1907;
AWCS; Century Assoc. Awards:
Osborne prize ($500) 1905; second prize,
CI Pittsburgh 1912; Inness gold medal,
NAD 1913; gold medal, P. -P. Exp., San
F., 1915; Carnegie prize, NAD 1915; Alt-
man prize ($1,000) NAD, 1918. Work :
• "The Land and the Sea," Corcoran Gal-
lery, Washington; "Flood Tide," Car-
negie Inst. Pittsburgh; "Moonlit Cove,"
DOUGHTEN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
DREIFOOS
Toledo Museum; "Sun and Storm," Na-
tional Gallery, Washington; "Autumn
Oaks," Brooklyn Institute Museum;
"Storm Quiet," Chicago Art Institute;
"October Seas," "The Road to Cayey,"
and "Lake Louise," Metropolitan Muse-
um, New York; "A Freshening Cale,"
Buffalo Fine Arts Academy; "Spring in
the Hills," Art Museum, Montclair,
N. J.; "Coast of Cornwall," Memorial
Art Gallery, Rochester, N, Y.; "In a
Golden Light," Hackley Gallery, Muske-
gon, Mich.; "After the Gale," City Art
Museum, St. Louis; "Moonlit Surf,"
Minneapolis Institute; "Sun and Surf."
Omaha (Neb.) Museum.
DOUGHTEN, Alice B.,^327 Penn St.,
Camden, N. J.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
DOUGLAS, Harold, Farmington, Conn.
P. — M ember : Conn. AFA; Salma.C.
DOUGLAS, Walter, 264 West 19th St.,
New York, N. Y.; summer, Block Islaiid,
R. I.
P.— Born Cincinnati, O., Jan. 14, 1868.
Pupil of Chase, NAD and ASL in N. Y.
Member: AWCS; Salma.C. 1904.
Work : "In the Shade," Dallas (Tex.)
Art Association. Specialty, poultry.
DOULL. Mary Allison, 18 East 9th St.,
New York, N. Y.; summer, Cape Trav-
erse, Prince Edward Island, Canada.
Min. P., C, T. — Born Prince Edward
Island, Canada. Pupil of NAD in New
York; Julian Academy in Paris.
DOVE, Arthur G., Westport, Conn. (I.)
DOW, Arthur W(esley), 525 West 120th
St.; h. 501 West 120th St., New York,
N. Y.; summer, Ipswich, Mass.
Ldscp. P., E., T., W., L.— Born Ipswich,
Mass. Pupil of Boulanger, Lefebvre,
Doucet and Delance in Paris. Instruc-
tor, Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, 1895-
1904; Professor of Fine Arts, Teachers
College, Columbia Univ., since 1904;
Director, Summer Art School, Ipswich,
Mass. Member: AI Graphic A;
Calif. PM. Awards Hon. mention,
Paris Exp., 1899; bronze medal for paint-
ing and hon. mention for woodcuts, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; medal, Boston
Mechanics Assoc; bronze medal for
woodcuts, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915. Au-
thor of "Composition," "Theory and
Practice of Teaching Art," "Construc-
tive Art Teaching," "By Salt Marshes,"
"Ipswich Prints" and "Prints from
Wood Blocks."
DOW, Leila A., 509 North Henry St.,
Madison, Wis.
P., C, T.— Born Cooksville, Wis., Apr.
2, 1864. Pupil of AIC; John Vander-
poel; F. W. Fursman. Member:
Madison AC; Wis. PS.
DOWDALL, Edward, 369 West 51st St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
DOWNES, Jerome \. H., 83 Sutherland
Rd., Brookline, Mass.
P.— M ember: New Haven PCC.
DOWNES, J(ohn) l(reland) H(owe), 254
Lawrence St.; h. 345 Whitney Ave.,
New Haven, Conn.
Ldscp. P. — Born Derby, Conn., 1861. Pu-
pil of Yale School of Fine Arts and J.
Alden Weir; Merson in Paris. Mem-
ber : New Haven Paint and Clay Club
(pres.); Conn. AFA; Librarian, School
of Fine Arts, Yale University.
DOYLE, Alexander, 718 High St., Ded-
ham, Mass.; summer, Squirrel Island,
Me. " ■■" 1
S.— Born Steubenville, O., Jan. 28, 1857.
Pupil of Nicoli, Dupre, Pellicia; Na-
tional Academies at Carrara and Flor-
ence, Italy. Work: Marble statue of
Rev. William Pinkney, Washington;
bronze equestrian statue of. Gen. Albert
Sidney Johnston and of Gen. G. T.
Beauregard, New Orleans, La.; "Peace,"
Gen. Philip Schuyler, on Revo-
lutionary Monument, Saratoga, N. Y. ;
Gen. James B. Steedman, Toledo;
Gen. Garfield, Cleveland; eight colos-
sal allegorical marble statues In
rotunda. State Capitol, Indianapolis;
statue of Horace Greeley, New York;
Gen. Robert E. Lee, New Orleans, La.;
"Calling the Roll," New Orleans, La.;
Francis Scott Key, Frederick, Md.
Henry W. Grady and Sen. Benjamin
Hill, Atlanta, Ga.; Edwin M. Stanton,
Steubenville, O.; Soldiers' Monument,
Montgomery, Ala.; Gen. Thomas H.
Benton and Gen. Frank P. Blair, for
State of Missouri, and Sen. John E.
Kenna, for State of W. Virginia, In
Capitol, Washington, D. C; Emma Wil-
lard, Troy, N. Y.
DRAKE, Charles, 10 South 18th St., Phil-
adelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
DRAKE, Frank C(ornelius), "New York
World," Pulitzer Bldg., Manhattan; h.
1821 East 15th St., B'klyn., New York,
N. Y.
I.— Born Palmyra, N. Y., Aug. 3, 1868.
Pupil of G. Ferrari, August Will, and
ASL of N. Y. Art director of "New
York World."
DRAKE, Will H(enry), care W. S. Bud-
worth & Son, 424 West 52nd St., New
York, N. Y.; 362 West 9th St., Los
Angeles, Calif.
P., I.— Born New York, June 4, 1856.
Pupil of Julian Academy in Paris under
Constant and Doucet. Member:
ANA 1902; AWCS; NYWCC; Salma.C.
1887; A. Fund S. Award: Hon.
mention, Paris Exp., 1889; Inness prize,
Salma.C. 1903. Specialty, animals. Il-
lustrated Kipling's "Jungle Book."
DRAYTON, Emily. See Mrs. J. Madison
Taylor.
DRAYTON, G(race) G(ebble) (Mrs. W.
Heyward Drayton), 830 Park Ave.,
New York. N. Y.
I.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Oct. 14, 1877.
Member: Fellowship PAFA; Al-
liance. Author and illustrator of
"Fido," "Kitty Puss" and other chil-
dren's books. Originator of Campbell
Soup cards, unbreakable dolls, paper
dolls, etc.
DREIFOOS, Byron G(olding), 17 West
Kinney St., Newark, N. J.; summer,
Oswego, N. Y.
P., L, C, W., L.. T._Born Philadelphia,
Jan. 30. 1890. Member: Fawcett
Sketch C; School Craft C.
405
DRESSLER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
DUMMEtT
DRESSLER, Mrs. Bertha Menzler. See
Menzler-Peyton.
DREYFOUS, Florence, 315 West 99th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, N. Y. Pupil of
Robert Henri.
DREYFUSS, Albert, 232 West 14th St.,
New York, N. Y.
S.— Born New York, N. Y., 1880. Pupil
of George Gray Barnard. M e m b er :
S. Indp. A.; Lg. of N.Y.A. Work:
Arsenal Park Memorial, Pittsburgh, Pa.
DRIER, Dorothea A., Riverdale-on-Hud-
son, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
DROGSETH, Eistein Olaf, 190 Beniteau
Ave., Detroit, Mich. (P.)
DROUET, Clarke, 258 Riverside Drive,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
DRURY, Hope Curtis (Mrs. William H.
Drury), Paradise Road, Newport, R. I.
P. — Born Pawtucket, R. I., June 14,
1889. Pupil of R. I. School of Design.
Member: Providence AC; Providence
WCC.
DRURY, William H., Paradise Road, New-
port, R. I.
Marine P. — Born Fitciiourg, Mass., Dec.
10, 1888. Pupil of R. I. School of De-
sign ; Tarbell and Woodbury. Mem-
ber: Providence AC; Providence WCC
(vice-pres.) ; Newport AA. Award:
Gillespie prize, Newport AA, 1916.
DRYDEN, Helen, 9 East 10th St., New
York, N. Y.
I., D.— Born Baltimore, Md., Nov. 26,
1887. Pupil of PAFA. Member: S.
Indp.A.; SI, 1914 (assoc); Alliance.
Award : Second prize ($500), Newark
poster competition, 1915. Designs cov-
ers for magazines, posters, stage cos-
tumes and scenery.
DRYSDALE, Alexander John, 1301 Bur-
gundy St.; h. 3820 Perrier St., New
Orleans, La.
P., I.— Born Marietta, Ga., March 2,
1870. Pupil of Paul Poincy in New
Orleans; ASL of N. Y., under Curran
and Du Mond. Member: Arts and
Crafts Club of New Orleans. Award :
Gold medal, New Orleans AA., 1909.
Represented in Delgado Museum, New
Orleans.
DU BOIS, Guy Pene, care Montross Gal-
lery, 550 Fifth Ave.; 53 West 9th St.,
New York, N. Y.; summer, Wilton,
Conn.
P., W.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Jan. 4,
1884. Pupil of Chase, DuMond and
Henri.
DU BRAU, Gertrud (Margarete), Pied-
mont and Columbia Avenues, Cumber-
land, Md.
P., I., C, T. — Born in Germany, June
1, 1889. Pupil of Maryland Institute,
Baltimore, and Royal Academy, Leipsig,
Germany. Member: S. Indp. A..
Work: Murals in Masonic Temple,
Cumberland, Md. ; "Entry of Gen. Brad-
dock into Fort Cumberland, 1754," "Gen.
Washington Reviewing Troops at Fort
Cumberland, 1794," City Hall Rotunda,
Cumberland, Md.
DUDENSING, F. Valentine, 116 East 19th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S. Indp. A.
DUDLEY, Frank V., 6356 Greenwood
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P., L. — Born Delavan, Wis. Studied
at Chicago Art Inst. Member: Chi-
cago SA; AIC Alumni Asso.; Chicago
WCC; Chicago AC; Chicago AG; Union
Internationale des Beaux Arts et des
Lettres, Paris. Awards : Chicago
Municipal Art League Prize, 1907; Mu-
nicipal Art League Purchase Prize,
1914; Butler Purchase Prize, AIC, 1915;
Cahn Prize, AIC, 1919; Logan Medal
and Prize, AIC, 1921. Represented in
Chicago Art Institute collection; Muni-
cipal collection of Owatona, Minn; col-
lection of Cedar Rapids Art Associa-
tion; Public School collections of St.
Louis and Chicago.
DUER, Douglas, 51 West 10th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: SL
DUESBERG, Otto, 10 Eldert St., Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
DUFFY, Richard H., 9 East 55th St., New
York, N. Y.
S.— Born New York, N. Y., Jan. 22,
1881. Pupil of ASL of N.Y.; Mercie in
Paris. Member: NSS 1914 (assoc).
DUFNER, Edward, 939 Eighth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Oct. 5, 1872.
Pupil of ASL of Buffalo; ASL of N. Y.;
Whistler and Laurens in Paris; studied
in Madrid. Member: ANA 1910;
NYWCC; AWCS; Salma.C. 1908; Paris
AAA; Lotos C; NAC. Awards:
First Wanamaker prize, Paris AAA
1899; bronze medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1902; Fellowship prize, Soc. of Artists,
Buffalo, 1904; silver medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; Evans prize. AWCS 1909.
Instructor, ASL of N.Y. Work; "In
the Studio," Buffalo Fine Arts Acad-
emy; "By the Window," Milwaukee Art
Soc; "Meadow Brook," Rochelle Public
Library.
DULL, John J., 1520 Locust St.; 5853
Willows Ave., Philadelphia. Pa.
P., Arch.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., 1862.
Pupil of PAFA. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA; T.Sq.C; Phila. Sketch
C. ; Phila.WCC. Award: Gold medal.
Plastic C, 1903.
DUMLER, M(artin) G(eorge), 19 West
8th St.; h. 1607 Dexter Ave., Cincin-
nati. O.
P. — Born Cincinnati, Ohio, Dec. 22,
1868. Pupil of Edward H. Potthast,
M. Rettig, and R. Busebaum. Mem-
ber: Salma. C. ; Cincinnati AC.
DUMMETT, Laura Dow, 867 North 66th
St., Ovprbrook, Philadelphia, Pa.
P., D., T.— Born Allegheny, Pa., Aug. 17,
1856. Pupil of Pittsburgh School of
Design for Women; Julian Academy
and Desgoffe in Paris. Member:
Pittsburgh AA.
406
DU MOND
WHO'S WHO IN ART
DUNN
DU MOND, F. Melville, Monrovia, Calif.
(P.)
DU MOND, F(rank) V(incent), 109 East
10th St., New Yorl?:, N. Y. ; Briarcliff
Manor, N. Y,
P., I., T.— Born Rochester, N. Y., 1865.
Pupil of Boulanger, Lefebvre and Con-
stant in Paris. Member: SAA 1905;
ANA 1900, NA 1906; ASL of N. Y.;
N.Y.ArchLg. 1904; Mural P.; Lotos
C; Salma.C. 1900; Century Assoc;
Players C. ; Rochester AC. Awards :
Third class medal, Paris Salon, 1890;
gold medal, Boston, 1892; gold medal,
Atlanta Exp., 1895; silver medals for
painting and for illustration, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904; hors concours
(jury of awards), P.-P.Exp., San F.,
1915. Director, Dept. of Fine Arts,
Lewis and Clark Exp., Portland, 1905.
Instructor at ASL of N.Y. Work:
"At the Well," Public Gallery, Rich-
mond, Ind.
DU MOND, Helen Savier (Mrs. F. V. Du
Mond), 109 East 10th St., New York,
N. Y.
Min. P.— Born Portland, Ore., Aug. 31,
1872. Pupil of ASL, Robert Brandegee
and F. V. Du Mond in New York; Col-
lin and Merson in Paris. Member:
NAC (life).
DUNBAR, Harold C, The Hayden Studio,
Belmont, Mass.
P., I. — Born Brockton, Mass., Dec. 8,
1882. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art School
under E. L. Major, De Camp and Tar-
bell; Colarossi in Paris, Member:
Boston SWCP; Boston AC; NYWCC;
Copley S.; Concord AA; AWCS.
Award: Hon. mention, AWCS, 1917.
Work: "Spring Evening," Boston
Art Club; "Autumn Glow," Boston City
Club; "Portrait of Arthur Gilman,"
RadclifCe College; "Portrait of Gov.
Woodbury," State House, Vermont;
"The Morning Letter," Municipal Col-
lection, McPherson, Kansas; "Portrait
of Chief Justice Watson," Supreme
Court, Vt. Instructor, Chatham Sum-
mer School of Painting, Cape Cod,
Mass.
DUNBAR, U(lric) S(tonewall) J(ackson),
1517 H St., N. W.; h. 1832 Biltmore St.,
Washington, D. C.
S. — Born London, Ont., Canada, Jan. 31,
1862. Pupil of Frederick A. T. Dunbar
and Art School, Toronto, Can. Mem-
ber: Wash. AC. Awards: Bronze
medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago,
1893; prize, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
prize, Atlanta Exp., 1902; prize, Seattle,
Wash., 1906; St. Louis Exp., 1904; silver
medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915. Work:
Bronze statue of Gov. Alexander R.
Shepherd, Washington; "Singleton Mon-
ument," Oak Hill Cemetery, Washing-
ton; bust of Hendricks and Martin Van
Buren, U. S. Senate; bust of G. G. Hub-
bard, Hubbard Memorial Hall, Wash-
ington; statue of Col. Hammond, At-
lanta, Ga.; Ross memorial bronze,
"Grief," Norwich, Conn.
DUNBIER, Augustus William, 513 Kar-
bach Blk., Omaha, Neb.
P.— Born Nebraska, Jan. 1, 1888. Pupil
of Royal Acad., Dusseldorf; and AIC.
Work: "Clouds," in Public Library,
Omaha.
DUNCAN, Charles W., 11 Cornelia St.,
New York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
DUNCAN, Florida Allen-Harris, Prov-
incetown, Mass.
P. — Born near London, Ontario. Canada.
Self-taught. Member: NYWCC.
DUNCAN, Frederick (Alexander), 1 West
67th St., New York, N. Y.
P., S. — Born Texarkana, Ark., May 11,
1881. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.
DUNCAN, G(eraldin) R(ose), 1550 N.
Garfield, Pasadena, Calif.
P., E. — Born Forest Row, Sussex, Eng-
land, Nov. 12, 1883. Pupil of Desvalli-
eres, Lucien Simon in Paris. Mem-
ber: Calif. AC; Calif. PM.
DUNCAN, W. J., 7 East 8th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma.C. Official art-
ist, /American Expeditionary Forces in
France, 1918.
DUN DAS, Verde Van Voorhees, 630 Or-
chestra Hall, Chicago, 111.; 318 West
Court St., Paris, 111.; summer. Art In-
stitute, Chicago, 111.
S., W., L.— Born Marlin, Tex., Aug. 31,
1865. Pupil of Lorado Taft. Mem-
ber: Chicago Mun. AL; Chicago ASL;
Western Art Society; AAS. Work:
"Baby Buntin'," Arche Club, Chicago.
DUNLAP, Helena, Whittier, Cal.; and
care of Lefebvre-Foinet, 19 Rue Vavin,
Paris, France.
I'. — Born Los Angeles, Cal. Pupil of
PAFA; AIC; Simon in Paris, Mem-
ber: Fellowship PAFA; Cal. AC; San
F. AA; Los A, Modern A, 'Soc.
Awards : Gold and silver medals,
Panama-Calif. Exp., San Diego, 1915;
silver medal, San Francisco AA, 1919.
DUNLAP, Zoe Fleming, Dunlap Villa,
2210 Upland PI., W. H., Cincinnati, O.
Min. P., W.— Born Cincinnati, O., Jan.
13, 1872, Pupil of Cincinnati Academy
under Nowottny; studied in Paris
Member: NAC; Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
DUNN, Charles, 1449 Fairmont St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
P., I., T.— Illustrates for "The Nation's
Business."
DUNN, Edna Marie, 3820 Main St., Kan-
sas City, Mo. (P.)
DUNN, Emelene Abbey, 435 West 119th
St., New York, N. Y. ; 97 Oxford St.,
Rochester, N. Y,
P., S., Arch. — Born Rochester, N. Y.,
May 26, 1859. Pupil in sculpture of Pow-
ers in Florence and Mimdy in Roches-
ter; in painting, of Wiles, 'Satterlee,
Sanderson; Corcos in Florence; Duval
in Paris. Supervisor, State Board of
Education of Connecticut. Established
N. Y. Normal Art School, 1905; Ameri-
can AC, 1913.
DUNN, Harvey T., Tenafly, N. J.
I., P., T.— Born Manchester, S. Dak.,
407
DUNN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
EARHART
March 8, 1884. Pupil of AI Chicago;
Howard Pyle. Member: SI 1913;
Salma.C. Illustrations In current mag-
azines. Official artist A. E. F. during'
Great War. Represented in Smithsonian
Inst., Washington.
DUNN, Nat, 47 E. Fayette St., Union-
town, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
DUNSMORE, John Ward, 96 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born near Cincinnati, O., Feb. 29,
1856. Pupil of Couture in Paris.
Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1903; Salma.
C. 1903; Boston AC, 1881; AWCS;
A. Fund S; Cincinnati AC (pres.
1898-1902.) Awards: Medal, Mass.
Charitable Mechanics' Assoc, Boston,
1881; Evans prize, Salma.C. 1914. Direc-
tor, Detroit Institute of Arts 1888-90; di-
rector, Detroit School of Arts 1890-94.
Work: "Macbeth," Ohio Mechanics'
Institute, Cincinnati; "All's Fair in Love
and War," Lassell Seminary, Auburn-
dale, Mass.; represented in collection
of Salmagundi Club, New York, N. Y.
Specialties, historical subjects and por-
traits.
DUNTON, W. Herbert, Taos, Taos Co.,
New Mexico.
P., I., W. — Born Augusta, Me., Aug. 28,
1878. Pupil of Andreas M. Anderson,
De Camp, F. V. Du Mond, William
L. Taylor, Ernest L. Blumenschein,
Fred C. Yohn. M e fn b e r : Salma. C;
Taos SA. Work: "The Navaho Coun-
try," Peoria (111.) Societ" of Applied
Arts. Specialty, paintings of the West.
DUPARQUE, Paul, Woodcrest Ave., White
Plains, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
DUPHINEY, Wilfred l(srael), Fleur-de-
lis Bldg., 7 Thomas St., Providence. R.
I.; h. 95 Carpenter St., Pawtucket, R. I.
P., I., T. — Born Central Falls, R. I.,
Sept. 16, 1884. Pupil of W. C. Loring
and Albert F. Schmitt. Member:
Prov. AC. ; Prov. WCC. Works: Por-
trait of Bishop Hickey in Providence,
R. I.; portrait Ex-Mayor John Lamay,
Central Falls, R. I. Illustrations for
magazines.
DUPRE, E., 117 Magnolia Ave., Jersey
City, N. J. (I.)
DUPREZ, Mrs. Elizabeth F. Kruseman
Van Elten, care of P. Foinet, 21 Rue
Brea, Paris. France.
P. — Born New York. Pupil of NAD;
Courtois and Collin in Paris. Mem-
ber: Paris A. Woman's AA.
DURKEE, Helen Winslow (Mrs. C. J.
Mileham), 124 West 72nd St., New York,
N. Y.
Min. P. — Born New York, N. Y. Pupil
of ASL of N. Y., Chase, Du Mond
and Mora. Member: Pa. S. Min. P.;
N.A. Women P.S. ; A. S. Min. P. Award :
C. D. Smith Memorial prize, Baltimore
Water Color Club.
DUSHINSKY, J., 64 East 88th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
DUSTIN, Silas S., Wright St., Westport,
Conn.
Ldscp.P. — Born Richfield, O. Pupil of
NAD and William M. Chase. M e m -
b e r : A.Fund S.; Salma.C; Lg. of
NYA.
DUTCH, George Sheldon, 1501 Barnard
Ave., Nashville, Tenn.
P., T. — Born Chelsea, Mass., Aug. 16,
1891. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art School
under Major and DeCamp. Mem-
ber: College AA.
DWIGGINS, W(illiam) A(ddison), 384A
Boylston St., Boston, Mass.; h. Leavitt
St., Hingham, Mass.
I., W. — Born Martinsville, Ohio, June
19, 1880. Member: Boston SWCP;
Boston Soc. of Printers; Boston AC.
DWIGHT, Julia S. L., 1651 Beacon St.,
Brookline, Mass.
P.— Born Hadley, Mass., Dec. 2, 1870.
Pupil of Tryon and Tarbell in Boston;
Brush in New York.
DWIGHT, Mabel, 111 West 10th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember : S.Indp.A.
DYE, Clarkson, 2595 Union St., San
Francisco, Cal.; summer, Bon Air, Cal.;
and Santa Barbara, Cal.
P. — Born San Francisco, Cal., June 30,
1869. Pupil of Virgil Williams, Bur-
ridge, Michelson, etc. Work: Mural
decorations in Cathedral of Los An-
geles, Durango, Mexico; and Grand
Opera House, Waco, Tex.
DYER, Mrs. Agnes S., 483 North Grove
St., East Orange, N. J.
P. — Born San Antonio, Texas, Feb. 14,
1887. Pupil of Julian Onderdonk, Arthur
Dow. John Carlson. ASL of N. Y.
DYER, H. Anthony, 170 Blackstone Blvd.,
Providence, R. I.
Ldscp.P., L. — Born Providence. C^ct. 28,
1872. Studied in Holland and France.
Member: Providence AC (ex-pres.);
Providence WCC (pres.); Boston
SWCP; Newport AA. Work: "The
Road that Leads Them Home," water
color, Corcoran Gallery, Washington,
D. C.
DYER, H(arry) W., 483 North Grove St.,
East Orange, N. J.
P., I. —Born Portland, Me., Nov. 16, 1871.
Pupil of Chas. L. Fox in Portland;
Frank W. Benson and Ross Turner in
Boston; Voitz Preissig and ASL of
N.Y. Member: S.Indp.A.
DZIEKOUSKA, Kasimir, 1947 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
EAKINS, Susan M., 1729 Mt. Vernon St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
EARHART, John Franklin, Perin Bldg.,
Cincinnati, O.; h. Fernbank, O.
Ldscp.P.— Born in Ohio, March 12, 1853.
Member: Cincinnati AC. Award :
Landscape prize ($100), Cincinnati AC
1903.
408
EARLE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
EDDY
EARLE, Elinor, 620 S. Washington Sq..
h. Stenton Ave., Chestnut Hill, Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia. Pupil of PAPA.
Member: Plastic C; Fellowship
PAFA. Award : Mary Smith prize,
PAFA 1902; bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904.
EARLE, L(awrence) C(armichael). Died
November 20, 1921.
P.— Born New York, Nov. 11, 1845.
Studied in Munich, Florence and Rome.
Member: ANA 1897; AWCS; A.Fund
S; AIC (hon.); NYWCC. Work:
Art Institute of Chicago; decorations
in Chicago National Bank. Specialty,
portraits.
EASLEY, J., 3 Vandam St., New York,
N. Y. (I.)
EASTMAN, Ruth, 9 West 9th St., New
York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: SI.
EASTMAN, William Joseph, 1868 East
82nd St., Cleveland, Ohio; summer,
Ogunquit, Me.
P., C, T. — Born Cleveland, Nov. 14,
1888. Pupil of Cleveland School of Art.
EASTON, Spencer G., 16 State St.^ Roch-
ester, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
EATON, Charles Warren, h. Bloomfleld,
N. J.
Ldscp.P.— Born Albany, N. Y., Feb. 22,
1857. Pupil of NAD and ASL. of N. Y.
Member: AWCS; NYWCC; Salma.C.
1897 ; A.Fund S. ; Lotos C. Awards:
Hon. mention, Paris Exp., 1900; Proctor
prize, Salma. C. 1901; silver medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902; Inness prize,
Salma.C. 1902; Shaw prize, Salma.C.
1903; gold medal, ACPhila., 1903; Inness
gold medal, NAD 1904; silver medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904; gold medal,
Paris Salon, 1906; silver medal,
Buenos Aires Exp., 1910. Work:
"Dunes at Knocke, Belgium," Cincin-
nati Museum; "Gathering Mists," Na-
tional Gallery, Washington; "Connecti-
cut Pines," B'klyn Ins. Museum; "The
Strip of Pines," Art Museum, Montclair,
N.J.; "Snow Scene" and "Landscape,"
Hackley Gallery, Muskegon, Mich.
EATON, Hugh M., 339 Halsey St., Brook-
lyn, New York, N. Y. ; summer, "The
Fircone," Montville, N. J.
P., I., C— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Jan.
25, 1865. Pupil of J. B. Whittaker in
Brooklyn; Beckwith, Cox and Chase in
New York. Member: NSC. Spe-
cialty, bookplates and illumination;
Eaton lead block prints.
EATON, Margaret Fernie (Mrs. Hugh M.
Eaton), 339 Halsey St., Brooklyn, New
York, N. Y.; summer, "The Fircone,"
Montville, N. J.
P., I., C. — Born Leamington, England,
April 22, 1871. Pupil of J. B. Whit-
taker in Brooklyn; ASL of N. Y. under
Cox and Mowbray. Member: NY
WCC; ASL of N. Y. (life).
EBBELS, Victoria, 1213 Carrier St.,
Denton, Texas.
P., T.— Born Hasbrouck Heights, N. J.,
Oct. 9, 1900. Pupil of John Sloan, George
Luks, Robert Henri, George Bridgman,
Frank Van Sloan and others. Mem-
ber: Alliance; Lg. of N.Y.A.; S. Indp.
A.
EBERHARD, Robert G., 1931 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
S.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
EBERLE, Abastenia St. Leger, 206%
West 13th St., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Webster City, la., April 6,
1878. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; George
Grey Barnard. Member: ANA; NSS,
Grey Barnard. Member: NSS
1906. Awards: Bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; Barnett prize, NAD
1910; bronze medal, P. -P. Exp., San F.,
1915. Work : "Girl on Roller Skates"
and "Mowgli," Metropolitan Museum,
New York; "Windy Doorstep," Wor-
cester Art IMuseum; Peabody Art Inst.,
Baltimore; Newark Museum, and Car-
negie Inst., Pittsburgh; "Little Mother,"
Chicago Art Institute; "The Dancer,"
Venice, Italy, and Twentieth Century
Club, Buffalo, N. Y.; "Rag Time,"
Toledo Art Museum; "Hurdy Gurdy,"
Detroit Institute.
EBERT, Charles H., Lyme, Conn.; sum-
mer, Monhegan Island, Me.
P. — Born Milwaukee, Wis., July 20,
1873. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy;
ASL of N. Y. ; Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: Greenwich SA; Salma.C.
Awards : Bronze medal, Buenoa
Aires Exp., 1910; silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915.
EBERT, Mary Roberts (Mrs. Charles H.
Ebert), Lyme, Conn.; summer, Monhe-
gan Island, Me.
P., C— Born Titusville, Pa., Feb. 8,
1873. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. ; Twacht-
man; Hunt in Boston. Member:
AAVCS (assoc); N.A. Women PS.
EBY, Kerr, Westport, Conn.
I., E.— Born Tokio, Japan, Oct. 19. 1890.
Member: Salma. C. ; P.-G.
ECHERT, Florence, The Valencia, 276
St. George St., St. Augustine, Fla. ;
summer, "Little Chalet", Intervale
White Mountains, N. H.
P., C— Born Cincinnati, O. Pupil of
Cincinnati AA; ASL of N. Y. ; W. M.
Chase. Member: Cincinnati Wo-
man's AC.
ECKFORD, Jessiejo, 4403 Gaston Ave.,
Dallas, Texas.
P.— Born Dallas, Texas, Nov. 21, 1895.
Pupil of Aunspaugh Art School, Hale
Bolton, Frank Reaugh. Member:
Dallas Art Asso.; S.Indp.A. Awards:
Bronze medal 1916, Gold medal 1919,
Dallas Woman's Forum Exhibit.
EDDY, Henry B., care of N. Y. Sunday
Anierican, 2 Duane St., New York, N.
Y. ; h. Mamaroneck, N. Y.
I.— Born New York, N. Y., Sept. 16,
1872. Member: SI 1914.
EDDY, Henry S(tephens), 58 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y. ; h. Springfield
Road, Westfield, N. J.; summer, Prov-
incetown, Mass.
P.— Born Rahway, N. J., Dec. 31, 1878.
Pupil of Volk, Cox, Twachtman, Al-
phonse Mucha and Geo. E. Browne.
409
EDENBOROUGH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
EDWARDS
Member: Salma. C; Beachcombers
of Provincetown; A. Aid S.; A.Fund S. ;
Provincetown AA. ; Am. Painters G.
Work: "In from the Nets," Mil-
waukee Art Inst.
EDENBOROUGH, Aubrey C, 373 Fifth
Ave., New York, N. Y.; h. 28 Elmhurst
Ave., Elmhurst, L. I., N. Y.
Des., C. — Born London, Eng., Mar. 19,
1887. Member: Guijd of Free Lance
A.
EDENS, Annette, University of Washing-
ton, Seattle, Wash. (P.)
EDERHEIMER, Richard, 18 East 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
Port. P. — Born Frankfort, Germany,
Oct. 25, 1878. Member: Lg. of
N.Y.A.; S.Indp.A.
EDGERLY, Beatrice, The Lenox, 13th
and Spruce Sts., Philadelphia, P. (P.)
EDGERLY, Gladys C, The* Lenox, 13th
and Spruce Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
EDHOLiVI, C(harlton) L(awrence), 10
Larchmont Ave., Larchmont, N. Y.
P., I., W.— Born Omaha, Neb., Mar. 21,
1879. Pupil of Ludwig Herterich in
Munich. Member: Lg. of N.Y.A.,
Whitney Studio Club.
EDINGER, Dorothy, 52 West 12th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — ^M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
EDIVIONDSON, William J., 2362 Euclid
Ave., Cleveland, O.; h. 2812 Scarborough
Rd., Cleveland Heights, O.
P.— Born Norwalk, O., 1868. Pupil of
Vonnoh in Philadelphia; Aman-Jean
and Lefebvre in Paris. Member :
Fellowship PAFA; Cleveland SA; Cleve-
land AA. Awards : Second Toppan
prize, PAFA; European traveling schol-
arship, PAFA; first prize, figure paint-
ing, popular vote prize and Penton
medal, Cleveland Museum of Art, 1919.
Work in: Delgado Art Museum, New
Orleans; Cleveland Museum; Chamber
of Commerce, Cleveland; Western Re-
serve University; Society for Savings,
Cleveland; Fellowship PAFA, Philadel-
phia; State House, Columbus, O.
EDOUARD, Giovani, 417 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
EDROP, Arthur N(orman), 1630 Sansom
St., Philadelphia, Pa., h. 5 Woodside
Ave., Narberth, Pa.
P., I. — Born Birmingham, England, May
15, 1884. Pupil of Whittaker in Boston.
Member: Asso. Artists of Phila-
delphia. Contributor to "Life", "Judge",
etc.
EDSTROM, David, 33 West 67th St.; 15
Gramercy Park, New York, N. Y.
S., W., L., T.— Born Hvetlanda, Swe-
den, March 27, 1873. Pupil of Bor-
jison. Royal Acad., Stockholm; Injal-
bert in Paris. Award : Silver medal.
World's Fair, St. Louis, 1904. Work:
"Soldiers Monument," Ottumwa, Iowa;
"Isis" and "Nepthys," Masonic Temple,
Washington, D. C; War memorial re-
lief, Montreal, Can.; "Portrait of Judge
G. F. Moore," Scottish Rite Temple, Dal-
las, Tex.; "Athlete," National Museum,
Stockholm, Sweden; "Cry of Poverty,"
"Caliban," "Portrait of Baron Beck-
Friis" and "Portrait of Dr. Romdahl"
in Gothenburg Museum, Sweden; reliefs
in the Faehrens Gallery, Stockholm;
"Portrait of the Crown Prince of
Sweden," and "Portrait of Princess
Patricia of Connaught," in the Royal
Palace, Stockholm.
EDWARDS, A. Elsie, 3800 Nebraska Ave.,
Washington, D. C.
P. — M ember: Wash. WCC.
EDWARDS, Edward B., 127 West 12th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., L, D.— Born Columbia, Pa., Feb. 8,
1873. Studied in Paris and Munich.
Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg., 1892; A. L
Graphic A.; Salma.C; Guild of Free
Lance A.
EDWARDS, George Wharton, 331 Madison
Ave., New York, N. Y. ; h. Greenwich,
Conn.
P., I., W. — Born Fair Haven, Conn.
Studied in Antwerp and in Paris.
Member: NYWCC; AWCS; NAC;
SI; Greenwich Soc. A. Awards:
Bronze and silver medals, Boston,
1884 and 1890; bronze medal, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901, for painting,
and Jion. mention for drawing; sil-
ver medal, Charleston Exp., 1902;
medal, Barcelona, Spain, 1902; medal
of King Albert, 1920; Golden Palms
of French Academy, 1921. Manager,
art department, Collier's, 1898 to 1903;
Am. Bank Note Co. since 1904. Work:
Mural dec, "Henrik Hudson," U. S.
Military Academy; illustrated Austin
Dobson's "Sun Dial"; "Old English
Ballads," "The Last Leaf," by O. W.
Holmes, etc. Author of "Alsace-Lor-
raine," "Vanished Towers and Chimes
of Flanders," "Vanished Halls and
Cathedrals of France," "Holland of To-
day," "Belgium, Old and New," etc.
EDWARDS, H(arry) C, 735 Fulton St.;
h. 754 Halsey St., Brooklyn, New York,
N. Y. ; summer, Gananoque, Ontario,
Canada.
P., L— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Nov. 29,
1868, Pupil of Adelphi College, Brook-
lyn, under J. B. Whittaker; ASL of
N. Y. under Mowbray. Member:
Salma. C, 1901; Brooklyn SA. Illustrated
"The Gun Brand," "Blackwater Bayou,"
etc.
EDWARDS, Kate F(lournoy), 35 East
Fourth St., Atlanta, Ga.
P.— Born Marshallville, Ga., July 29,
1877. Pupil of AIC; and Simon in Paris.
Member: The Cordon, Chicago; At-
lanta AA. Award : First prize.
Southeastern Fair Ex. 1916, Atlanta, Ga.
first prize, Atlanta AA, 1921. Work :
Portrait Judge Barbour, property of U.
S. Gov,. Washington, D. C; portrait
Gov. Slaton, property of State of
Georgia; portrait of Senator A. S. Clay,
Georgia State Capitol,
EDWARDS, Mary L., 1 West 67th St.,
New York, N. Y,
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
EDWARDS, Robert, 46 Washington
Square, New York, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Oct. 4, 1879.
Pupil of ASL of Buffalo; ASL of N. Y.;
410
EGGLESTON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
ELMORE
Chase School; Eric Pape School and
Cowles School in Boston. Member :
SI 1910. Illustrated "The Lovers of
Sanna," "Eve's Second Husband," "The
Wiving of Lance Cleveridge." Com-
poser of "The Song Book of Robert
Edwards." Editor of "Mr. Quill."
EGGLESTON, Benjamin, 164 East 22d
St., Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.; sum-
mer, Lyme, Conn.
P. — Born Goodhue Co., Minn., Jan. 22,
1867. Pupil of Minneapolis School of
Fine Arts under Douglas Volk. Mem-
ber: Brooklyn AC; Brooklyn WCC;
Salma.C, 1903; Brooklyn SA.
EH MANN, Fred, 515 West 4th St., Cin-
cinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati AC.
EICHLEAY, Harry O., 2115 Sidney St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
EILERS, Emma, 751 St. Marks Ave.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Littleworth Lane, Sea Cliff, L. I., N. Y.
P., C— Born New York. Pupil of ASL
of N. Y. under Cox, Chase, Mowbray,
Beckwith and Du Mond. Member:
ASL of N. Y.; N.Y.Woman's AC; Fel-
lowship PAFA.
EILSHEMIUS, Louis, 118 East 57th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
EIMER, Elsa, 209 East 19th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
EISENLOHR, E. G., 324 Eads Ave., Sta-
tion A, Dallas, Tex.
P., L., T. — Born Cincinnati, O., Nov. 9,
1872. Pupil of R. J. Onderdonk and F.
Reaugh in Texas; Academy Karlsruhe,
Germany, under G. Schoenleber. M e m-
b e r : Salma C. Work: "The Gar-
den," Dallas Public Art Gallery; Eliza-
beth Ney Museum, Austin, Tex. Au-
thor of "Study and Enjoyment of Pic-
tures"; "Tendencies in Art and Their
Significance"; "Landscape Painters."
ELAND, John Slienton, Rodin Studios,
200 West 57th St., New York, N. Y.
P., E. — Born Market, Harborough, Eng-
land, March 4. 1872. Pupil of Sargeant.
Member: NAC. Illustrated "Flower
Legends for Children". "Willy Wind and
Jock and the Cheese", etc.
ELDER, Arthur J(ohn), Nutley, N. J.
P. E., C. — Born London, England, Mar.
28, 1874. Pupil Walter Sickert, Theodore
Roussel, Charles Swinstead. Mem-
ber: Art Workers Guild, London.
Award : Medal, Crystal Palace,
London, 1901.
ELLEN, Dorothy Hambly, 512 East End
Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember : Pittsburgh AA.
ELLERHUSEN, Uiric H(enry), 939
Eighth Ave.; 51 West 10th St., New
York, N. Y.
S., T.— Born in Germany, Apl. 7, 1879:
came to America at age of 15. Pupil
of AIC; Lorado Taft; ASL of N. Y.;
Karl Bitter. Member: NSS 1912;
N. Y. Arch. Lg. 1914; Beaux-Arts Inst.
of D. (hon.), 1916; Am. Numismatic Soc.
(assoc), 1919. Award: First prize in
competition for medal for St. Louis Art
Guild. Work: "Contemplation".
"Wonderment", "Meditation and
"Frieze of Garland Bearers", exterior
decorations, Fine Arts Bldg., San Fran-
cisco; Schwab Memorial Fountain, Yale
University Campus, New Haven, Conn.;
medal for St. Louis Art League; Penn-
sylvania Memorial medal to employees
of the Penna. R. R. in miliffiry service.
ELLINGER, Carlton D., 8 West 92nd St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
ELLiOTT, Eilzabeth Shippen Green (Mrs.
Huger Elliott), Allen Lane, Philadel-
phia, Pa.
I. — Born Philadelphia, I'a. Pupil of
PAFA and of Howard Pyle. Mem-
ber: Phila. WCC; NYWCC; SI
(assoc.) 1903; Inter-Soc. of Sculptors,
Painters and Gravers; Fellowship PAFA;
Plastic C; Providence AC. Awards :
Second Corcoran prize. Wash. WCC
1904; bronze medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904; Mavy Smith prize, PAFA 1905;
Beck prize, Phila. WCC 1907; silver
medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
ELLIOTT, Hannah, 2036-13th Ave., South,
Birmingham, Ala.
P., Min. P., I., T.— Born Atlanta, Ga.,
Sept. 29, 1876. Studied in America and
Europe. Award : Third prize for
Miniature, All Southern Exhibition,
Charleston, S. C, 1921.
ELLIOTT, John, Newport, R. L
P.— Born in England, April 22, 1858.
Pupil of Julian Academy and of Caro-
lus-Duran in Paris; Villegas at Rome.
Decorated by King of Italy in 1910 for
devotion to survivors of Messina earth-
quake. Award: Hunt prize, New-
port AA, 1917. Work: "Triumph of
Time," ceiling decoration, Boston Public
Library; "Diana of the Tides," mural
decoration. National Museum, Wash-
ington, D. C; Metropolitan Museum,
New York, N. Y. ; Old State House,
Boston, and in the Ethnographical Mu-
seum, Athens.
ELLIOTT, Robert R., 170 Green Lane,
Manayunk, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
ELLIS, Charles, care of Provincetown
Players, 133 Macdougall St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
ELLIS, Joseph Bailey, 431 Fourth Ave.;
h. 5546 Pocusset St., Pittsburgh, Pa.;
summer. North Scituate, Mass.
S., T. — Born North Scituate, Mass., May
24, 1890. Pupil of Albert H. Munsell,
Bela Pratt; Peter and Injalbert in Paris.
Member: Copley S., Boston Arch.
C, Pittsburgh AA.
ELMENDORF, Stella. 1320 University
Ave., Madison, Wis.
S. — M ember: Wis. PS.
ELMER, Rachel Robinson (Mrs. Robert
Elmer), 508 West 122nd St., New York,
N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
ELMORE, Elizabeth Tinker, 345 West
57th St., New York, N. Y. (P.)
411
ELWELL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
ENGLER
ELWELL, F(ranl<) Edwin. Died January
23, 1922.
S. — Born Hubbardville, Concord, Mass.,
June 15, 1858. Pupil of Daniel C.
French in Concord; Falguiere and Ecole
des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Member:
Cincinnati AC (hon.). Curator of the
Depart, of Statuary, Metropolitan Mu-
seum of Art, New York, 1903-05.
Awards : Medal, Columbian Exp.,
Chicago, 1893; gold medal, AC Phila.
1891 and 1897; silver medal, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901. Hilver medal for
architecture from King of Belgium.
Work: "Dicltens and Little Nell,"
Philadelphia; Equestrian statue of Gen.
Hancock, Gettysburg, Pa.; "New Life,"
Cemetery, Lowell, Mass.; "Greece" and
"Rome," New York Custom House;
"Dispatch Rider," Orange, N. J.; "Lin-
coln Monument," Orange, N. J.; "Ad-
miial Davis," National Naval Monu-
ment, Vicksburg, Miss.; "Gen. Frederick
Steele" and "The Flag," Vicksburg,
Miss.; "Death of Strength," Garden of
Old Cathedral, Edam, Holland; "Sir
Peter Esselmont," Aberdeen (Scotland)
Library; "Egypt Awaking," Paris,
France; "The New Life," Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia, Pa.; "Aqua
Viva," Metropolitan Museum, New
Yorlc; "Genius of Memory," Lowell
Cemetery; Amzi Dodd Memorial, Mu-
tual Benefit Life. Newark, N. J.
ELWELL, John H., 30 Bromfield St.,
Boston, Mass.; h. 33 Brewster Rd.,
Newton Highlands, Mass.
P., S., I., E., W.— Born Marblehead,
Mass., Mar. 10, 1878. Pupil of Vesper
L. George, Reuben Carpenter.
ELY, Edward Francis, 36 Prospect St.,
Providence, R. L
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
ELY, Letitia Maxwell, New Hope, Pa.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
EIVIERSON, Arthur W(ebster), 176 Waver-
ly PI., New York, N. Y.
P., L, E., T.— Born Honolulu, Hawaii,
Dec. 5, 1885. Pupil of John C. Johan-
sen. Member: ASL of N. Y.; Al-
liance; Provincetown AA.
EMERSON, C(harles) Chase, 107 Fenway
Studios, 30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.
I., P.— Member: SI 1912; Salma.C;
Boston AC.
EMERSON, Edith, "Cogslea," Allen Lane,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P., T.— Born Oxford, O., July 27, 1888.
Pupil of AIC; PAFA and Violet Oakley.
Member: Fellowship PAFA; Phila.
Print C; Phila. AlUance. Work:
Mural decorations in the Little Theatre,
Philadelphia; Roosevelt memorial win-
dow, Temple Keneseth Israel, Philadel-
phia, Pa.
EMERSON, W. C, 109 West 84th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer. New Canaan,
Conn.
P., Arch. — M ember: Chicago SA;
Chicago WCC; NYWCC; New Canaan
SA. Award : Englewood Club prize.
EMERTON, James H., Fenway Studios, 30
Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.
I, — Born Salem, Mass., 1847. Mem-
ber: Copley S. 1894. Illustrates zoo-
logical publications. Specialty, Ame.
spiders. 1 y ^[
EMMET, Ellen G. See Mrs. Wm. B. Rand.
EMMET, Jane Erin. See Mrs. Von
Glehn. | i^
EMMET, Leslie, 126 East 34th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — Member: N. A. Women PS.
EMMET, Lydia Field, 535 Park Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Stockbridge,
Mass. iTt^
Port. P., I.— Born New Rochelle, N. Y.,
Jan. 23, 1866. Pupil of Chase, Mow-
bray, Cox and Reid in New York;
Bouguereau, Collin, Robert-Fleury and
MacMonnies in Paris. Member:
ANA 1909, NA 1912; ASL of N. Y. ; NY-
WCC; Port. P.; Conn. AFA; N. A.
Women PS. Awards : Bronze medal,
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1S93; bronze
medal, Atlanta Exp., 1895; hon. men-
tion, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; Shaw
prize, SAA 1906; Proctor prize, NAD
1907; Clarke prize, NAD 1909; hon. men-
tion, CI Pittsburgh, 1912; Bok prize
(first award), PAFA 1915; popular prize,
Corcoran Gallery of Art,- Washington,
1917; Maynard portrait prize, NAD, 1918;
Hudson prize. Conn. AFA, 1919.
EMMET, Rosina. See Mrs. Sherwood.
EMMONS, Mrs. C(hansonetta) S(tanley),
'21 Bennington St., Newton, Mass.
P.. C— Born Kingfield, Me., Dec. 30,
1858. Pupil of Enneking and Alice Beck-
ington. Member: Boston SAC.
Represented in SAC collection, Boston.
EMMONS, Dorothy Stanley, 21 Benning-
ton St., Newton, Mass.
P. — Born Roxbury, Mass., June 14, 1891.
Pupil of Woodbury, J. G. Browne, G. A.
Thompson and G. L. Noyes. Director
of Occupational Therapy at Boston
Consumptives' Hospital.
EMRICH, Harvey, Woodstock, N. Y. (I.)
ENGEL, Richard Drum, 1634 Third St.,
N. W., Washington, D. C.
P., W.— Born Washington, D. C, Dec.
25, 1886. Member: Wash. AC; See.
Wash. A.
ENGELS, Charles, care of Helen Page,
21 West 9th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
ENGLE, Amos W., 44 West 50th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: NYWCC.
ENGLE, H(arry Leon), Athenseum Bldg.,
59 East Van Buren St., Chicago, 111.;
summer, Yorkville, 1)1.
Ldscp.P. — Born Richmond, Ind., Feb. 24,
1870. Pupil of AI Chicago. Mem-
ber: Palette and Chisel C; Chicago
SA. Award: Palette and Chisel Club
prize, 1917. Work: "Old Lyme
Road," purchased by Chicago Art Com-
mission, 1914. "Laurel Blossoms," Long
Beach (Calif.) Public Library.
ENGLER, Arthur, 150 Nassau St., New
York, N. Y. ; h. 36 Gardner Ave., Jersey
City, N. J. ; summer. Ideal Beach, N. J.
Engr., D. — Born Jersey City, Mar. 26,
1885. Pupil of Francis Clarke. M e m -
412
ENGLISH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
EVANS
b e r : American
Indp. A. Award
plate, Grolier Club,
Bookplate Soc. ; S.
1st prize for book-
1921.
ENGLISH, Frank F., Point Pleasant,
Bucks Co., Pa.
P.— Born Louisville, Ky., Dec. 4, 1854.
Pupil of PAFA; studied in England and
Holland. Member: Fellowship
PAFA; Phila. Sketch C. Award:
Gold medal, AAS. Phila. 1902.
ENGLISH, Mabel Bacon Plimpton (Mrs.
J. L. English), 210 Fern St., Hartford,
Conn. ; summer, Weekapaug, R. I.
P.— Born Hartford, Feb. 18, 1861. Pu-
pil of Chase and D. W. Try on. Mem-
ber: Hartford AS; Hartford AC; Hart-
ford-Municipal AS; Conn. AFA; Hart-
ford Arts and Crafts C.
ENNEKING, J(oseph) Eliot, 17 Webster
Square, Hyde Park, Mass.; summer,
Mystic, Conn.
P. — Born Hyde Park, Mass. Pupil of
De Camp, Benson and Tarbell in Bos-
ton. Member: Boston AC; Copley
S.
ENNIS, George Pearse, 58 West 57th St.,
New York, N. Y.; summer, Meddy-
bemps. Me.
P.— Born St. Louis, Mo., July 21, 1884.
Pupil of Chase. Member: Salma.C;
AWCS; Allied AA; A.Aid S.; N. Y.
Arch. Lg.; NYWCC; Guild of American
Painters. Work: Three victory
windows in New York Military Acad.;
memorial windows, New York Athletic
Club; Eastport, Me.
ENNIS, Georgia L(eaycroft), (Mrs. G. P.
Ennis), 58 West 57th St., New York,
N. Y. ; summer, Meddybemps, Me.
P., S. — Born Wading River, Long Isl-
and. Pupil of Chase and Hayes Miller.
ENOS, E. IViarguerite, St. Paul's Rectory,
Troy, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
ENQUIST, Mary B., lll-14th St., N. E.,
Washington, D. C.
S.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
ENRIGHT, Mrs. Maginel Wright, 20
West 10th St., New York, N. Y.
I.— M e m b e r : SI 1912 (assoc).
ENRIGHT. Walter J., 23 East 9th St.,
New York, N. Y.
I.— Born Chicago, 111., July 3, 1875. Pu-
pil of AIC. Member: SI 1910.
ENTRESS, Albert, 79 Allen Place, Hart-
ford, Conn.
P. — M ember: Conn. AFA.
ERB, George, Thaw Bldg., Pittsburgh,
Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
ERICSON, David, 48 Commercial St.,
Provincetown, Mass.
P. — Born Motala, Sweden, April 15,
1870. Pupil of Chase, Whistler and
Prinet. Award : Silver Medal, St.
Louis Exposition 1904. Work: "Na-
tivity," City of Duluth; "Moonlight,
Provincetown," owned by City of La
Crosse; "Barley Field, Etaples," Com-
mercial Club, Duluth.
ERSKINE, H. P., 159 West 56th St., New
York, N. Y. (S.)
ERTZ, Bruno, Manitowoc, Wis.
P. — Born Manitowoc, Wis., March 1,
1873. Paints birds and insects.
ERTZ, Edward (Frederick), Pulborough,
Sussex, England.
P., L, Etcher, T.— Born Canfield, Taze-
well Co., 111., March 1, 1862. Pupil of
Lefebvre, Constant and Delance in
Paris. Member: Royal Soc. of Brit-
ish Artists; Soc. of Arts, London; Im-
perial Arts League; British WCS; Essex
AC; Aberdeen AG; Soci6t6 Inter.
d'Aquarellistes, Paris; Soci€t6 des
Cinquante; Union Inter, des Beaux-Arts;
Chicago SE; Chicago AG; Cal. SE.
Awards : Diploma of honor. Interna-
tional Exp., St. Etienne; gold medal,
Exp. d'Angiers; grand prix. Interna-
tional Exp., Rouen, France; medal, Soc.
des Amis des Arts de la Somme, 1899;
medal, Ville d'Elboeuf, France; two
awards, Bristol (Eng.) Arts and
Crafts; medal AAS Philadelphia, 1902.
Work: "The Gardener," Alexander
Palace Museum, London; "Spanish
Water Currier," Public GhUptw, Liver-
pool; Print Dept., Library of Congress,
Washington, D. C, and California
State Library; N. Y. Public Library;
"The Vacation Girl," "Sunset, Grand
Canyon," American Consulate, London.
ERTZ, Gordon, 1411 Foster Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.
P., I., C, T.— Born Chicago, 111., Feb.
19, 1891. Self-taught. Member:
Palette and Chisel C.
ESCHERICH, Elsa F., 1753 West 46th St.,
Los Angeles. Calif.
P.— M ember: Calif. AC.
ESHERICK, Wharton H(arris), Paoli, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., July 15,
1887. Pupil of Chase, Beaux, and
Anshutz. Member: Fellowship
PAFA.
ESKRIDGE, Robert Lee, Coronada Beach,
Cal.
P., E., D. — Born Phyllysburg, Pa., Nov.
22, 1891. Pupil of Los Angeles College
of Fine Arts; AIC; Chicago Academy of
Fine Arts; George Senseney. Mem-
ber: Chicago SE; Brooklyn SE.
Award : Bronze medal for water
color. Pan. -Cal. Exp., San Diego, 1915.
ESSIG, George E(merick), 9 North Cam-
bridge Ave., Ventnor, Atlantic City, N.
J.; summer, Elwyn, Delaware Co., Pa.
P., I., T. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Sept.
2, 1838. Pupil of PAFA; Edward Moran;
James Hamilton. Specialty, marines.
ETZ, Pearl Potter, 1515 Rhode Island
Ave., Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash.WCC.
EVANS, Anne, 1320 Hannock St., Denver,
Colo.
P. — M ember : Denver A C.
EVANS, Edwin, Univ. of Utah; h. 1261
Emerson Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah.
P., T.— Born Lehi, Utah, Feb. 2, 1860.
Pupil of Laurens, Lefebvre and Benja-
min-Constant in Paris. Member:
S. Utah A. (pres. 1905); Utah Art In-
stitute (pres. 1907). Director of Art,
University of Utah.
413
EVANS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
FAIRCHILD
EVANS, Dulah Marie. See Dulah Evans
Krebheil.
EVANS, Elizabeth, 4 Soldiers' Home,
Washington, D. C. (P.)
EVANS, Ethel, 130 Claremont Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
EVANS, Mrs. Eva Clemence, 17 Spring
St., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
EVANS, Grace (Lydia), 930 Presser Bldg.;
h. 218-32d St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I., T.— Born Pittston, Pa., Feb. 19,
1877. Pupil of PAFA under Chase, An-
shutz and Breckenridge; Drexel Inst.
Member: Phila. Alliance; Fellow-
ship PAFA. Instructor, Fine Arts Col-
lege of Syracuse University. Award :
First prize for fashion drawing for
"Good Housekeeping Magazine," 1915.
Formerly fashion artist for the "Phila-
delphia Press." Work: Portrait of
Dr. Francis March, March High School,
Easton, Pa.
EVANS, Jessie Benton, 1517 East 61st St.,
Chicago, 111.; winter, Scottsdale, Ariz.
P. — Born in Ohio. Pupil of AIC.
Member: Chicago SA; Chicago AC;
Cordon C; Salvator Rosa, Naples.
EVANS, John W(illiam), 633 St. Mark's
Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Wood Engr. — Born Brooklyn, March 27,
1855. Pupil of P. R. B. Pierson.
Award : Bronze medal, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; silver medal, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915.
EVANS, Rudulph, 71 Washington PI.,
New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Washington, D. C. Pupil of
Falguiere and Rodin. Member:
ANA, 1919; Paris AAA; Allied AA.
Award : Bronze medal, Paris Salon,
1914; Watrous gold medal, NAD, 1919.
Work: Statue acquired by French
Government for Luxembourg; "The
Golden Hour," Metropolitan Museum,
New York.
EVERETT, Herbert Edward, 1632 Lati-
mer St., Philadelphia, Pa.
S., T. — Born Worcester, Mass. Pupil of
Boston Museum School; Julian Acad-
emy in Paris. Member: Phila.WCC.
EVERS, Ivar Eils, Tillson, Ulster Co.,
N. Y.
P., Arch.— Born in Sweden, Oct. 28,
1866. Pupil of Napoleon Csesar in
Sweden; De Camp in Boston; Twacht-
man in New York: Member: S.
Indp.A.
EYRE, Louisa, 1003 Spruce St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
S.— Born Newport, R. I., Jan. 16, 1872.
Pupil of Augustus Saint Gaudens.
Member: Phila. ACG; Fellowship
PAFA; Philadelphia Alliance. Work:
Tablet to Gen. George Sykes for Me-
morial Hall, West Point, N. Y.
FABIAN, Lydia Dunham, 3918 Lake Park
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Charlotte, Mich., March 12,
1867. Pupil of the ASL of N. Y.; AIC;
Ossip Linde and Henry Henshall;
Member : Sante Fe Society of Art-
ists; Alumni of the Chicago Art Insti-
tute.
FAHRENBRUCH, Lottie, 22 S St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C. (P.)
FAIG, Mrs. Frances Wiley, 3345 Whitfield
Ave., Clifton, Cincinnati, O.
P. — Pupil of Duveneck, 'Grover, and
Hawthorne. Member: MacD. C. of
Cincinnati; Cin. Woman's AC. Work:
Mural decorations in Engineering Li-
brary, University of Cincinnati.
FAILING, Ida C, 1041 Acoma St., Den-
ver, Colo.
P. — M ember: Denver AA.
FAIRBANKS, Avard Tenneson, Univer-
sity of Oregon, Eugene, Ore.
S.— Born Provo, Utah. March 2, 1897.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under James E.
Eraser; Beaux- Arts in Paris, under In-
jalbert. Award : First prize for bust
and first prize for relief, Utah State
Fair, 1915; prize for sculpture, Utah
State Fair, 1916. Work: "The In-
dian," "The Pioneer," Salt Lake City
Public Schools; monument "The Bless-
ing of Joseph" and fountain in honor of
Hawaiian motherhood, Laie, H. I.;
"Doughboy of Idaho."
FAIRBANKS, Charles Mason, 44 West
44th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
FAIRBANKS, Frank P., 15 Vanderbilt
Ave., New York, N. Y. ; h. Larchmont,
N. Y.
P.— Born Boston, 1875. Pupil of Tar-
bell and De Camp in Boston.
Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg.l913 (vice-
pres.); Mural P. (sec); Players.
Awards : Sears prize and Paige
traveling scholarship from the Boston
Museum of Fine Arts; Academy at
Rome scholarship, 1909-1912. Instruc-
tor in painting, Cooper Union.
FAIRBANKS, John B., 1111 Whitlock
Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah.
P., T.— Born Payson, Utah, Dec. 27,
1855. Pupil of Constant, Lefebvre and
Laurens in Paris. Member: P?iris
AAA; S. Utah A.; Assoc. Artists Salt
Lake City. Awards : First prize,
Utah State Fair, 1899; first prize for
marine, Utah State Fair, 1913; second
prize for marine, Utah State Fair, 1917;
second prize for landscape, Utah State
Fair, 19i8; first, second and third prizes,
Utah State Fair, 1920.
FAIRBANKS, J. Leo., 1228 Byran Ave.,
■Salt Lake City, Utah.
P., E., T.— Pupil of Julian Academy,
Paris. Member: Associated Artists
of Salt Lake City; Utah A. Inst. De-
signed and assisted in executing sculp-
ture frieze on Mormon Temple, Hawaii.
Director of Art in public schools of Salt
Lake City.
FAIRCHILD, C. Wiilard, care of Hoyt's
Service, Inc., 116 West 32nd St., New
York. N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI 1912.
FAIRCHILD, Lucia. See Mrs. Henry B.
Fuller.
414
FAIRCHILD
WHO'S WHO IN ART
FASSETT
FAIRCHILD, Mary. See Mrs. Will H.
Low.
FAIRCHILD, May (Mrs. Charles Nelson
Fairchild), 58 West 57th St., New York,
N. Y.; h. Rhinebeck, N. Y.
Min. P.— Born Boston, Mass. Pupil of
Cowles Art School in Boston; ASL. of
N. Y.; John F. Carlson. Member:
N. A. Women PS; PBC; ASL, of N. Y.
Taught miniature painting at ASL of
N. Y.
FALCO, Henri Louis, 643 Carlton Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
FALLER, Mrs. Hortense Gimbel, St.
Leger, Cincinnati, O.; and 60 Lake
Flower Ave., Saranac Lake, N. Y.
P.— Born Vincennes, Ind., Dec. 15, 1889.
Pupil of St. Louis School of Art and
Cincinnati Art Academy. Member:
Cin. Woman's AC; Cincinnati AL.
FALLS, Charles Buckles, 2 East 23d St.
New York, N. Y.
I. — Born Fort Waynr-, Ind., Dec. 10,
1874. Member: SI 1909. Award:
Beck prize, Phila WCC, 1918.
FALLS, D(e) W(itt) C(linton), 16 East
60th St.; h. 449 Park Ave., New York,
N. Y.
P., T.— Born New York, Sept. 29, 1864.
Pupil of Walter Satterlee. Specialty,
military subjects, portraits, comic il-
llustrating.
FANGEL, Henry Guy, 360 West 22nd St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I.— M f m b e r : SI 1913.
FANGEL, Maud Tousey (Mrs. H. G. Fan-
gel), 360 West 22nd St., New York, N.
Y.
I.— M e m b e r : SI 1913 (assoc).
FARINA, Pasquale, 1314 Arch St.; h. 625
North 64th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Port. P. — Born Naples, Italy, Nov. 2,
1864. Member: Phila. AC; Phila.
Alliance; Fellowship PAFA; Print C.
Award : Bronze Medal, World's Fair,
Chicago, 1903. Founded School of De-
sign, Painting and Sculpture, Tucuman,
Argentina.
FARIS, Ben Howard, The Primrose Bldg.,
434 Race St., Cincinnati, O.
P., I.— Born St. Clairsville, O., July 21,
1862. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy.
Member: Cincinnati AC. Illustrator
for "The Commercial Tribune."
FARJEON, Eliot E., 418 Penn Ave., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
Port. P. — Born in New York City.
Studied at Cooper Union; NAD; ASL
of N. Y.; with Bonnat, Bouguereau,
Robert-Fleury and Lefebvre in Paris.
Member: Pittsburgh JlA.
FARLEY, R(ichard) B(lossom), Hunting-
ton Valley. Pa.
P.— Born Poultney, Vt., Oct. 24, 1875.
Pupil of Whistler, Chase, Cecilia Beaux.
Member: Phila. AC; Fellowship
PAFA; Phila. Sketch C; Allied AA.
Awards : Fellowship prize, PAFA.
1912; gold medal, Phila. AC. 1912;
fourth W. A. Clark prize ($500), Cor-
coran Gallerv, 1914; silver medal. P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915. Work: "Morn-
ing Mists," Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts; "Fog," Corcoran Gal-
lery, Washington, D. C.
FAR LOW, Harry, Hotel Chelsea, 222 W.
23rd St., New York, N. Y. ; h. 49 Beverly
Road, Kew Gardens, L. I.; summer
Woodstock, N. Y.
P.— Born Chicago, 111., April 11, 1882.
Pupil of Duveneck, Benson, and Tar-
bell. Member: Salma. C, Lg. of
NYA., MacD. C. Portraits in Hunter
College, Lawyers' Club, Yale Club,
Board of Education, New York; Manu-
facturers' Club, and Neff College, Phila-
delphia, P.
FARNDON, Walter, Douglaston, Long
Island, N. Y.
P.— Born in England, March 13, 1876.
Pupil of NAD under Edgar M. Ward.
Member: 'Salma. C. ; Brooklyn SA.
Award : Turnbull prize, Salma C,
1919.
FARNHAM, Paul, 1441 Broadway, Oak-
land, Calif. (P., L)
FARNHAM, Sally James (Mrs. Paulding
Farnham), 57 West 57th St., New York,
N. Y.
S — Born Ogdensburg, N. Y.
FARNSWORTH, Jerry, 2020 G St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C. (P.)
FARNUM, Herbert Cyrus, 23 Waterman
St., Providence, R. I.; h. Olney Ave.,
North Providence, R. I.
P.— Born Gloucester, R. I., Sept. 19,
1866. Pupil of R. L School of Design;
Julian Academy in Paris. Member:
Providence AC; Providence WCC.
Work: "Flood Tide," Rhode Island
School of Design.
FARNUNG, Helen M., 413 West 147th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., E., T.— Born Jersey City, N. J.,
Mar. 31, 1896. Pupil of Frank V. Du-
Mond, ASL of N. Y. Member: S.
Indp. A.; ASL of N. Y.
FARR. Bertha M., Wyoming, N. Y.
P.— M ember : Rochester AC.
FARRELL, Katherine Levin (Mrs. Theo.
P. Farrell), 330 South 43rd St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P., Etcher. — Born Philadelphia, Pa.
Pupil of School of Design, School of
Industrial Art and of PAFA. Mem-
ber: Plastic C; Fellowship PAFA.
FARRELL, Ruth Clements, 39^^ Wash-
ington Sq., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
FARRINGTON, Katherine, 483 Field
Point Rd., Greenwich. Conn.
P., W., T.— Born St. Paul, Minn., May
3, 1877. Pupil of DeCamp, Mowbray,
DuMond and ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: St. Paul AS. See. Conn. Art-
ists.
FASANO, Clara, 5719 Tenth Ave., Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
S. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
FASSETT, Truman E., 58 West 57th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Woodmere,
L. I., N. Y. ; West Falmouth, Mass.
P., I.— Born Elmira, N. Y., May 9, 1885.
Pupil of Boston Museum School.
415
PAULEY
WHO'S WHO IN ART
FERGUSON
PAULEY, Mrs. Lucy S., Lock Box 705,
Columbus, O.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
FAULKNER, Barry, 11 Macdougal Alley,
New York, N. Y., and 61 Summer St.,
Keene, N. H.
Mural P.— Born Keene, July 12, 1881.
Pupil of Abbott H. Thayer and George
de F. Brush. Member: Mural P.;
N.Y.Arch.Lg-.1911. Award : American
Academy in Rome Scholarship, 1908-
1911; medal of honor for painting, N.Y,
Arch.Lig. 1914. Work : Mural decora-
tions in the house of Mis. E. H. Harri-
man, Arden, N. Y. ; panels in foyer of
Washington Irving High School, New
York City. Pictorial Maps in Cunard
Bldg., New York, N. Y.
FAULKNER, Mrs. E. D., 992 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
FAULKNER, Herbert W., Washington,
Conn.
P., I., Engr., W., L.— Born Stamford,
Conn., Oct. 8, 1860. Pupil of ASL. of
N. Y. under Beckwith and Mowbray;
Collin in Paris. Member: Salma. C,
1897; Syndicat de la Presse Artistique.
Award: Hon. mention, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901. Work: "Gondo-
lier's Kitchen," Dallas (Tex.) Art Asso-
ciation; "Palace on Grand Canal," 'St.
Louis Museum; "Une Fete qui finlt
mal," Minneapolis Museum; "San
Georglo, Venice, at Sunset," Herron Art
Institute, Indianapolis.
FAXON. William Bailey, 7 West 43rd St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.-Born Hartford, Conn., 1849. Pupil
of Jacquesson de la Chevreuse. Mem-
ber: SAA 1892; ANA 1906; AFAS;
A. Aid S.; Century Assoc.
FAY, Clark, Westport. Conn.
I. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
FAY, Nancy, Westport, Conn. (I.)
FAY, Nellie, 1612 Washington St., San
Francisco, Cal.
P.— Born Eureka, Cal., Feb. 11, 1870.
Pupil of Arthur F. Mathews and Emil
Carlsen. Member: San Francisco
SA; Kingsley Art C, Sacramento.
FEHRER, Oscar, 257 West 86th St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Lyme, Conn.
Port. P.— Born New York City in 1872.
Studied in New York, Paris and Munich.
Member: Allied AA; Salma. C; NAC
(life). Represented in Memorial Hall
City Library, Lowell, Mass.
FEITELSON, Alice L. L., 7 AVest 14th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
FELDMAN, Baruch M., 320 Harmony St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.; h. Uhlerstown, Pa.
P., W., T.— Born in Russia, Mar. 4, 1885.
Pupil of Anshutz. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA. Award : Hon, men-
tion, Americanization through Art Ex-
hibition, Philadelphia, 1916; first hon.
mention, Phila. Sketch C, 1921.
FELKER, Ruth Kate (Mrs. W. D.
Thomas), 6949 Mitchell Ave., St. Louis,
Mo.
Arch., P., I., T. — Born St. Louis, Mo.,
May 16, 1889. Pupil of School of Archi-
tecture at Washington University and
St. Louis School of Fine Arts; ASL of
N. Y. ; Society of Beaux-Arts Archi-
tects; studied in Europe. Member:
Soc. of Ancients of St. Louis; Wash.
Univ. Arch. Soc. (hon.); St. L. AG.
Award: Mallinckrodt prize, St. Louia
AG, 1915, 1916, 1917, 1919. Work:
Mural decoration in St. John's Hospital,
St. Louis.
FELLOWS, A. P., 23 West 43rd St., New
York, N. Y.
P., Etcher.— Pupil of School of Indus-
trial Art and of Drexel Inst., Phila-
delphia. Member: Phila. Soc. of
Etchers; Phila. Sketch C.
FELLOWS, Cornelia Faber (Mrs. A. P.
Fellows), 3203 Summer St., W. Phila-
delphia, Pa.
Port. P.— Born Philadelphia. Pupil of
PAFA and Drexel Inst. Member:
Fellowship PAFA; Plastic C.
FENDERSON, Annie M. (Mrs. Mark
Fenderson), 144 West 23d St., New
York, N. Y.
Min. P. — Born Spartansburg, Pa.
Member: N. A. Women PS.
FENDERSON, Mark, 144 West 23d St.,
New York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI 1913.
FENNER, Mrs. Albert, 78 Oriole Ave.,
Providence. R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC; Provi-
dence WCC.
FENTON, Beatrice, 1523 Chestnut St.; h.
1319 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa.
S.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., July 12,
1887. Pupil of School of Industrial Art,
Phila., and PAFA. Member: Fellow-
ship PAFA; Plastic C. ; Phila. Alliance.
Awards: Stewardson sculpture prize,
PAFA, 1908; Cresson traveling scholar-
ship, PAFA, 1909 and 1910; hon. mention,
P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915; hon. mention.
Plastic C, 1916. Represented in per-
manent collection, Philadelphia Art
Club.
FENTON, Hallie Champlin (Mrs. Warden
Fenton), Bronxville, N. Y.
P.— Born St. Louis. Mo., Oct., 1880.
Pupil of AIC; Blanche in Paris; NAD.
Member: N. A. Women PS.
FENTON, John William, 11 Clove Road,
New Rochelle, N. Y. ; summer, "Fenton
Farms", Conewango Valley, Cattarau-
gus Co., N. Y.
P., T. — Born Conewango Valley, July 6,
1875. Pupil of N. Y. School of Fine
and Applied Art; Cullen Yates and
Howard Giles. Member : SAL of
N. Y. ; New Rochelle AA. Teacher of
Art in New York City High Schools.
FERG, Frank X., 6026 Webster St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
FERGUSON, Alice Lowe (Mrs. H. G.
Ferguson), 2330 California St., Wash-
ington, D. C.
P.— Born Washington, D. C. Pupil of
Corcoran School in Washington; and
of Hawthorne. Member: Wash.
WCC; Wash. AC; S.Indp.A.
416
FERGUSON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
FINK
FERGUSON, Eleanor M., 123 Vernon St.,
Hartford, Conn.
S.— Born Hartford, June 30, 1876. Pu-
pil of C. N. Flag-g in Hartford; D. C.
French, G. G. Barnard and ASL of
N. Y. Member: Conn. AFA.
FERGUSON, Elizabeth F(oote). 1039 Fine
Arts B!dg. ; 2822 Cambridge Ave.;
Chicago, III.; summer. Bay View. Mich.
I., T.— Born Omaha, Neb., July 2, 1884.
Pupil of AIC; PAFA. Member;
Omaha AG; Alumni AIC; Cordon C,
Chicago.
FERGUSON, Lillian Prest, Laguna
Beach, Calif.
P., T. — Born Windsor, Ont., Canada,
Aug. 18, 1871. Pupil of W. L. Forster,
"VV. M. Chase, Alex. Robinson, Julian
School. Member: S. Indp. A. ;
Calif. AC; Laguna Beach AA; AVomaa's
Art Club of Southern Calif.
FERGUSON, Nancy M., 524 Walnut St.;
53 West Tulpehocken St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
P. — Member: N. A. Women PS;
Fellowship PAFA. Award: Mary-
Smith prize, PAFA, 1916.
FERNBACH. A(gnes) B.. 48 St. Nicholas
Place, New York, N. Y.
E.— Born New York City. June 29. 1879.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y., Alphonse Mucha
and Ernest Haskell.
FERN IE, Margaret. See Mrs. Hugh
Eaton.
FERNOW, Bernice Pauahi Andrews (Mrs.
B. E. Fernow, Jr.), 432 Lafayette PL,
^ Milwaukee, Wis.
* Min. P. — Born Jersey City, N. J., Dec.
17, 1881. Pupil of Olaf M. Brauner and
Theodora Thayer. Member: ASL
of N. Y.
FERRARI, Febo, 96 William St.; h. 94
William St., New Haven, Conn.; sum-
mer, Onahill Cottage, Short Beach,
Conn.
S.— Born Pallanza, Italy, Dec. 4, 1865.
Pupil of Royal Academy, Turin, under
Tabacchi. Member: New Haven
PCC; New Haven Arch. C.
FERRER, Vera L.. 193 Wa.shington Ave.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., Jan. 13,
1895. Pupil of Lucia Fairchild Fuller
and J. B. Wliittaker; NAD. Member:
N. A. Women PS. Specialty, miniatures.
FERRIS, Jean Leon Gerome, 8 No. 50th
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Hist.P.— Born Philadelphia, Aug. 8, 1863.
Pupil of S. J. Ferris and Christian
Schuessele in Philadelphia; Bouguereau
and G6rome in Paris. Member: A.
Fund S. of Phila. (treas. and sect.);
Phila. SE, 1881; Phila. AC, 1890.
Painter of historical genre.
FERRISS, Hugh, 210 West 59th St., New
York, N. Y.
L, E., A.— Born St. Louis, Mo., July 12,
1889. Member: SI; S. Indp. A.; St.
Louis Art Lg. Drawings for Committee
on Public Information, "Harpers,"
"Century," "Pencil Points."
FERRO, Charles M., 515 Madison St.,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
FERRY, Isabella H., Skye Studio, Booth-
bay Harbor, Me.; h. 189 East St., East-
ham-pton, Mass.
P., T. — Born Williamsburgh, Mass.
Pupil of Tryon, Henri, Bouguereau,
Boutet de Monvel, Fleury, etc. Mem-
ber: Springfield. Mass. Art Lg.
Supervisor of drawing at Holyoke.
FETSCHER, Charles W., 323 Gulon Ave.,
Richmond Hill, L. L, N. Y.
P., Arch. — M ember: Soc. Deaf A.
(pres.).
FEURER, Karl, 3125 Western Ave.,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
FICKBOHIVl, Sallie I., 47 East 58th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S. Indp. A.
FIELD, Edward, The Harvard, 4 Trinity
St., Hartford, Conn.
P., W.— Born Providence, R. I., Oct. 4,
1858. Member: Conn. AFA.
FIELD, Hamilton Easter, 106 Columbia
Heights, Brooklyn, N. Y. ; summer,
Thurnscoe, Ogunquit, Me.
P., E.. T.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., April
21, 1873. Pupil of Gerome, Collin, Cour-
tois, Fantin-Latour and Lucien Simon
in Paris. Member: S. Indp. A.;
Brooklyn SA. ; Modern Artists of Amer-
ica. Director; Thurnscoe School of Art,
Ogunquit, Me.; Ardsley School of Art,
Brooklyn, N. Y. Art editor, Brooklyn
Daily Eagle; The Touchstone, The Arts,
and The American Art Student.
FIELD, J. M. 1440 Broadway, New York,
N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
FIELD, Mrs. Louise Blodgett, 32 Cottage
St., Wellesley, Mass.
P. — Born Boston. Pupil of Ross Tur-
ner, Fred D. William^, William Mor-
ris Hunt and Tomasso Juglarls in
Boston. Member: Boston WCC;
Copley S., 1896.
FIELD, M. (Mrs. Herman Field), 4826
Kimbark Ave. Chicago, 111.
P., C. — Born Stoughton, Mass., Jan. 14,
1864. Pupil of AIC. Member: Chica-
go S'A. Award : Bronze medal,
A la ska- Yukon-Pacific Exp., Seattle,
1909.
FINCKEN, James H(orsey), 1012 Walnut
St.; h. 909 South St. Bernard St., Phil-
adelphia, Pa.
P., E., C. — Born Bristol, England, May
9, 1860. Member: Phila. Sketch C.
FINK, Aimee M., 1069 Madison Ave., New
York. N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
FINK, Denman, Haworth, N. J.
P., I. — Born Springdale, Pa., Aug. 29,
1880. Pupil of Benson, Hale and Walter
A. Clark. Member: SL ; Salma.C.
Illustrated "Mace's History of United
States"; "The Barrier" and "The Post
Girl," by Rex Beach; "Lost Borders,"
by Mary Austen, etc. Illustrations for
"Harper's," "Scribner's," "Century,"
etc.
417
FINKELNBURG
WHO'S WHO IN ART
FITTS
FINKELNBURG, Augusta, Kimmswick,
Mo.
P. — Born Fountain City, Wis. Pupil of
AIC; Pratt Inst., Brooklyn; studied in
Paris, Italy, Holland and England and
with Robert Reid, Willard Metcalf,
Henry B. Snell, Herbert Adams and Ar-
thur W. Dow. Awards: Three first
prizes at Missouri State Fair. Mem-
ber: St. Louis AG; St. Louis AL.
Work: Two pictures in San Fran-
cisco Art Museum.
FINKLE, Melik, Art Academy of Cin-
cinnati, O.
S. — Work in Cincinnati Museum.
FIORATO, Noe, 308 West 56th St., New
York, N. Y. (S.)
FIORENTINO-VALLE, Maude Richmond,
1136-1140 Corona St., Denver, Colo.;
summer, "Mt. Falcon," Mt. Morrison,
Colo.
P., L, W., T.— Pupil of ASL of N. Y.,
under Cox, Chase, Brush, and Beck-
with; Academic Julian under Lefebvre,
Constant and Beaury-Sorel, in Paris.
Member: Denver Art Asso. Art
Critic for "Rocky Mountain News."
FIRESTONE, I (sadore) L(ouis), 549 Riv-
erside Drive, New York, N. Y. ; h. 246
Dinwiddle St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P., I., T. — Born in Austria -Hungary,
Apr. 13, 1894. Pupil of Carnegie Inst,
of Tech., and Stevenson Art School,
Pittsburgh; ASL of N. Y. Member:
Pittsburgh AA.
FISCHER, Anton Otto, Bushnellville,
Greene Co., N. Y.
I. — Born Munich, Germany, Feb. 23,
1882. Pupil of Julian Academy, Paris.
Member: SI 1913.
FISCHER, H., 48 West 90th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
FISCHER, Mary Ellen SIgsbee (Mrs. An-
ton O. Fischer), Bushnellville, Greene
Co., N. Y.; and 415 Central Park West,
New York, N. Y.
I. — Born New Orleans, La., Feb. 26,
1876. Member: SI (assoc), 1912.
FISHBURN, Mrs. Josephine R., 110
Huntington PI., Mt. Auburn, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
FISHER, Anna S., 939 Eighth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Member: ANA: AWCS; NY-
WCC; N. A. Women PS; SPNY.
Award : National Arts Club prize,
N. A. Women PS, 1919. Work: "The
Orange Bowl," National Academy of
Design, New York, N. Y.
FISHER, Bud, 258 Riverside Drive, New
York, N. Y.
I.— Born April 3, 1885.
FISHER, Emily Kohler (Mrs. Charles W.
Fisher). Manheim Apartments, Queen
Lane, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
FISHER, George V., 858-52nd St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
FISHER, Harrison, 80 West 40th St., 44
West 77th St., New York, N. Y.
I.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., July 27, 1875.
Studied in San Francisco. Member:
SI 1911. Illustrated "The Market Place,"
by Harold Frederic; "Three Men on
Wheels," by Jerome K. Jerome; for
"Life," etc.
FISHER, Vaudrey, 1730 Broadway, New
York, N. Y. ; h. care of Miss Piers,
Denver Capitol Hill Bank, Denver, Colo.
P., C, T.— Born Staffordshire, England,
Aug. 9, 1889. Pupil of von Herkomer,
Castellucho, Brangwyn.
FiSHER, William Fdgar, 52 East 19th
St.; h. 611 West 136tn St., New York,
N. Y.
L, D.— Born Wellsville, N. Y., Oct.
24, 1872. Pupil of AIC; Cornell Univ.
Member: AI Graphic A. ; A. Book-
plate S. ; Salma. C. Specialty, book-
plate designs.
FISK, H. T., 3004 Heath Ave., New York,
N. Y.
I. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
FISK, Mary Stella, Angola. Ind.
S.— M ember: Ind. SS.
FISK, Mrs. Pliny, Rye, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
FISKE, Gertrude, 120 Riverway. Boston,
Mass.
P., E.— Born Boston, April 16, 1879.
Pupil of Tarbell, Benson, Hale and
Woodbury. Member: Boston GA;
N. A. Women PS; Boston SE.
Award: Silver^medal, P.-P Exp.,
San F., 1915; Hudson prize. Conn. AFA,
1918; Samuel Bancroft, Jr., prize, Wil-
mington, SFA, 1921.
FISKEN, Jessie, 1607 Minot Ave., Seattle,
Wash. ; summer, Wing Point, Winslow,
Washington.
P., C, T.— Born Row, Scotland, Mar. 5,
1860. Pupil of Glasgow School of Art.
Member: Seattle FAS.
FITCH, Benjamin Herbert, 217 West 33rd
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Lyons, N. Y., Sept. 4, 1873.
Self-taught. Member: Rochester
AC; Rochester SA.
FITCH, Eugene C, 327 West 28th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
FITCH, Walter, 348 Judah St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
FITE, Mrs. Frank E. See Anne Merri-
man Peck.
FITLER, Mrs. W. C. See Claude Raguet
Hirst.
FITSCH, Eugene C(amille), 253 West 42nd
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, Lyme,
Conn.
P., E. — Born Alsace, France, Dec. 11,
1892. Pupil of Mahonri Young, Frank
V. DuMond. Member: S. Indp. A.;
Lg. of N. Y. A.
FITTS, Clara Atwood (Mrs. F. W. Fitts),
40 Linwood St., Roxbury, Mass.
I. — Born Worcester, Mass., Oct. 6, 1874.
Pupil of School of the Boston Museum
of Fine Arts. Member: Copley S.
Work : Altar piece, three panels. St.
John's Church, Roxbury, Mass. Illus-
trates books for children, "St. Nicholas,"
etc.
418
FITZGERALD
WHO'S WHO IN ART
FLISHER
FITZGERALD, Harrington, 716 Walnut
St.; h. 2109 Porter St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Ldscp. P. — Born Philadelphia, Apr. 5,
1847. Pupil of Fortuny and Gerome in
Paris; George Nicholson in Philadel-
phia. Member: Fairmount Park
AA; Phila. Sketch C; Pen and Pencil
C, Phila; Newspaper Artists' Asso.
Award: Gold medal, AAS, 1902;
bronze medal, Charleston Exp., 1902.
Work: "Valley Forge," four panels,
State Capitol, Harrisburg, Pa.; "The
Wreck." National Gallery, Washington,
D. C; "The Smuggler's Cave," Detroit
Institute, "The Smugglers" and "In
Cairo," Albright Art Gallery, Buffalo,
N. Y. ; "On the Shore," Pennsylvania
Museum, Philadelphia; "Delaware
Water Gap," State College, Pa.
FITZGIBBON, J. L., 3704 Bell St., Kansas
City, Mo. (P.)
FITZPATRICK, Daniel Robert, Post-Dis-
patch Bldg., 12th & Olive Sts.; h. 1230
Amherst Place, St. Louis, Mo.
Cartoonist — Born Superior, Wis., Mar. 5,
1891. Pupil of AIC. Member: St.
Louis AG.
FITZPATRICK, J, C, 212-lst St., S. E.,
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
FJELDE, Paul, 333 Fourth Ave., New
York. N. Y.
S. — Born Minneapolis, Minn., Aug. 12,
1892. Pupil of Lorado Taft. Mem-
ber: S'W Sc; Chicago SA. Award:
Hon, mention, St. Paul Inst., 1918.
Work: Lincoln Monument at Kris-
tiania, Norway; John Scott Bradstreet
Memorial, Minneapolis Art Institute;
Irwin Memorial, Auburn, Me.; Gjertsen
Memorial, Minneapolis, Minn.; Lincoln
monument, Hillsboro, N. D. ; Pioneers'
memorial. Council Bluffs, la.; Donners-
berger memorial, McKinley Park, Chi-
cago, 111.
FLACK, Arthur W., Atlas Bldg.; h. 78
Fulton Ave., Rochester, N. Y.
P., D., Arch. — Born in San Francisco,
1878, Pupil of Rochester Mechanics'
Institute, Fine Arts Dept,; studied in
Paris and London, Member : Roch-
ester AC; Rochester AL,
FLAGG, H. Peabody, 26 East 23d St.,
New York, N, Y.
P, — Born Somerville, Mass., 1859. Pupil
of Carolus-Duran in Paris. Member:
N,Y,Arch,Lg, 1899; Boston AC; Salma,C.
1904. Work: Two historical paint-
ings in Flower Memorial Library,
Watertown, N, Y,
FLAGG, J(ames) Montgomery, 33 West
67th St., New York, N, Y.
I., P. — Born Pelham Manor, N. Y., June
18, 1877. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Her-
komer in England; Victor Marec in
Paris, Member: SI 1911; Lotos C,
Illustrations for "Judge," "Life" and
other magazines; collection of drawings
published as "The Well-Knowns."
FLANAGAN, John, 1931 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
S.— Born Newark, N. J. Pupil of Saint
Gaudens in New York; Chapu and Fal-
guiere in Paris. Member: ANA
1911; NSS 1902; N, Y. Arch. Lg. 1914;
Conn. AFA; Salma. C. Am. Numismatic
Soc. Awards : Silver medal, Paris
Exp., 1900; silver medal. Pan- Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; silver medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; medal of honor for section
of medals, P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915;
Saltus medal, American Numismatic
Soc, 1921. Work: Clock, Library of
Congress, Washington, D. C. ; bronze re-
lief, "Antique Education," Free Public
Library, Newark, N. J.; tinted marble
relief "Aphrodite," Knickerbocker Hotel,
New York, N. Y. ; bronze memorial por-
trait of Samuel Pierpont Langley,
Smithsonian Institution. Washington,
D. C; Bulkley memorial, Aetna Life In-
surance Bldg., _ Hartford, Conn.; Alex-
ander memorial medal for School Art
League of New York, 1915. Represented
in medal collections of the Luxembourg,
Paris; Museum of Ghent, Belgium;
Metropolitan Museum of Art and Amer-
ican Numismatic Society of New York;
Chicago Art Institute; Carnegie Insti-
tute, Pittsburgh; Newark Art Museum;
war medal for the town of Marion.
Mass.; medal for the Garden Club of
America; "Medaille de Verdun," voted
by Congress, and presented by the
President of the United States to the
City of Verdun.
FLEMING, H(enry) S(tuart), 44 West
47th St.; h. 2 East G5th St., New York,
N. Y. ; summer, Southampton, L. I.,
N. Y.
L, P., S., C— Born Philadelphia, July
21, 1863, Pupil of Lefebvre and Benja-
min-Constant in Paris, Member: SI
1901 (sec).
FLEMING, Margot, Hibernia, Flemings
Island, Fla.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
FLETCHER, Calvin, Utah Agricultural
College; h. 166 South 4th East, Logan,
Utah.
P., S., Arch,, C„ W„ L., T,— Born Provo,
Utah, June 24, 1882, Pupil of Pratt In-
stitute; Columbia University; AIC; Cen-
tral School Arts and Crafts in London;
Colarossi and Biloul in Paris; Morse in
Chicago. Award : First prize, Utah
State Fair Assoc, Work: Two murals
in L, D. S. Temple at Logan, Utah.
FLETCHER, Godfrey Bockius, Watson^
ville, Calif.; summer, Monterey, Calif.
P. — Born Watsonville, Calif., Dec. 16,
1888. Pupil of N. Y. ASL and Armin
Hansen; Academic de la Grande Chaum-
iere. Award : Silver medal for
water color painting, San Francisco A A
1918. Gold medal, San Francisco AA.
1920.
FLETCHER, Grace, 222 West 23rd St..
New York. N. Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
FLEURY, Albert, 1133 North Dearborn
St., Chicago, 111.
Mural P., T. — Born Havre, France, Feb.
2, 1848. Pupil of Lehman, Renouf and
Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris, Officier
d'Instruction Publique, France. Mem-
ber: Chicago SA; Chicago WCC.
FLISHER, Edith M,, Church St., Bel-
mont Heights, Tenn.
P., C, T.— Born Nashville, Tenn, Pupil
419
FLORANCE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
FORSYTHE
of PAFA. Member: Nashville AA;
Nashville Pes. Club. Work: "Por-
trait of Gov. Tom Rye," State Capital,
Nashville.
FLORANCE, Eustace Lee, 1090 Wash-
ington St., Dorchester, Mass.
P. — Born in Philadelphia. Member:
St. Botolph C.
FLOWER, Sherwood, Evesham Ave., Bal-
timore, Md.; summer. Govans, Md.
P., Arch. — Born Oakwood, Cecil Co.,
Md., Jan. 3, 1878.
FOBES, Elizabeth C, 350 55th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
FOGARTY, Thomas, 38 East 22d St.; h,
253 West 71st St., New York, N. Y.
I.— Born New York, 1873. Pupil of ASL
of N. Y. M e m b e r : SI 1901; Salma.C.
1908, Illustrated "The Making of an
American," by Riis; "On Fortune's
Road," by Will Payne, etc.
FOLAWN, Thomas Jefferson, 1809 Marine
St., Boulder, Colo.; summer, Santa Fe,
N. M.
P. — Born Youngstown. O., May 1, 1876.
Pupil of C. Sanborn Miles. Member:
Denver Art Asso.: Brush and Pencil
Club, St. Louis; S.Indp.A.
FOLINSBEE, John Fulton, New Hope,
Pa
P.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Mar. 14, 1892.
Studied with Birge Harrison, John F.
Carlson and Du Mond. Member:
Salma. C. : Allied AA; ANA, 1919; Conn.
AFA; NAC. Awards: Third Hall-
garten prize, NAD. 1916; second Hall-
garten prize, NAD, 1917; Greenough
memorial prize, Newport A A, 1917: hon.
mention, AIC, 1918; hon. mention. Conn.
AFA, 1919; Isidor prize, Salma. C, 1920;
Carnegie prize, NAD, 1921. Represented
in Syracuse (N.Y.), Museum of Fine
Arts.
FOLSOM, Frances, 277 Eagle St., Buffalo,
N. Y. (P., T.)
FONDA. Mina M. See Mrs. I,eonard
Ochtman.
FOOTE, Mary, 3 Washington Square,
North, New York, N. Y.
P., I. — Member: N. A. Women PS;
New Haven PCC; Port. P. Work:
"Portrait of an Old Lady," Art Insti-
tute of Chicago.
FOOTE, Will Howe, Old Lyme, Conn.
P., T. — Born Grand Rapids, Mich., June
29, 1874. Pupil of AIC; ASL of N. Y.;
Julian Academy in Paris under Lau-
rens and Constant. Member: ANA
1910; Paris AAA: Salma. C. Awards;
Hon. mention, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; third HaUgarten prize. NAD 1902;
bronze medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904: sil-
ver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
FORBELL, Charles, 116 Nassau St.; 114
East 13th St., New York, N. Y.
I. — -M ember: Salma. C.
FORBES, Helen K., 426 Palo Alto Ave.,
Palo Alto, Calif.
P., E. — Born San Francisco, Calif., Feb.
3, 1891. Pupil of San F. AA and A.
Hansen. Member : San F. AA.
FORBES, Laura S., 22 East 8th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
FORCE, Clara G., Marine Bank Bldg.,
Erie, Pa. (Min, P,)
FORD, J. W. Neilson, 1124 Calvert St.,
Baltimore, Md,
P. — Pupil of Leonce Rabillon in Paris;
Hugh Newell in New York; B. West
Clinedinst in Philadelphia; J, "W. Jack-
son in England; Lippish in Berlin.
Member: Baltimore WCC; Plastic C.
of Phila.
FORESMAN, Alice Carter, 2117 Eighth
Ave,, Seattle, Wash,
Min, P, — M ember: N. A. Women
PS,
FORINGER, A(lonzo) E(arl), 15 West
67th St., New York, N. Y.; h. Grant-
wood, N, J.
Mural P., I, — Born Kaylor, Armstrong
Co,, Pa„ Feb, 1, 1878. Pupil of H. S.
Stevenson in Pittsburgh; Blashfield and
Mowbray in New York. Member:
Mural P.; N.Y,Arch.Lg.l911. Award:
Third prize ($300), Newark poster com-
petition, 1915. Work: 11 panels,
Council Chamber, City Hall, Yon-
kers, N. Y. ; Baptistery and Organ
Walls, Church of the Savior, Philadel-
phia; panel, County Court House, Mer-
cer, Pa.; panel, House of Representa-
tives, Utah State Capitol; bank note
designer for European and Canadian
banks; Red Cross War poster "The
Greatest Mother in the World"; and
the post-war poster "Still the Greatest
Mother in the World"; 4 panels in the
Home Savings and Loan Company
Bldg., Youngstown, O. Illustrations
for "Scribner's" and other magazines,
FORKNER, Edgar, 2615 East Cherry St.,
Seattle, Wash.
P. — Born Richmond. Ind. Pupil of C.
Beckwith, Irving Wiles, F, DuMond,
ASL of N. Y,
FORSYTH, William, 15 South Emerson
Ave.. Irvington. Ind.
P., T.— Born Hamilton Co., O, Pupil
of Royal Academy in Munich under
Loefftz, Benczur, Gysis and Lietzen-
meyer. Member : Art Assoc, of In-
dianapolis, Instructor Herron Art In-
stitute, Awards : Medal Munich,
1885; silver medal for water color and
bronze medal for oil, St, Louis
Exp., 1904; bronze medal, Buenos
Aires Exp., 1910; Fine Arts Bldg,
prize ($500), SWA 1910; bronze medal
for oil and silver medal for water
colors, P,-P.Exp,, San F,, 1915. Work:
"Autumn at Vernon," "The Constitu-
tional Elm — Corydon," "Close of a
Summer Day" and "Still Life," Art As-
sociation, Indianapolis; "Autumn Road-
side," Public Gollery, Richmond, Ind.
FORSYTHE. (Victor) Clyde, 40 Prospect
St,, New Rochelle, N. Y,
P,. I.— Born Orange, Calif., Aug, 24,
1885. Pupil of L. E. Garden Maclcod;
Frank Vincent Du Mond. Member:
Salma. C; So. Calif. A. C. Author of
poster used in 5th Victory Liberty
Loan, "And They Thought We Couldn't
Fight."
420
FORTUNE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
FRANCIS
FORTUNE, Miss E. Chariton, 47 Mardale
Crescent, Edinburgh, Scotland.
P.— Born Marin Co., Cal., 1885. Studied
at St. John's Wood School of Art in
London; ASL, of N. Y. under F. V.
Du Mond, Mora and Sterner. Mem-
ber: Cal. AC; San Francisco AA;
NY.ASLi. Award : Silver medal
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915; silver medal,
Panama-Cal, Exp., San Diego, 1915;
honorary prize, San F. AA., 1916;
Emanuel Walter purchase prize, San
Francisco AA., 1920.
FOSDICK, Gertrude C. (Mrs. J. W. Fos-
dick), 33 West 67th St., New York,
N. Y.; summer. Sugar Hill, N. H.
P.— Born in Virginia, Apr. 19, 1862,
Pupil of Julian Academy in Paris under
Bouguereau and Lefebvre. Member:
Pen and Brush C.
FOSDICK, J(ames) William, 33 West
67th St., New York, N. Y.; summer.
Sugar Hill. N. H.
Mural P., C, W. — Born Charlestown,
Mass., Feb. 13, 1858. Pupil of Boston
Museum School; Julian Academy in
Paris under Boulanger, Lefebvre and
Collin. Member: N. Y. Arch. Lg.
1890; Mural P.; Copley S. 1904; N.Y. Soc.
C; NAC; Lotos C. Specialty, mural
decorations, both in paint and in fire
etching. Work : "Adoration of St. Joan
of Arc," National Gallery, Washington;
"Decorative Portrait Louis XIV," Penn-
sylvania Academy, Philadelphia. Deco-
rations in National Arts Club.
FOSTER, Ben, 119 East 19th St., New
York, N.Y. ; sum., W. Cornwall, Conn.
Ldscp.P., W, — Born North Anson, Me.,
July 31, 1852. Pupil of Abbott H. Thayer
in New York; Morot and Merson in Paris.
Member: SAA 1897; ANA 1901, NA
1904; NYWCC; AWCS; Century Assoc;
Cal. AC; Nat. Inst. AL. ; Lotos C; Salma.
C. NAC (life). Awards: Medal Co-
lumbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; second
prize, Cleveland, 1895; bronze medal,
Paris Exp., 1900; silver medal, C.I.Pitts-
burgh, 1900; silver medal, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; Webb prize, SAA
1901; silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
Carnegie prize, NAD 1906; Inness gold
medal, NAD 1909; gold medal and prize,
NAC, 1917; Altman prize ($500) NAD
1917. Work: "Sunset in the Litchfield
Hills" and "Late Autumn Moonrise,"
Corcoran Gallery, Washington; "Early
Moonlight," Toledo Museum; "Lulled by
the Murmuring Brook," Luxembourg
Museum, Paris, France; "Birch-Clad
Hills," National Gallery, Washington;
"A Hill — Early Twilight," Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia; "Misty Moon-
light Night," Brooklyn Institute Mu-
seum; "Late Afternoon, Litchfield Hills,"
Public Gallery, Richmond, Ind.; "In the
Connecticut Hills," and "Late Summer
Moonrise," Metropolitan Museum, New
York; "Litchfield Hills," Art Institute
of Chicago; "Hazy Moonrise," Carnegie
Institute, Pittsburgh; and represented in
the Montreal Art Association; City Art
Museum of St. Louis; Omaha Society
of Fine Arts; Grand Rapids Art Asso-
ciation, etc.
FOSTER, Charles, Farmington, Conn.
P. — Born North Anson, Me., July 4.
1850. Pupil of Cabanel, Ecole des
Beaux-Arts and Jacquesson de la Chev-
reuse in Paris. Me m b e r : Conn. AFA.
FOSTER, Mrs. Emilie, 1017 M St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
P.— M em b e r : S. Wash. A.
FOSTER, Enid, Ross, Marin Co., Calif.
S. — Born San Francisco, Oct. 28, 1895.
Pupil of Chester Beach.
FOSTER, Ralph L., care of Livermore &
Knight Co., 42 Pine St.; h. 268 Presi-
dent Ave., Providence, R. I.
D., I.— Born Providence, Mar. 20, 1881.
Pupil of R. I. School of Design; ASL of
N. Y. Member : Providence AC;
Director, Art Dept., Livermore and
Knight.
FOSTER, W(illiam) F., care of Salma-
gundi Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
I.— M e m b e r : SI 1910; Salma. C.
FOURNIER, Alexis J(ean), 150 Walnut
St., East Aurora, N. Y.
P., I., L. — Born St. Paul, Minn. Pupil
of Laurens, Constant, Harpignies and
Julian Academy in Paris. Member:
Buffalo SA; Buffalo AC; Toledo Art
Klan; Minneapolis A.Lg. ; Paris AAA.
Awards: Gold and silver medals,
Minnesota Industrial Soc; Hengerer
prize, Buffalo, 1911; hon. men-
tion, Chicago AG.. 1917. Work:
"Clearing After a Storm," Vanderbilt
University, Nashville, Tenn.; "The
Haunts and Homes of the Barbizon
Masters," twenty oil paintings. Rep-
resented in Minneapolis Institute, St.
Paul Library, Detroit Art Institute, Pa.
Historical Soc, Congressional Library
Print Dept., Woman's Club of Minnea-
polis; "A France Sky," Hackley Art
Gallery, Musl^egon, Mich.; Kenwood C,
Chicago; Minneapolis Club and Library.
FOWLER, Carlton C, Colonial Studios:
h. 39 West 67th 'St.. New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., Mar. 19,
1877. Pupil of Academic Julian and
Caro - Delvaille. Member: NAC;
Salma. C; Lg. of N.Y. A. Award:
Hon. mention, Pan-American Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901.
FOX. C(ecilia) Beatrice B(ickerton) Mrs.
C. F. Grifl^.th.
FOX, Fontaine, care of Wheeler Syndi-
cate, 373 Fourth Ave., New York, N. Y.
(Cartoonist.)
FOX, Selden, care of Alley and Trask, 52
East 53rd St., New York, N. Y. (P.)
FRANCE, J(esse) L(each), 78 Pearl St.,
New Haven, Conn.; summer, Higgins
Beach, Me.
P., I., T. — Born Cincinnati, O., Oct. 8,
1862. Pupil of Carolus-Duran. Lefebvre
and Constant in Paris; H. W. Mesdag
in Holland. Member: Buffalo Soc
of Artists.
FRANCIS, Helen I. See Mrs. H. F. Hodge.
FRANCIS, William C, 64 Pearl St.; h.
]8 Oakland Place, Buffalo, N. Y.
Dec, Arch.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., May
21, 1879. Pupil of Buffalo ASL; Colum-
421
FRANCISCO
WHO*S WHO IN ART
FREEDLANDER
bia Univ. Sch. of Arch. Award:
Fellowship prize, Buffalo SA, 1918.
Member: Alumni Academy in Rome;
Buffalo SA; Buffalo GA. Instructor of
interior decoration, Albright Art School.
FRANCISCO, J. Bond, 1401 Albany St.,
I^os Angeles, Calif.
P.— Born Cincinnati, O., Dec. 14, 1863.
Pupil of Fechner in Berlin; Nauen
Schule in Munich; Bouguereau, Robert-
Fleury and Coutois in Paris. Mem-
ber: Laguna Beach Asso., Calif.
FRANK, Charles Lee, Box 1140, Wash-
ington, D. C. (P.)
FRANK, Gerald A., Tree Studio Bldg., 4
E. Ohio St.; summer, Box 8, Clifton,
Mass.
P.— Born Chicago, Nov. 22, 1888. Pupil
of Reynolds and Ufer in Chicago;
Hawthorne, Webster and Nordfeldt
in Provincetown, Mass. Member:
Chicago SA; Chicago AC; Chicago
AG; AIC. Alumni; Provincetown AA.
Awards : Chicago AG Fine Arts
prize, 1919. Represented in AIC.
FRANK, Herman, 950 North Franklin St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (S.)
FRANKLIN, Dwight, care of The Coffee
House, 54 West 45th St., New York,
N. Y.
P., S.— Born New York, N. Y., Jan. 28,
1888. Member: Am. Assoc, of Mu-
seums. Work in American Museum
of Natural History; Newark Public Li-
brary; Metropolitan Museum; Children's
Museum, Brooklyn; Cleveland Museum;
University of Illinois; French War
Museum. Specialty, miniature groups
for museums, usually of historical
nature.
FRANKLIN, Kate Mann, 38 Sanford
Ave., Flushing, N. Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
FRANTZ, Marshall, 49 West 37th St.,
New York, N. Y.
I.— Born Kief, Russia, Dec. 26, 1890.
Pupil of Walter Everett. Member:
Phila. Graphic Sketch C. Illustrations
for: "Saturday Evening Post," "Mc-
Clure's."
FRANZEN, August, 222 West 59th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Bar Harbor,
Me.
Port.P.— Born Norrkoping, Sweden, 1863.
Pupil of Dagnan-Bouveret in Paris.
Member: SAA 1894; ANA 1906; NA
1920; Lotos C. Awards: Medal,
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; bronze
medal, Paris Exp., 1900; hon. mention,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; gold
medal, AAS. 1902. Work: "Yellow
Jessamine." Brooklyn Institute Museum;
"William H. Taft," Yale University.
FRASER, James Earle, 3 Macdougal
Alley, New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Winona, Minn., Nov. 4, 1876.
Pupil of Falguiere in Paris. Mem-
ber: N.Inst.AL; NSS 1907; ANA
1912; NA 1917. National Commission
of Fine Arts. Award : First prize,
Paris AAA, 1898; medal Edison com-
petition, 1906; gold medal for sculpture
and gold medal for medals, P. -P.Exp.,
San F., 1915. Represented by medals
in Metropolitan Museum, New York;
Ghent Museum and Rome; bust Ex-Pres.
Roosevelt, Senate Chamber, Capitol,
Washington; Fine Arts Academy, Buf-
falo; statute of Bishop Potter in Cathe-
dral of St. John the Divine, New York,
N. Y. ; "End of the Trail," City of San
Francisco; Buffalo nickel; U. S. Victory
Medal; John Hay Memorial, Cleveland.
Instructor, ASL. of N. Y. 1906-1911.
FRASER, Mrs. James E. See Gardin.
FRASER, Malcolm, care of Salmagundi
Club, 45 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.;
. h. Brookhaven, N. Y.
I. — Born Montreal, Canada, Apr. 19,
1868. Pupil of ASL of N. Y., under
Wyatt Eaton; Julian Academy in Paris
under Boulanger and Lefeb'vre. Mem-
ber: Salma.C. 1897. Illustrated "Rich-
ard Carvel," "Caleb West," etc.
FRAZEE, Hazel, Fine Arts Building,
Chicago, 111.
P. — M ember: Chicago SA.
FRAZER, John E., 422 Wood St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
FRAZIER, John R(obinson), University
of Kansas. Lawrence, Kan.
P., T.— Born Stonington, Conn., July 29,
1889. Pupil of R. I. School of Design,
and C. W. Hawthorne. Member:
Providence AC. Award : Phila.
WCC. Prize, 1920.
FRAZIER, Kenneth, 129 East 40th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. Garrison-on-Hud-
son, N. Y.
P. — Born Paris, France, June 14, 1867.
Pupil of Herkomer in England; Con-
stant, Doucet and Lefebvre in Paris.
Member: SAA 1893; ANA 1906;; Cen-
tury Assoc. Award : Bronze medal,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
FRECH, Howard, 1230 St. Paul St., Bal-
tiinore, Md.
P.— M ember: Char. C.
FRECHETTE, M (arie) - M (arguerite), 67
Somerset St., West, Ottawa, Canada.
P. — Born Ottawa, Canada, April 16,
1884. Pupil of Kenyon Cox, Charles
Hawthorne; Mme. LaFarge in Paris.
Member: Union Internationale des
Beaux-Arts et des Lettres. Works :
Ten historical portraits. Chateau Fron-
tenac, Quebec.
FREDERICK, Edmund, 322 Fenimore St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
I. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Apr. 2, 1870.
Studied at PAFA. Member: SI 1910.
Worked in New York for the "World"
and "The Morning American." Illus-
trated books by Elinor Glyn, Robert
W. Chambers, Joseph C. Lincoln, etc.
FREDERICK, Frank F(orrest), 9 Bel-
mont Circle, Trenton, N. J.
P., C, T., W., L.— Born Methuen, Mass.,
Oct. 21, 1866. Pupil of Mass. Normal
Art School; Royal College of Art, Lon-
don; Trenton School of Industrial Arts.
Director, Trenton School of Industrial
Arts.
FREEDLANDER, Arthur R., 153 West
57th St., New York, N. Y.—
P., T.— Born New York. Pupil of
422
FREEDMAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
FRIESEKE
Twachtman and Mowbray in New York;
Cormon in Paris. Member: Salma.
C.1905. A w ar d : Isidor portrait prize,
Salma.C.1915.
FREEDMAN, Ruth, 4113 Arcade Bldg-.;
h. 6731 38th Ave., South, Seattle, Wash.
P.— Born Chicago, HI., June 4, 1899.
Pupil of Chicago AFA. Member:
Seattle AC. Award : 1st prize, Seat-
tle SFA, 1921.
FREELON, Allan R(andall), 774 South
15th 'St., Philadelphia, Pa.; summer,
Grendell Ave., Torresdale, Pa.
P., T. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 2,
1895. Pupil of Pa. Museum School of
Industrial Art, Member: Alumni
Assoc, Pa. Mus. School of Art.
FREEMAN, Jane, 1110 Carnegie Hall,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Conn. AFA.
FREEMAN, Mrs. Margaret, 43 West 12th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
FRENCH, Alice Helm (Mrs. William M.
R. French), 37 Glen Road, Williams-
town, Mass.
P.— Born Lake Forest, 111., Mar. 17, 1864.
Pupil of AIC. Member: Chicago SA.
Represented in St. Louis Museum; Be-
loit College Art Museum; Doshisha Col-
lege, Kotyo, Japan.
FRENCH, Daniel C(hester), 12 West 8th
St.; h. 125 West 11th St., New i^ork,
N. Y. ; summer, Glendale, Mass.
S.— Born Exeter, N. H., Apr. 20, 1850.
Pupil of Wm. Rimmer in Boston; J. Q.
A. Ward in New York; Thomas Ball in
Florence. Member: ANA 1900, NA
1901; NSS (hon.pres.) 1893; SAA 1882;
N.Y.Arch.Lg.l890; AIA (cor.) 1896; Acad-
emy San Luca, Rome; NAC; Century
Assoc; Nat. Inst. A.L.; Am.Acad.A.L.
Member Nat. Commission of Fine Arts
1910 to 1915. Awards: Third class
medal, Paris Salon, 1892; medal of
honor, Paris Exp., 1900; medal of honor
for sculpture, N.Y.Arch.Lg.l912; medal
of honor, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915; gold
medal of honor, Nat. Inst. AL, 1918.
■^/V o r k : "Death and the Sculptor,"
memorial to Martin Milmore, Boston;
"The Minute Man," Concord, Mass.;
"Abraham Lincoln," for Lincoln, Neb.;
"Continents," New York Custom House;
"Gen, Devens," equestrian statue (in
collaboration with E, C. Potter), Wor-
cester, Mass.; "Jurisprudence" and
"Commerce," Federal Building, Cleve-
land; "Quadriga," State Capitol, St.
Paul, Minn.; "Alma Mater," Columbia
Univ,, New York; Parkman Memo/;al,
Boston; "Mourning Victory," memorial
to Melvin brothers in Concord, Mass.,
and replica and "Memory," Metropolitan
Museum, New York; bust of Emerson,
Art Museum, Montclair, N. J. ; "Spirit
of Life," Trask Memorial, Saratoga, N.
Y. ; "Sculpture" on exterior of St. Louis
Museum; "Study of a Head," Fine Arts
Academy, Buffalo; "Statue of Emerson,"
Concord, Mass.; "Lafavette Monument."
Brooklyn, New York, N, Y, "Lincoln,"
Lincoln Memorial, Washington, D. C;
Dupont Fountain, Washington, D. C.
FRENCH, Frank, 83 Hanover St., Man-
chester, N. H.
Port. P., I., Wood Engr. — Born Loudon,
N. H., May 22, 1850. Mainly self-taught.
Member: Socof American Wood En-
gravers; Salma, C. Specialty, illustra-
tion of nature books. A w ar d s :
bronze medal. Centennial Exp., Phila-
delphia, 1876; medal, Columbian Exp.,
Chicago, 1893; silver medal for wood
engravings, Pan-Am. Exp,, Buffalo,
1901; gold medal for wood engraving,
St, Louis Exp., 1904.
FREUND, Arthur, 3714 Olinville Ave.,
New York, N, Y.
P, — M ember: S.Indp.A,
FREW, Wm., 1519 Wightman St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
FREY, Ervvin F., 110 Main St., Fleming-
ton, N. J.
S.— Born Lima, O., Apl, 21, 1892, Pupil
of Barnhorn, J, E. Eraser and Piccirilli.
Member: YS.
FRIEDLANDER, Leo, 71 Woodside St.,
Stamford, Conn,
S,— Born New York City, 1889, Pupil
of ASL of N, Y,; Ecole des Beaux Arts
of Paris and Brussels. Awards:
American Academy in Rome Fellow-
ship, 1913-1916; Helen Foster Barnett
Prize, NAD, 1918; hon. mention, AIC,
1920. Work: Sculptures on Wash-
ington Mem.orial Arch, Valley Forge,
Pa,, 1912; figures on altar of St. Thom-
as' Church, Frankfort, Pa.
FRIEDMAN, Sarah, 49 West 8th St,, New
York, N, Y.
P.— M ember: S,Indp,A .
FRIES, Charles Arthur, P. O. Box 28th
and Broadway; h. 2876 F St., San
Diego, Cal.
P., L, T.— Born Hillsboro, O., Aug. 14,
1854. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy.
Member: San Diego AG; Cal.A.C.
Laguna Beach AA; La Jolla AA, Rep-
resented in San Diego Art Museum.
FRIESEKE, Frederick Carl, care of Mac-
beth Galleries, 450 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.; and 64 Rue du Cherche
Midi, Paris, France,
P. — Born Owosso, Mich., Apr. 7, 1874.
Pupil of AIC; ASL of N. Y.; Constant,
Laurens and Whistler in Paris. Mem-
ber: ANA 1912, NA 1914; Assoc.Soc.
Nat. des Beaux- Arts, Paris; Paris AAA;
Inter.SocAL, Awards : Silver medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904; gold medal, Mu-
nich, 1904; fourth W. A. Clark prize
($500), Corcoran AG 1908; Temple gold
medal, PAFA 1913; grand prize, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915; Harris silver medal
and prize ($500), AIC 1916; Wm, W. R.
French Gold Medal, AIC, 1920; Potter
Palmer Gold Medal ($1,000), AIC, 1920;
Edw. B. Butler prize ($100), AIC, 1920,
Work : "Before the Mirror," Luxem-
bourg Museum, Paris; "The Toilet,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York; "The
Open Window," "On the Bank" and
"The Toilet," Art Institute, Chicago;
"Garden in June," Minneapolis Institute
of Arts; "Nude" and "The Hammock,"
Telfair Academy, Savannah, Ga. ; Mod-
ern Gallery, Venice, Italy; Museum of
423
FRIETSCH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
FULLER
Odessa; "The Sun Bath," Museum of
Fine Arts, Syracuse, N. Y.; "The Blue
Khiiono" and "Torn Lingerie," Art
Museum, St. Louis; "Under the Wil-
lows," Cincinnati Museum; "Mem-
ories," Toledo Museum; "The Bird
Cage," New Britain (Conn.) Institute;
"The Blue Gown," Detroit, Mich. "Lady
in Pink," Corcoran Art Gallery, Wash-
ington; "Golden Locket," Cincinnati
Museum.
FRIETSCH, Charlotte, 138 West 77th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., Des. — Born Mud Bay, Wis., Jan. 18,
1893. Member: Alliance; S.Indp.A.
FRISHMUTH, Harriet W(hitney), 152
East 36th St., New York, N .Y.
S.— Born Philadelphia, Sept. 17, 1880.
Pupil of Rodin and Injalbert in Paris;
Gutzon Borglum in New York. Mem-
ber: NSS, 1914; Alliance; N. A.
Women PS. Awards: McMillin
sculpture prize, N. A. Women PS.; hon.
mention, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1916; NAC
prize, N. A. Women PS; 1921.
FRITZ, Henry E., 29 Second Ave., North
Pelham, N. Y.
P., T.— Director of drawing. Public
Evening Schools, New York City.
FROEHLICH, George J., 44 Love St.,
Rochester, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
FROELiCH, Paul, 237 South 11th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
FROMEN, Agnes Valborg, 6016 Ellis
Ave., Chicago, 111.
S.— Born Waldermasvik, Sweden, Dec.
27, 1868. Pupil of AIC under Lorado
Taft. Member: Chicago SA; AIC
Alumni. Awards : Prize Municipal
Art League of Chicago, 1912; Swedish
Exhibition, 1912; second and third for
frieze of Illinois State Fair Building,
1914; prizes at Swedish American Ex-
hibition, 1917 and 1919. Work: "The
Spring," Art Institute of Chicago;
"Bust of Washington Irving," Wash-
ington Irving School, Bloomington, 111.;
memorial fountain in Englevvood High
School; memorial tablet in Hyde Park
Church of Christ, Chicago.
FROMKES. Maurice, 51 West 10th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Russia, Feb. 19, 1872. Pupil
of NAD under Ward and Low. Mem-
ber: Salma. C; MacD. C; Allied AA.
Award : Isidor portrait prize, Salma.
C. 1908. Work: Painting at Delgado
Museum, New Orleans; "Portrait,"
Newcomb College, New Orleans.
FROIVIUTH, Charles H(enry), Concar-
neau, Finistere, France.
Marine P. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Feb.
23, 1861. Pupil of PAFA under Thomas
Eakins. Member: Fellowship Penn-
sylvania Academy of Fine Arts; Assoc.
Soc. Nat. des Beaux- Arts; Pans; Lon-
don Pastel Soc; Soc. des Peintres de
Marine, Paris; Berlin Secession Soc. of
Painters (cor.). Awards: Second
class gold medal, International Exp.,
Munich, 1897; silver medal, Paris Exp.,
1900; gold medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
FROST, A(rthur) B(urdett), 529 South
Madison Ave., Pasadena, Calif.
I., P.— Born Philadelohia, Pa., Jan. 17,
1851. Member: SI 1905; Fellowship
PAFA. Award : Hon. mention, Paris
Exp., 1900. Author and illustrator of
"The Bull Calf," etc.
FROST, John, 546 South Madison Ave.;
h. 529 South Madison Ave., Pasadena,
Calif.
P., I.— Born Philadelphia, May 14, 1890.
Pupil A.B. Frost. Member: Calif.
AC.
FRUEH, (Alfred J.), 34 Perry St., New
York, N. Y.
P., I., C— Born Lima, Ohio, Sept. 2,
1880. Member: S. Indp. A.
FRY, John H(emming), 200 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born in Indiana. Pupil of Bou-
langer and Lefebvre in Paris. Mem-
ber: Lotos C; Paris AAA; A. Fund S;
Salma.C. 1902.
FRY, Sherry E(dmundson), 21 Carmine
St., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Creston, la., Sept. 29, 1879.
Pupil of AIC under Taft; MacMonnies
in Paris. Member: NSS 1908; N.Y.
Arch.Lg.l911; ANA 1914. Awards:
Hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1906; medal,
Salon, 1908; Am, Acad, at Rome schol-
arship 1908-11; silver medal, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915; Watrous gold medal,
NAD, 1917. Work: Statue, "Indian
Chief," Oskaloosa, Iowa; "Au Soliel,"
fountain, Toledo Museum of Art; "The
Dolphin," fountain, Mt. Kisco, N. Y.;
"The Turtle," fountain, Worcester,
Mass.; fountain for St. George, S. I.,
N. Y. ; Capt. Abbey, Tompkinsville,
Conn.; pediment, H. C. Frick house,
New York City; pediment Clark Mau-
soleum, Los Angeles; statute of Ira
Allen, U. of Vt.
FRY, William H., Art Academy, Cin-
cinnati, O. (Wood Carver.)
FRYE, M(ary) H(amilton), 10 Acacia
St., Cambridge, Mass.
C, I.— Born Salem, Mass., April 18, 1890.
Pupil of Boston Museum School. Mem-
ber: Boston SAC.
FRYER, Bryant W., 239 Central Park,
West, New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember Guild of Free Lance A.
FUCHS, Emil, 80 West 40th St., New
York, N. Y. (P., S.)
FUERTES, Louis Agassiz, Cornell
Heights, Ithaca, N. Y.
I., Mural P.— Born Ithaca, Feb. 7, 1874.
Pupil of Abbott H. Thayer in Boston.
Specialty, illustrations of bird and an-
imal life: Coves's "Key to North Amer-
ican Birds," Eaton's "Birds of New
York," etc.; made studies for habitat
groups in museum of Natural History,
New York.
FUHR, Ernest, Westport, Conn.
I. — M ember: SI.
FULLER, Arthur D., Westport, Conn.
I.— M ember: SI.
424
FULLER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
GALLAGHER
FULLER, Henry B(rown), 40 Washington
Sq., New York, N. Y.; summer, Wind-
sor, Vt.
P.— Born Deerfield, Mass., Oct. 3, 1867;
son of George Fuller. Pupil of Cowles
Art School in Boston under Bunker;
Cox and Mowbray at ASL of N. Y. ;
Collin in Paris. Member: SAA 1902;
ANA 1906. Awards: Bronze medal,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; Carnegie
prize, NAD 1908; silver medal, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915. Work: "Illu-
sions," National Gallery, Washington.
FULLER, Lucia Fairchild (Mrs. Henry
B. Fuller), 219 Clifford Ct., Madison,
Wis.
Min.P.— Born Boston, Dec. 6, 1872. Pu-
pil of Dennis M. Bunker in Boston;
Mowbray and Chase in New York.
Member: SAA 1899; ANA 1906; Am.
S. Min.P. (hon. vice-pres.); Pa.Min.P. ;
NYWCC; N. A. Women PS. Awards:
Bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1900; silver
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
gold medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
Work : "Portrait of a Child," Metro-
politan Museum, New Yorlc.
FULLER, Mrs. Meta W. See Warrick.
FULLER, R(alph) B(riggs), 170 Ames
Ave., Leonia, N. J.
P., I.— Born Capac, Mich., Mar. 9, 1890.
Humorous illustrations for Life and
Judge.
FULLER, Walter B., 606 West 191st St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., Arch. — Born Allston, Mass., Oct. 3,
1881. Pupil of NAD.
FULOP, Koroly, 7 West 14th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Tndp.A.
FULTON, E. Donald, care Pa. Academy
of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
FUNK, Wilhelm (Heinrich), 80 West 40th
St., New York, N. Y.
Port. P. — Born Hanover, Germany, Jan.
14, 1866; came to United States in 1885.
Pupil of ASL of N.Y.; Royal Academy
in Munich. Member: NAC; Acad-
emy of Fine Arts, Munich.
FURLONG, Charles (Wellington), P. O.
Box 222, Back Bay 17, Boston, Mass.;
summer, Pendleton, Ore.
P., I., W., L. — Born Cambridge, Mass.,
Dec. 13, 1874. Pupil of Bouguereau, Jean
Paul Laurens. Member: Boston
Art School Alumni Asso. ; Salma. C.
Award : Prix de concours. Academic
Julian, Paris.
FURSMAN, Frederick F., 4465 North Kil-
dare Ave., Chicago, 111.
P. — M ember: Chicago SA. Award:
Cahn prize ($100), AIC 1911. Work:
"In the Garden," Museum of Art, To-
ledo.
FYFE, Gilbert G., 511 Jeanette St., Wil-
l<;insburg. Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
GABAY, Esperanza, 136 West 91st St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Member: N. A. Women PS.
GADO, T. K., 12 Arden St., New York,
N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
GAFILL, Mrs. John J., 506 Southfield
Ave., Birmingham, Mich. (S.)
GAG, Wanda H(azel), 226 North Wash-
ington St., New Ulm, Minn.
I. — Born New Ulm, Minn., March 11,
1893. Pupil of Koehler, Zeigler, Goetsch,
Phoenix; ASL of N. Y. Award: New
York prize and honorable mention, Min-
nesota State Art Society.
GAGE, G(eorge) W(illiam), 64 Poplar 'St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Lawrence, Mass., Nov. 14,
1887. Pupil of Hale, Benson and Pyle.
Designs covers for leading magazines,
and has illustrated numerous books.
GAGE, Harry L., 5839 Morrowfield Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P., D., T.— Born Battle Creek, Mich.,
Nov., 1887. Pupil of AIC. Member:
Pittsburgh AA; AI Graphic A. Instruc-
tor at Carnegie Institute of Technology.
GAGE, Robert Merrell, 1031 Fillmore Ave.,
Topeka, Kan.
S.— W o r k : Bronze statue of Lincoln,
State House Grounds, Topeka.
GAGNON, Clarence A., 9 Rue Falgulere,
Paris, France.
P., E. — Born Montreal, Canada, Nov. 12,
1881. Pupil of Art Gallery, Montreal;
Jean Paul Laurens, Julian Academy,
Paris. Member: Salma. C, Royal
Canadian Society of Arts; Arts Club,
Montreal. Awards : Medal, St.
Louis Fair, 1904; Honorable mention,
Paris Salon, 1906. Represented in Na-
tional Gallery, Ottawa; Halifax Muse-
um; Toronto Art Gallery; Petit-Palais,
Paris; South Kensington Museum, Lon-
don; Dresden Gallery; Venice, Rome,
Florence, Hague, and Mulhausen.
GALE, Charles F., 91 North 20th St., Co-
lumbus, O.
P.— Born Columbus, July 3, 1874.
Member: Pen and Pencil Club,
Columbus; Col.Lg.A. Award: Mary
Elizabeth Bascom prize ($100), St.
Louis AG, 1914.
GALE, Walter R., Baltimore City College;
h. 233 West Lanvaie St., Baltimore, Md.
P., L, L., T.— Born Worton Manor, Kent
County, Md., Jan. 17, 1878. Pupil of
J. P. Haney and Walter Sargent;
Maryland Institute; Charcoal Club
School of Art. Member: Md. Inst,
Alumni A.; College AA; Archaeological
Inst.; Balto. WCC; Balto. Municipal AS;
Balto. School AL; Balto. Handicraft C;
Eastern Arts Asso.
GALLAGHER, James A., 426 Oakland
Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
GALLAGHER, Sears, 96 Hemenway St.,
Boston, Mass.; h. West Roxbury, Mass.
P., E.— Born Boston, Apr. 30, 1869. Pu-
pil of Tomasso Juglaris in Boston; Lau-
rens and Constant in Paris. Mem-
ber: Boston AC; Boston SWCP; Chi-
cago SE; Cal. SE; Boston SE.
Etchings in Boston Museum of Fine
Arts; Art Institute of Chicago; New
York Public Library; Brooklyn Mu-
seum; Library of Congress.
425
GALLI
WHO'S WHO IN ART
GARNSEY
GALLI, Alfredo, 417 Riverside Drive, New
York, N. Y. (I.)
GALLUP, Jeanie. See Mrs. Mottet.
GALT, Charles F(ranklln), 4021 Washing-
ton Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
P.— Born St. Louis, 1884. Pupil of St.
Louis School of Fine Arts and of Rich-
ard Miller. Award : Bascom prize
($100), St. Louis AG., 1914; Mallinckrodt
prize ($100), St. Louis AG, 1917.
GAMBLE, John Marshall, 8I31/2 State St.,
h. Box 313, Santa Barbara, Calif.
P. — Born Morristown, N. J., Nov. 25,
1863. Pupil of San Francisco School
of Design; Academic Julian, Laurens
and Constant in Paris. Member:
San F. AA. Award: Gold medal,
Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exp., 1909. Rep-
resented in Museum of Art, Auckland,
N. Z.; Park Museum, San Francisco.
GAMBLE, Roy C, 83 Fort St., West, De-
troit, Mich.
P.— Born June 12, 1887. Pupil of De-
troit Fine Arts Academy; ASL of N. Y.;
Julian in Paris. Member: Scarab C.
Awards : Second Hopkin prize for
painting. Scarab C, Detroit, 1914; gold
medal, 1920, Scarab C. Wo r k in
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts;
"Freckles," Detroit Art Institute.
GAMMELL, R(obert) H(ale) Ives, 480
Boylston St., Boston, Mass.; h. 170
Hope St., Providence, R. I.; summer,
Provincetown, Mass.
P.— Born Providence, R. L, Jan 7, 1893.
Pupil of William M. Paxton. Mem-
ber: Providence AC; Provincetown
AA.
GANIERE, George Etlenne, 6016 Ellis
Ave.; 1155 East 62d St., Chicago, 111.
S., T.— Born Chicago, 111. Pupil of AIC.
Member : Chicago SA; Alumni AIC;
SW Sc. Award: Shaffer prize, AIC,
1909. Work: "Baby Head" in John
Vanderpoel Memorial Collection; "Lin-
coln" at Lincoln Memorial School, Web-
ster City, la., and at Burlington, Wis.;
"Lincoln Fountain," Lincoln Highway,
Chicago, 111.; "Gen. Anthony Wayne,"
equestrian statue. Fort Wayne, Ind.
"Lincoln" and "Douglas," Chicago His^
torical Society; "Lincoln," Illinois His-
torical Society; "Lincoln," Grand Army
Memorial Hall. Chicago; "Hately Memo-
rial," Highland Park, 111.; Lincoln
Memorial, Starved Rock, State Park,
111.; Dr. Frank W. Gunsaulus Memorial,
Chicago. Former instructor in Sculp-
ture Dept., Chicago Art Inst.
GANG, Katherlne V., 2302 Park Ave.,
Cincinnati, O.
P.. — M ember: Cinn. Woman's A. C.
GARBER, Daniel, 1819 Green St., Phila..
Pa.; and Lumberville, Bucks Co., Pa,
P., T. — Born N. Manchester, Ind., Apr.
11, 1880. Pupil of Cincinnati Art
Academy under Nowottny; PAFA under
Anshutz. Member: ANA 1910, NA
1913. Fellowship PAFA; NAG; Salma.
C. Instructor PAFA since 1909.
Awards: Cresson scholarship PAFA
1903; first Hallgarten prize, NAD 1909;
non. mention, ACP 1910; hon. mention,
CI Pittsburgh 1910; fourth Clark prize,
Corcoran Gal. 1910; bronze metal, Bue-
nos Aires Exp.. 1910; Lippincott prize,
PAFA 1911; Palmer prize ($1,000), AIC-
1911; second W. A. Clark prize ($1,500)
and silver Corcoran medal, 1912; gold
medal, P.-P Exp., San F., 1915; Altman
prize ($500), NAD, 1915; Shaw prize,
Salma C, 1916; Morris prize, Newport
AA., 1916; Altman prize ($1,000), NAD,
1917; Stotesbury prize, PAFA, 1918;
Temple gold medal, PAFA, 1919.
Work: "April Landscape," Corcoran
Gallery, Washington; "Winter — Rich-
mont," Cincinnati Museum; "The Hills
of Byram" and "Towering Trees," Art
Institute, Chicago, 111.; "September
Fields," City Art Museum, St. Louis;
"Midsummer Landscape," University of
Missouri; "March," Carnegie Institute,
Pittsburgh; "Down the River. Winter."
Mus. of Art and 'Science, Los Angeles;
represented in Ann Mary Brown Me-
morial, Providence; National Arts Club,
New York; St. Paul Institute of Art;
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts;
Detroit Institute.
GARBETT, Mrs. C. (See Cornelia Barns).
GAR DIN, Laura (Mrs. James E. Fraser),
3 Macdougal Alley, New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Chicago, 111., Sept. 14, 1889.
Pupil of James E. Fraser. Member:
NSS; N. A. Women PS. Award:
Helen Foster Barnett prize, NAD, 1916.
Shaw memorial prize, NAD, 1919.
GARDINER, Eliza D(raper), 2139 Broad
St., Providence, R. I.
P., Engr., T.— Born Providence, R. L,
Oct. 29, 1871. Pupil of RI School of De-
sign. Member : Providence AC; Prov-
idence HC; Providence WCC; S.Indp.A.;
Calif. P.M. Represented in Detroit In-
stitute, Springfield Public Library and
Philadelphia Print Club.
GARDNER, Donald, 701 Emerson Ave.,
Evanston, 111. (I.)
GARDNER, Fred D., 246 Fuller St.; h.
1234 Pacific St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ; sum-
mer, Janesville, N. Y.
P., Arch. — Born Syracuse, N. Y., April
16, 1880. Pupil of Pratt Institute, Brook-
lyn. Member: S.Indp.A.
GARDNER, Gertrude G(azelle), 171 Union
St., Flushing, L. I., N. Y. ; summer.
Rocky Neck, Gloucester, Mass.
P., T.— Born Palo Alto Co., la.. Oct. 26,
1878. Pupil of Henry B. Snell.
GARDNER, Hamlin, 12 Gramercy Park,
New York, N. Y. (I.)
GARDNER, Mabel, 54 Stimson Ave., Prov-
idence, R. I.
P.— M ember: Providence WCC.
GARNSEY, Elmer E(llsworth), Prospect
Hill, White Plains, N. Y.
Mural P. — Born Holmdel, Monmouth Co.,
N. J., Jan. 24, 1862. Pupil of Cooper
Union, ASL, George Maynard and
Francis Lathrop in New York. Mem-
ber: Mural P; AIA (hon.). 1899; N. Y.
Municipal AS; Century Assoc; A. Aid S.
Awards : Bronze designer's medal,
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; hon.
426
GARO
WHO'S WHO IN ART
GAULEY
mention and silver medal for mural
decorations, Paris Exp., 1900. Work:
General color schemes — Library of Con-
gress, Washington; Public Library,
Boston; Public Library, St. Louis; Li-
brary of Columbia University, New
York; Memorial Hall, Yale University,
New Haven; State Capitol, St. Paul,
Minn.; State Capitol, Des Moines, la.;
State Capitol, Madison, Wis.; U. S.
Custom House, New York; Richardson
Memorial Library, City Art Museum,
St. Louis.
GARO, John H., 747 Boylston St., Boston,
Mass.
P. — M ember: Boston AC.
GARRATT, Arthur, 42 Washington
Square, New York, N. Y. (P., I.)
GARRETSON, Albert M., Waite and Bart-
lett Bldg., 53 Jackson Ave., Long Is-
land City, N. Y.; h, 22nd St. and Bay-
side Ave., Whitestone, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Oct. 12, 1877.
Pupil of Laurens in Paris. Member:
Salma. C. Award: Inness book-
plate prize, Salma. C, 1912.
GARRETT, Anna, Lansdowne, Pa.
I.— M ember: Plastic Club.
GARRETT, Clara Pfeifer (Mrs. Edmund
A. Garrett), Bayside, L. I., N. Y.
S.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa. Pupil of St.
Louis School of Fine Arts; Ecole des
Beaux- Arts; Mercie and Bourdelle in
Paris. Awards : Bronze medal,
Louisiana Purchase Exp., St. Louis,
1904; hon. mention, NSS, 1905; prize,
Artists' Guild of St. Louis, 1915; St.
Louis Art Lg. prize, 1916. Work:
"Boy Teasing Turtle," Metropolitan
Museum, New York City; "McKinley,"
City of St. Louis; "Children at Play,"
50 ft. frieze, Eugene Field School, St.
Louis.
GARRETT, Edmund H(enry), 110 Tre-
mont St., Boston, Mass.; h. Colonial
Court, Cambridge, Mass.
P., I., Etcher, W., L.— Born Albany, N.
Y., Oct. 19, 1853. Pupil of Laurens,
Boulanger, Lefebvre and Leroux in
Paris. Member: Boston AC; Boston
SWCP; Copley S. 1902; Paris AAA;
Boston SE. Award : Silver medal,
Boston, 1890. Work: Paintings in
Public Library and Calumet Club, Win-
chester, Mass.; etchings in Boston Mu-
seum of Fine Arts; Boston Public
Library; decorations in Brookside
Library, Great Barrington, Mass. ;
Conant Memorial Church, Dudley,
Mass.; State House, Boston.
GARRETT, Theresa A., 410 South Mich-
igan Ave., Chicago, 111.
E.— Born June 8, 1884. Member:
Chicago SE.
GARRISON, Robert, 1015 Logan St., Den-
ver, Colo.
S. — Pupil of Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts. Work: Decorations
Y. M. C. A. Building, Estes Park, Colo.;
2 Bronze African Lions for State Office
Bldg. of Colorado, Denver, Colo.
GARVEY, J(oseph M.), Alpine, N. J.
P.— Born New York, Sept. 28, 1877.
Pupil of William M. Chase. Mem-
ber: S. Indp. A.
GASAWAY, John W., Edgewood, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
GASBARRO, Nicola, 947 Steiner St., San
Francisco, Calif. (I.)
GASCH, Herman E., 1753 P St., Washing-
ton, D. C.
P.— M ember: S. Wash. A.
GASPARD, Leon, Fine Arts Bldg., Chi-
cago, 111.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
GATES, Frank E., 155 West 29th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
GAUGENGIGL, l(gnaz) IVI(arcel), 5 Otis
Place, Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Passau, Bavaria, July 29, 1855;
came to United States in 1880. Pupil
of Academy of Munich. Member:
SAA 1895; ANA 1906; Copley S. (hon.);
Boston GA. Awards : Medal, New
Orleans Exp.; medal, Mass. Charitable
Mechanics' Assoc. Work: "An Ama-
teur," R, I. School of Design, Provi-
dence. "Une Question DlfRcile," Metro-
politan Museum of Art.
GAUL, Arrah Lee (Mrs. A. L. G. Bren-
nan). Spruce and Sixteenth Sts., Phila-
delphia, Pa. Ludlow Bldg., 34 South
IGth St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Plastic C. ; AWCS.
GAUL, 0. G., 4842 Hazel Ave., Philadel-
phia, Pa. (I.)
GAUL, Harvey B., 6213 Howe St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., April 11,
1881. Pupil of Gilbert Gaul and NAD.
GAUL (William) Gilbert, 1947 Broadway,
Room 605; h. 150 West 105th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Jersey City, N. J., March
31, 1855. Pupil of NAD, ASL and J. G.
Brown in New York. Member: ANA
1879; NA 1882. Awards: Gold medal.
Prize Fund, 1886; bronze medal, Paris
Exp., 1889; medal, Columbian Exp.,
Chicago, 1893; bronze medal, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; gold medal, Appa-
lachian Exp., Knoxville, 1910. Work:
"Battery H in Action," Toledo Mu-
seum; "Molly Pitcher at Monmouth"
and "Exchange of Prisoners," Demo-
cratic Club, New York.
GAULEY, Robert D(avid), Hotel Nassau,
55 East 59th St., New York, N. Y.
P., T. — Born Carnaveigh, County Mona-
ghan, Ireland, March 12, 1875; came to
United States in 1884. Pupil of D. W.
Ross in Cambridge; Benson and Tar-
bell in Boston; Bouguereau and Fer-
rier in Paris. Member: NYWCC;
ANA 1908; AWCS. Awards: Bronze
medal, Paris Exp., 1900; hon. mention.
Pan- Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; Isidor prize,
Salma. C, 1907; Clarke prize, NAD 1908;
third prize, Appalachian Exp., Knox-
ville, Tenn., 1910; Isidor portrait prize,
Salma. C. 1912; silver medal, P.-P Exp.,
San F., 1915. Work: "The Fur Muff,"
427
GAUSTA
WHO'S WHO IN ART
GELERT
National Gallery, Washington, D. C. ;
Capitol, Washington, D. C; Public Li-
brary, Watertown, N. Y.; Kolding, Den-
mark; Fine Arts Dept., Harvard Univ.,
Cambridge, Mass.
GAUSTA, H(erbjorn), 1706 Elliot Ave.,
Minneapolis, Minn.
P. — Born in Norway, June 16, 1854.
Pupil of Royal Academy of Munich.
Member: Minneapolis A. Lg.
GAW, William A., 2713 Ellsworth St.,
Berkeley, Calif. (P.)
GAY, Edward, Mt. Vernon, N. Y.; sum-
mer, Cragsmoor, Ulster Co., N. Y.
P. — Born Dublin, Ireland, Apr. 25, 1837;
came to United States in 1848 and
settled in Albany. Pupil of J. M. Hart
at Albany, N. Y.; Schirmer and Les-
sing in Karlsruhe, Germany. Mem-
ber: ANA 1869, NA 1907; NYWCC;
A.Fund S; Lotos C. Awards: Prize
of $2,000, American Art Assoc, compe-
tition 1887; medal. Midwinter Exhibi-
tion, San Francisco; medal, New Or-
leans Exp., 1885; bronze medal, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; Shaw purchase,
SAA 1903; bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; Inness gold medal, NAD
1905. Works: Mural paintings: Wag-
ner Hotel, Canajoharie, N. Y.; "Taor-
mina," Mount Vernon (N. Y.) Public
Library; "The Acropolis, Athens,"
Frank R. Chambers Library, Crows
Nest, Bronxvilie, N. Y. Paintings:
"Washed by the Sea," Lay ton Mu-
seum, Milwaukee; "Broad Acres,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York;
"Time and Tide," Public Library,
Mount Vernon, N. Y.; "The Fields at
Eastchester, N. Y.," Mount Vernon
High School; "Waving Grain," Min-
neapolis Fine Arts GaUery; "The Hill-
side," National Gallery, Washington;
'-•The Month of May," Chicago Art In-
stitute; "Summer at Sound Beach," Art
Museum, Montclair, N. J.; "Mother
Earth," High School, Mt. Vernon, N.Y.
GAY, George Howell, 100 Kraft Ave.,
Bronxvilie, N. Y.
P. — Born Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 2, 1858.
Pupil of Paul Brown and Henry A.
Elkins in Chicago. Settled in New York
in 1889. Specialty, marines and land-
scapes.
GAY, Lillie H., 5 West 39th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
GAY, Walter, 11 Rue de I'Universite,
Paris, France; summer, Le Breau-par-
Dammarie - les - Lys, Seine - et - Marne,
France.
P.— Born Hingham, Mass., Jan. 22, 1856.
Pupil of Bonnfit in Paris. Member:
ANA 1904; Societe Nouvelle; Nat. des
Beaux- Arts; Societe de la Peinture u
I'Eau; Royal Society Water Colors,
Brussels; i\at. Inst. A. L. Member ex-
ecutive committee Societe des Amis du
Louvre, Paris; National Inst, of Arts
and Letters. Awards : Hon. men-
tion, Paris Salon, 1885; third class
medal, Paris Salon, 1888; gold medal,
Vienna, 1893; gold medals, Antwerp
and Munich, 1894; gold medal. Ber-
hn and Budapest, 18U5; silver medal,
Paris Exp., 1900; silver medal, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; Chevalier of
the Legion of Honor 1894, officer 1906.
Work: Six pictures bought by
the French Government; "White and
Blue" and "Las Cigarreras," Luxem-
bourg Museum, Paris; "Interior of the
Palazzo Barbaro," Boston Museum of
Fine Arts; "Chez Helleu," Pennsyl-
vania Academy, Philadelphia; "The
Spinners" and portrait of W. H. Hun-
tington, Metropolitan Museum, New
York; "Beiedicite," Museum at Amiens,
France; represented at Buffalo, N. Y.;
Providence, R. I.; Carnegie Institute,
Pittsburgh, Pa.; Pinacotheque, Munich;
"Interior of Petit Trianon," R. I. School
of Design, Providence; "The Green
Salon," Metropolitan Museum of Art,
New York; "Interior, Chateau du Breau
(La Commode)," Art Institute of Chi-
cago.
GAYLOR (Samuel) Wood, 142 West 127th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., E., L.— Born Stamford, Conn., Oct.
2, 1883. Pupil NAD. Member: Pen-
guins; Modern Artists of America.
GEARHART, Frances H., 18 West Cali-
fornia St., Pasadena, Calif.
E.— M ember: Calif. P.M.
GEARHART, May, 18 West California St.,
Pasadena, Calif.
E.— M ember: Calif. P.M.
GEER, Grace Woodbridge, 12 Pinckney
St., Boston, Mass.
Port. P., T.— Born Boston, 1854. Pupil of
Mass. Normal Art School, F. H. Tomp-
kins, Triscott, Tarbeil, Vonnoh and
Lowell Inst. Member: Copley S. 1900.
Represented by portrait at International
Institute for Girls, Madrid, 'Spain; Girls'
High School, Boston.
GELERT, J(ohannes Sophus), 11 East
14th St., New York, N. Y
S. — Born Nybel, Schleswig, Denmark
Dec. 10, 1852; came to United States
1887; citizen 1892. Pupil of Royal
Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen.
Member: NSS 1899;. N Y. Arch.
Lg. 1898. Awards : Scholarship
from Danish Government for study
in Italy, 1882-83; gold medal, Nash-
ville Exp., 1897; gold medal, AC
Phila. 1899; hon. mention, Paris
Exp., 1900; hon. mention, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; gold medal,
AAS 1902. Work: "Haymarket"
monument, Chicago; Gen. Grant Statue,
Galena, 111. ; Hans Christian Andersen
and Beethoven monument, Chicago;
"Denmark," for U. S. Custom House,
New York; "Roman Civilization," four
statues. Brooklyn Institute of Arts and
Sciences;, Furman statue, Vanderbilt
University and Furman Memorial Cem-
etery, Nashville, Tenn.; statue of Col.
Stevens, Minneapolis, Minn.; nine stat-
ues for Bergen County Court House.
Represented in Art Institute of Chi-
cago and museums in Denmark. "Goth-
ic Art" and "Napoleon," St. Louis Mu-
seum; six reliefs on Erenshaw Me-
morial, Cincinnati, O.; statue of C. W.
Post, Battle Creek, Mich.
428
G ELLEN BACK
WHO'S WHO IN ART
GIBSON
GEL LEN BACK, Edith C, 407 Resor Ave.,
Clifton, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnali Woman's
AC.
GELON, Marie Martha J. See Mrs.
lildgar Cameron.
GENDROT, Felix Albert, Buena Vista St.,
Koxbury, Mass.
P., S. — Born Cambridge, Mass., Apr.
28, 1866. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art
School, Boston; Julian Academy in
Paris under Laurens and Constant;
sculpture with Puech and Verlet.
Member: Boston AC; Paris AAA;
Copley S.
GENTH, Lillian, 62 Washington Sq., New
Y^ork, N. Y.; summer, Fails "Village, Ct.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil of
Phila. School of Design for Women
under Elliott Daingerlield; Whistler in
Paris. M ember: ANA 1908; Assoc.
Fellowship PAFA; NAC; K. Soc.
Arts, London; Inter. Soc. AL.
Awards : Mary Smith prize, PAFA
1904; Shaw memorial, NAD 1908; bronze
medal, Buenos Aires Exp., 1910; first
Haligarten prize, NAD 1911; bronze
medal, NAC 1913. Work: "Depths
of the Woods" and "Adagio," National
Gallery, Washington; "Springtime," Met-
ropolitan Museum, New York; "The
Lark," Engineers' Club, New York;
"The Bird Song," Carnegie Institute,
Pittsburgh; "Pastoral," Brooklyn In-
stitute of Arts and Sciences; "Venice"
and "In Normandy," Philadelphia Art
Club, Philadelphia; and in Detroit
(Mich.) Club; Grand Rapids (Mich.) Art
Association; Muncie (Ind.) Art Associa-
tion; Rochester (N. Y.) Museum; Na-
tional Arts Club, New York; Cremer
Collection, Dortsmund, Germany; Nash-
ville AA.
GEORGE, H. Margaret, Newton Center,
Mass. (S.)
GEORGE, Vesper Lincoln, 120 Riverway,
Boston; h. West Gloucester, Mass.
P., T. — Born Boston, Mass., June 4,
1805. Pupil of Constant, Lefebvre
and Doucet in Paris. Member:
Boston AC; Head of Dept. of Design,
State Normal Art School, Boston.
GEORGESON, Lloyd W., 22 West 9th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
GERDES, Augustus M., New Canaan,
Conn.
P. — M e m b e r : Salma. C.
GERE, Nellie Huntington, 123 South Vir-
gil Ave., Los Angeles, Cal,
Ldscp. P., Interior Dec, T. — Born Nor-
wich, Conn. Pupil of AI Chicago under
Frederick Freer; Pratt Inst., Brooklyn;
Ipswich Summer School under Dow.
Member : Chicago ASL. Chairman
Art Dept., Southern Branch, University
California, Los Angeles.
GERNHARDT, Henry F., South Framing-
ham, Mass.
P.— M ember: Conn.AFA.
GERRER, Robert Gregory, St. Benedict
and Kickapoo Sts., Shawnee, Okla.
P., T. — Born Alsace, France, July 23,
1867. Pupil of Ortiz, Nobile, Gonnella,
and Galliazzi. Member: Okla. Assoc.
Artists (pres.). Award: Silver medal,
Okla. State Exh., 1915. Work: "Por-
trait of Pope Pius X," in the Vatican,
Rome.
GERSTENHEIM, Louis, 344 East 57th
bt.. New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born in Poland, June 10, 1890.
Pupil of National Academy of Design.
Member: S.Indp.A.; Soc. of N.Y.
Artists.
GERSTLE, Miriam Alice, 2360 Washing-
ton St., San Francisco, Cal.
P., I., E. — Born San Francisco, Cal.,
Mar. 9, 1898. Member: San Fran-
cisco AA.; Whitney Studio Club of N. Y.
GERSTLE, William L(ewis), 617 Mont-
gomery St., h. 310 Sansome St., San
ii'iancisco, Calif.
P. — Born San F'rancisco, Jan. 28, 1868.
Pupil of George Weiss, ASL of N. Y.;
San Francisco School of Fine Arts.
M ember: San Francisco AA.
GEST, J(oseph) H(enry), Art Museum,
Eden Park; h. 2144 Grandin Road, Cin-
cinnati, O.
P. — Born Cincinnati, 1859. Member:
NAC; Cin. Municipal AC. Director
Cincinnati Museum; President Rook-
wood Pottery.
GETCHELL, Edith Loring, 6 Linden St.,
Worcester, Mass.
E.— Born Bristol, Pa. Pupil of Phila.
School of Design for Women; PAFA.
Member: N. Y. EC; Chicago SE;
Boston SE. Work in: Library of
Congress, Washington, D. C. ; New
York Public Library; Boston Museum
of Fine Arts; Worcester Art Museum;
Smithsonian Institute, Washington, D.
C; Walters Collection, Baltimore.
GETTIER, C. R., Tudor Hall, Baltimore,
Md.
I.— M ember: Char. C.
GETTIER, G. Wilmer, 855 North Howard
St.; h. 1019 West Lanvale St., Balti-
more, Md.
P.— Born Baltimore, Md., Feb. 23, 1877.
Studied in Baltimore and Munich.
Member: Char. C. ; Baltimore Alli-
ance.
GETTY, Francis E., Winchester, Mass.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
GIBBONS, Caroline L., 4421 Osage Ave.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
GIBBS, George, 1520 Chestnut St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.; h. Rosemont, Pa.
I., P. — Born New Orleans, La., March
8, 1870. Pupil of Corcoran School and
ASL in Washington, D. C. Member:
S. Wash. A; Wash. WCC; AC. Phila.;
Author and Illustrator of "American
Sea Fights," "Tony's Wife," etc.
GIBSON, Charles Dana, Carnegie Studios;
' h. 127 East 73d St., New York, N. Y.
1., P. — Born Roxbury, Mass., Sept. 14,
1867. Pupil of ASL. Member: ANA;
SI 1902 (pres.); AI Graphic A.; Nat. Inst.
AL; Port. P. Author and illustrator of
"Education of Mr. Pipp."
429
GIDDINGS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
GILPIN
GIDDINGS, Albert F., Hotel Del Prado,
1400 East 59th 'St., Chicago, III.
P., E.— Born Brenham, Texas, Feb. 12.
1883. Pupil of AIC. Frederick W. Freer.
Member: Chicago ASL,; Alumni
Asso. AIC. Decoration in Wendell
Phillips High School, Chicago.
GIDDINGS, Frank A., 74 Webster St.,
Hartford, Conn.
P., E.— Born Hartford, Conn., Dec. 3,
1882. Pupil of Chase. Member:
Conn. AFA.
GIEBERICH, O(scar) H., care of Haw-
thorne Art School, Provincetown, Mass,
P., E., T.— Born New York City, Mar.
25, 1886. Pupil of Bridgman, Cox, Mora,
Du Mond and Hawthorne. Member:
S. Wash. A.; Salma. C. Teacher in
Summer School of Charles W. Haw-
thorne, Provincetown, Mass., and at
Notre Dame, Ind.
GIES, Joseph W., 14 West Adams Ave.,
Detroit, Mich.
P. — Born Detroit. Pupil of Bouguereau
and Robert-Fleury in Paris; Royal
Academy in Munich. Member:
Scarab. C. Work: "Lady m Pinit *
and "Portrait of Robert Hopkin,"
Detroit Institute.
GIESE, Augustus F., 1852 Jerome Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
GIFFEN, Lilian, 1004 North Charles St.,
Baltimore, Md. ; summer, East Glouces-
ter, Mass.
P., W. — Born New Orleans, La. M e m-
b e r : Balto. WCC; Washington AC.
GIHON, A(lbert) D(akin), 59 Avenue de
Saxe, Paris, France.
Ldscp.P., T.— Born Portsmouth, N. H.,
Feb. 16, 1866. Pupil of Eakins in Phila-
delphia; Constant, Laurens and Ecole
des Arts Decoratifs in Paris. Mem-
ber: Fellowship PAFA; Paris AAA.
Award: Second prize, Paris AAA, 1900.
GIHON, Clarence Montfort, 51 Blvd. St.
Jacques, Paris, France.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Oct. 25, 1871.
Pupil of Chase and Cox in New York;
Laurens and Constant in Paris.
Member: Paris AAA.
GILBERT, Caroline, Mechanic Arts High
School, St. Paul, Minn.; summer. White
Bear, Minn.
D., E., C— Born Pardeeville, Wis., in
1864. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: St. Paul Inst. Artists' S.
GILBERT, Charles Allan, 251 East 61st
St., New York, N. Y.
I., P.— Born Hartford, Conn., Sept. 9,
1873. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Constant
and Laurens in Paris. Member: SI
1904; Conn. AFA. Illustrated "Women
of Fiction," "A Message from Mars."
GILBERT, Dorothy, 490 21st St., Port-
land, O. (P.)
GILCHRIST, Meda. 1152 West 51st St.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
P.— M ember: Calif. AC.
GILCHRIST, W. Wallace, Jr., Brunswick.
Me.
P.— Born Mar. 2, 1879. Studied at PAFA
and in Munich, Paris and London.
Member: AC Phila. ; Fellowship
PAFA; Phila. WCC; Salma.C. Award:
Third Hallgarten prize, NAD 1908; gold
medal, Wash.SA 1914. Work: "The
Model's Rest," Cincinnati Museum.
GILDER, Robert F(letcher), World-
Herald Bldg.; h. 4604 Florence Blvd.,
Omaha, Neb.
P.— Born Flushing, L. I., N. Y., Oct. 6,
1856. Pupil of August Will in New
York. Member: Omaha Art G.
Work: "Where Rolls the Broad Mis-
souri," University Club, Omaha; "Sun-
shine and Shadow," Omaha Friends of
Art Association; "Winter Morning," St.
Paul Institute; "Desert Clouds," Philip
Payne Memorial, Amherst College;
"Arizona Desert" and "San Gabriel
Canyon, Calif.," Omaha Public Library.
On Staff of the Omaha "World-Herald."
GILES, Howard, 35 West 14th St., New
York, N. Y.; h. Forest Hill, N. J.
P., L, T.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Feb.
10, 1876. Pupil of ASL of N.'Y. under
Mowbray. Member: ANA; AWCS;
A. Fund S.; Allied AA.; AI Graphic A.;
Phila. AC; Salma. C; NAC (life); Lg.
of N.Y.A.; Guild of Free Lance Artists;
Century Asso. Awards : Shaw Pur-
chase Prize ($500), Salma. C, 1915;
Shaw illustration prize, Salma. C,
1915; Beck prize, Phila. WCC, 1917; In-
ness gold medal, NAD, 1918; hon. men-
tion Chicago Art Institute, 1918; Silver
medal Carnegie Inst., 1921; Water Color
Purchase Prize, AIC, 1921. Represented
in Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts; Chicago Art Institute. Director,
Dept. of Fine Ai'ts, N. Y. School of Fine
and Applied Arts.
GILKISON, Mrs. A. H., 226 West Swiss-
vale Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
GILLESPIE, George, 711 Penn Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
GI'lLESPIE, Jessie, 5909 Wayne Ave.,
German town, Philadelphia, Pa.; sum-
mer, Hurryville, Monroe Co., Pa.
I. — Born Brooklyn, N. Y. Pupil of
PAFA. Member: Plastic C.
GILLIAM, Marguerite Hubbard, 1216 20th
St.; h. 2100 Pennsylvania Ave., Boulder,
Colo.
P., T.— Born Boulder, Colo., Dec. 22,
1894. Pupil of Edwin H. Blashfield,
Emil Carlsen, John Sloan, Hugh H.
Breckenridge. Member: Fellow-
ship PAFA.
GILMORE, Ada, Provincetown, Mass.
P., Wood Engr. — Born Kalamazoo,
Mich., June 17, 1882. 'Studied with Hen-
ri in New York; AIC; and in Paris.
Work: "Parasols," purchased by Mu-
nicipal Art Commission, Chicago.
GILPIN, Charles Armour, 5818 Alder St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— Born Cumberland, Md., Oct. 7. 1867.
Member: Pittsburgh AA. Work:
"Relic of 1824," owned by Hundred
Friends of Pittsburgh Art.
430
GIMENO
WHO'S WHO IN ART
GOFF
GIMENO, P(atricio), 807 Jenkins Ave.,
Norman, Okla.
P., L.. T. — Born Arequipa, Peru, S. A.,
Dec. 25, 1865. Pupil of M. Rosas and
Valencia in Spain. Member: Okla.
Art League. Award: $500 prize
for Allegorical Painting awarded by
Okla. City R. R. Co. Work : Portrait
of Pres. Pierola in Gov. Palace, Lima,
Peru.
GINTHER, Mary Pemberton. See Mrs.
M. P. G. Heyler.
GIRARDIN, Frank J., 532 San Francisco
Ave., Redondo Beach, Calif.
Ldscp.P. — Born Louisville, Ky., Oct. 6,
1856. Pupil of Cincinnati Academy
under Noble. Member: Cincinnati
AC; Richmond AA; Richmond Group
of Painters. Award : First prize,
Cincinnati AC 1903; Foulke prize, Rich-
mond Art Association, 1912. Work:
"The Hillside" and "Lingering Snow,"
Public Gallery, Richmond, Ind.; also in
Marion Art League, Connersville Art
League, and Queen City Club of Cin-
cinnati.
GLACKENS. William J., care Daniel
Gallery, 2 West 47th St.; h. 10 West 9th
St., NeAV York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Philadelphia, March 13,
1870. Pupil of PAFA and studied in
Europe. Member: SI 1902; SAA
1905; ANA 1906; Am.PS; Fellowship
PAFA.; Port. P.; Society Independent
Artists; Los Angeles Modern AS.
Awards: Gold medal for drawings
at Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver
medal for painting and bronze for
illustration, St. Louis Exp., 1904; hon.
mention, CI Pittsburgh, 1905; bronze
medal, P.-P.Exp., San F. 1915. Work-
Drawings in Metropolitan Museum, New
York; Minneapolis Institute of Arts.
GLADDING, Mary, 20 Arnold St., Provi-
dence, R. I.
P.— M ember: Providence WCC.
GLAMAN, Mrs. Eugenie Fish, 2850 Lex-
ington St., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born St. Joseph, Mo., Jan. 25, 1873.
Pupil of AIC; Simon, Cottet and Fre-
miet in Paris. Member: Chi-
cago SA; Chicago WCC. Awards:
Bronze medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
. Butler purchase prize ($200), AIC, 1913.
Work purchased by Chicago Municipal
Commission. Specialty, animal subjects.
GLEESON, Adele Schulenberg (Mrs.
Charles K. Gleeson), 115 Edwin Ave.,
Kirkwood. Mo.
S. — Born St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 18, 1883.
Studied with George J. Zolnay; St.
Louis School of Fine Arts; Grafly; and
in Berlin. Member: St. Louis AG.
GLEESON, C(harles) K., 115 Edwin Ave.,
Kirkwood, Mo.
P., E.— Born St. Louis. Mo., March
5, 1878. Pupil of Theo. Steinlen; School
of St. Louis Museum of Art; ASL of
N. Y.; Colarossi Academy in Paris.
M em b e r : Chicago SE; St. Louis AG.
Work in: Herron Art Institute, In-
dianapolis; Worcester Art Museum;
Chicago Art Institute; St. Louis Mu-
seum of Fine Arts; New York Public
Library; Library of Congress, Wash-
ington, D. C; Toledo Art Museum.
GLENNY, Alice Russell (Mrs. John
Glenny), 1150 Amherst St., Buffalo.
N. Y.; and 132 East 19th St., New York,
N. Y.
P., S.— Born Detroit, Mieh., 1858. Pupil
of Chase in New York; Boulanger in
Paris. Member: Buffalo SA; ASL
of Buffalo; N. A. Women PS. Award:
Prize for mural decoration, Buffalo His-
torical Soc.
GLINSKY, Vincent, 13 East 14th St., New
York, N. Y. (S.)
GLOETZNER, Josephine P., 1228 M St.,
N. W., Washington, D. C.
P., D.— -Born Washington, D. C. Me m-
b e r : Wash. WCC; S. Wash. A.; Wash.
AC; Kiinstterinen Veriein, Munich.
GLUECK, Charles M., 342 West Portsea
St., New Haven, Conn.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
GODDARD, Florence M., Southern Calif.
Br., IT. of Calif., Los Angeles, Calif.
E.— M ember: Calif. P.M.
GODDARD, Margaret. See Mrs, John
Carlson.
GODDARD, Ralph (Bartlett), 290 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y. ; and Madison,
Conn.
S.— Born Meadville, Pa., June 18, 1861.
Pupil of NAD and ASL of N. Y.;
Dampt in Paris. Member: NSS 1899.
Work: Statuettes of Carlyle and of
Tennyson and bronze portrait medal-
lions. Metropolitan Museum, New York;
"Premiere Epreuve," Detroit Institute;
Statue of Gutenberg, Hoe Building,
New York.
GODDING, Mary P., "The Albermarle."
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
GODWIN, Frank, 61 West 12th St., New
York, N. Y. (I.)
GOETSCH, Gustav F., 20 Elm Ave., Glen-
dale, Mo.; School of Fine Arts, Wash-
ington University, St. Louis, Mo.
P., E., T. — Born Minneapolis, March 15,
1877. Pupil of Koehler in Minneapolis;
Chase and Beckwith in New York;
Blanche and Julian in Paris. Mem-
ber: SFA; St. Louis AG; Chicago SE;
Calif. SE; St. L. AL; 2 x 4 Soc.
A wa r d : First prize ($100) for paint-
ing, Minneapolis AI; hon. mention, St.
Paul Inst., 1917; first prize for best
work of art, and first prize, thumb box
exhibition, St. L. AL, 1918; first prize
for best work of art, and first prize for
pastel, St. L. AG, 1918. Work in:
City Art Museum, St. Louis; Minne-
apolis Inst, of Arts; and Worcester Art
Museum. ;
GOETSCH, Mrs. Gustav F. See Weedell,
Hazel.
GOFF, Clifton D., Manhasset, L. L, N. Y.
P.— ]\r e m her: S.Indp.A.
GOFF, Sudduth, 441 West 2nd St., Lex-
ington, Ky.
P. — Born Eminnce, Ky., Aug. 6, 1887.
Pupil of Meakin, Nowottny, Benson, and
Hale. M em b e r : Alumni Boston
431
GOFFE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
GOSHORN
School of Museum of Fine Arts. AV o r k
in collection of Kentucky Federation of
Women's Clubs.
GOFFE, Gladys, 403 AVest St., Wilkins-
burg, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
GOHL, Edward Heinrich, Pearson Bldg.,
Auburn, N. Y.
P.— Born Harrisburg-, Pa., Nov. 3, 1862.
Pupil of Constant, Laurens, Bashet and
Schommer in Paris. Member: Paris
AAA.
GOLDBECK, W(alter) D(ean), 70 West
45th St., New York, N. Y.; summer,
Little Neck, L. I., N. Y.
P., S., E. — Born St. Louis, Mo., Oct. 7,
1882. Award : Cahn hon. mention,
AIC, 1911.
GOLDBERG, Reuben Lucius, "Evening
Mail," 25 City Hall Place, New York,
N. Y,
L — Born San Francisco, Cal., July 4,
1883. Cartoonist on "Evening Mail"
since 1907.
GOLDIE, J. Liddel, 31 Hancock St.,
Springfield, Mass. (P.)
GOLDSWORTHY, Emelia M., Art Direc-
tor, Western States Normal School, Kal-
amazoo, Mich.
P., T. — Born Platteville, Wis., June 3,
1869. Pupil of AIC and of Otis Art
Inst., Los Angeles, and Pratt Inst,
under Dow, Forsyth, Snell, Freer, Bat-
chelder and Jean Mannheim. Mem-
ber: Fine Art Study Club of Kalama-
zoo; Indiana Painters; Kalamazoo Art
Assoc, (pres.). Art instructor, Cali-
fornia Univ., Berkeley, summer 1915;
Art director, AVestern State Normal,
Kalamazoo (1905-1920).
GOLDTHWAITE, Anne, 35 West 10th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., E. — Born Montgomery, Ala. Pupil
of NAD under Mielatz in New York;
Academie Moderne in Paris. Member:
N. A. Women PS; P-G.; NYWCC;
Eclectics; Calif. P.M. Awards : Mc-
Millin landscape prize ($100); N. A.
Women PS, 1915; bronze medal for etch-
ing, P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915. Work
in Library of Congress, Washington,
D. C.
GOLTZ, Walter, Woodstock, N. T.
P., T.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., June 20,
1875. Pupil of Mowbray and Birge Har-
rison.
GONZALES, Boyer, 3327 Avenue O, Gal-
veston, Tex. ; summer, AVoodstock, N. Y.
P. — Born Houston, Tex., Sept. 22, 1867.
Pupil of Wm. J. Whittemore in New
York; Walter Lansel in Boston; ASL at
AVoodstock, N. Y. ; studied in Holland,
Paris and Florence; painted with Wins-
low Homer. Member: Galveston
A. Lg. NYAVCC; Salma. C; NAC;
AVash. AC. Awarded Arthur Evarts
gold medal, Dallas, 1921. Represented
in Galveston Art League; Municipal
Schools of Galveston; Delgado Museum,
New Orleans, La.
GOODELMAN, Aaron, 25 East 14th St.,
New York, N. Y. (S.)
GOODHEART, Anna, 52 S St., N. W.,
AVashington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
GOODRICH, J(ames) H(arry), 2119-24th
Ave., North, Nashville, Tenn.; Scotch
Plains, N. J.
P.— Born Colon, St. Joseph Co., Mich.,
Nov. 29, 1878. Pupil of Gies in Detroit;
Freer in Chicago.
GOODWIN, Arthur Clifton, 41 AVashing-
ton Sq., New York, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Portsmouth, N. H., Sept.
12, 1866.
GOODWIN, Frances, 320 South Main St.,
Newcastle, Ind.
■S.— M ember: Ind. SS.
GOODWIN, Gilberta D(aniels), 847 East
Blvd., AVeehawken, N. J.
P.— Born Burlington, Vt., Aug. 20, 1888.
Pupil of John F. AYeir, Edwin Taylor,
G. A. Thompson, Hayes Miller. Mem-
ber: NYWCC ; New Haven PCC ;
Conn. Soc. of Painters.
GOODWIN, Mrs. Harold. See Alice Hap-
good.
GOODWIN, Helen M., 320 South Main
St., Newcastle, Ind.
Min. P. — Born Newcastle, Ind. Pupil
of Collin and Courtois in Paris. Mem-
ber: Paris Woman's AAA; Indiana
AA.
GOODWIN, Myrtle. See Mrs. Nicola
D'Ascenzo.
GOODWIN, Philip R(ussell), Grove and
Louis Sts., Mamaroneck, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Norwich, Conn., Sept 16,
1882. Pupil of R. I. School of Design;
Howard Pyle; ASL of N. Y.
GOOSEY, G. Turland, care of The Salma-
gundi Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma.C.
GORDON, F(rederick) C(harles), High
Orchard, Westfield, N. J.
I. — Born Coburg, Ont., Canada, June 30,
1856. Pupil ASL of N. Y.; Julian and
Colarossi academies in Paris. Decora-
tor and illustrator of books and maga-
zines.
GORDON, Leon, 80 W. 40th St.. New
A^ork, N. Y. ; h. 5 Thurioe Square,
S.AV.F., London, Eng.
P.— Born Bonsor, Russia, May 25, 1888.
Pupil of AIC, ASL. of N. Y. Mem-
ber: Salma. C; SI.
GORE, Thomas H., 211 Pleasant St.,
Covington, Ky.
P., D. — Born Baltimore, Md., Oct. 1,
1863. Studied with Duveneck. Mem-
ber: Cincinnati AC.
GORSON, Aaron Harry, 8 Wood St.; h.
56 Pasadena St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— Born in Russia, July 2, 1872; came
to America in 1889. Pupil of PAFA;
Julian Academy, Constant and Laurens
in Paris. Member: Pittsburgh AA.
Specialty, views of factories.
GOSHORN, John T(homas), 512 Wash-
ington Bank Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — Born near Independence, la., Feb.
16, 1870. Pupil of AIC and Smith Art
Academy.
432
I
GOSS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
GRANT
GOSS, John, 384A Boylston St., Boston,
Mass.; h. Walpole, Mass.
P., I.— Born Lewiston, Me., Sept. 19,
1886. Member: Boston AC; Boston
SWCP.
GOSSELIN, Lucien H., 52 Rue Vercinge-
torix, Paris, France; 1061 Elm St.; h.
430 Notre Dame Ave., Manchester, N. H.
S.— Born Whitefield, N. H., Jan. 2, 1883.
Pupil of Verlet, Bouchard, Landowski,
and Mercie. Member: Societe Libre
des Artistes Francais.
GOTTHOLD Florence W(olf) (Mrs.
Frederick Gotthold), Carnegie Studios;
h. 165 West 58th St., New York, N. Y.;
summer, Cos Cob, Conn.
P., C— Born Uhrichsville, O., Oct. 3,
1858. Pupil of B. R. Fitz, H. Siddons
Mowbray and H. G. Dearth. Mem-
ber: N.Y.Pen and Brush C; MacD.
C; Greenwich SA.
GOTTHOLD, Rozel, 1421 Marengo St..
New Orleans, La.
P., S., C, W. — Born New Orleans, La.,
Jan. 26, 1886. Inventor of palm baskets.
GOTTWALD, F(rederick) C(arl), 2031
East 100th St.. Cleveland, O.
P., T.— Born in 1860. Pupil of ASL of
N. Y.; Royal Academy, Munich. Mem-
ber: Cleveland SA (pres.). Work:
"The Umbrian Valley, Italy," Cleve-
land Museum. Instructor in Cleveland
School of Art.
GOUDY, Frederick W., 114 East 13th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
GOULD, Carl Frelinghuysen, 710 Hoge
Bldg., Seattle, Wash.; summer. Port
Blakely, Wash.
P., Arch., L., T.— Born New York, N. Y.,
Nov. 24, 1873. Pupil of M. Victor Laloux.
Member: Beaux- Arts Architects;
Seattle Fine Arts Soc. ; AIA. Work:
Campus Bldgs., University of AVashing-
ton; New Seattle Times Bldg.; Instruc-
tor of architecture. University of Wash-
ington.
GRABACH, John R., 900 South Grove 'St.,
Irvington, N. J.
P., S. — Born Newark, N. J., March 2,
1886. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: Lg. of N.Y.A.; S.Tndp.A.
GRAEF, Robert A., 70 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y. (L)
GRAF, Carl C. 43 Union Trust Bldg.,
Indianapolis, Ind.
P.— Born Sept. 24, 1890. Pupil of Her-
ron Art Inst., Indianapolis, Ind., and
Cincinnati Academy. Member: Ind.
AC; Ind. SS.
GRAFLY, Charles, 131 North 20th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.; summer, Lanesville
Station, Gloucester. Mass.
S.— Born Philadelphia, Dec. 3, 1862.
Pupil of Eakins in Philadelphia; Chapu
and Dampt in Paris. Member: NSS
1893; ANA 1902, NA 1905; N.Y.Arch.Lg.
1902; AC.Phila.; Nat.Inst.A.L.; Fellow-
ship PAFA; Municipal Art Jury of Phila.
Awards: Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1891; hon. mention. Temple Trust Fund,
PAFA 1892; medal, Columbian Exp.,
Chicago, 1893; silver medal, Atlanta
Exp., 1895; gold medal of honor, PAFA
1899; gold medal, Paris Exp., 1900; gold
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
gold medal, Charleston Exp., 1902;
grand prize, Buenos Aires Exp., 1910;
AVidener Memorial medal, PAFA 1913;
Lea prize ($300), Phila. W. C. C, 1916;
Watrous gold medal, NAD, 1918.
Work: "Mauvais Presage," Detroit
Institute; "Vulture of War." St. Louis
Museum; "Gen. Reynolds," Smith
Memorial, Fairmount Park, Philadel-
phia; "England" and "France," Cus-
tom House, New York; "In Much Wis-
dom," "Bust of Dsedalus," busts of Dr.
Joseph Price and Thomas P. Anshutz,
Pennsylvania Academy, Philadelphia;
"Pioneer Mother Monument," San Fran-
cisco; "Bust of Duveneck," Carnegie
Institute, Pittsburgh. Head of Model-
ing Dept., School of the Museum of Fine
Arts, Boston, and Pennsylvania Aca-
demy of the Fine Arts.
GRAFTON, Robert W., 131 West Second
St., Michigan City, Ind.
P.— Born Chicago, 111., Dec. 19, 1876.
Pupil of AIC; Julian Academy in Paris;
studied in Holland and England.
Awards: Marv T. R. Fonlke. prize,
Richmond AA, 1910 and 1919. Mem-
ber: Chicago SA (ex-pres.); Palette
and Chisel C. ; Chicago AC; Chicago
AG. Work in : Delgado Museum and
New Orleans Art Assoc, New Orleans;
LaFayette Art Assoc; Union Lg. C.
Chicago; North Western Univ.; Purdue
Univ.; Earlam College; Public Art Gal-
lery, Richmond, Ind.; mural panels in
State House, Springfield, 111.; Tulane
University, New Orleans, La.
GRAHAM, Miss Payson, 251 West 81st
St., New York, N. Y.
S.. I., W. — Born London, Ontario, Can-
ada, Apr. 26, 1878. Pupil of Bourdelle
in Paris; Eraser and Aitken in New
York. Member: ASL of N. Y.
GRAHAM, Robert A(lexander), Miller
Bldg., 1931 Broadway, New York. N. Y. ;
4540 West Hayward Place, Denver,
Colo.
P.— Born Brooklyn, la., June 29, 1873.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Member:
NYWCC; Sahna. C.
GRANDIN, Elizabeth, 154 Carnegie Hall,
New York, N. Y. ; h. Hamden, N. J.;
summer. Gloucester, Mass.
P., C. — Born Hamden, N. J. Pupil of
Henri and Dow; Guerin in Paris.
Member: MacD. C. ; Lg. of N. Y. A.
GRANT, Blanche C, Taos, N. M.
P., I., E., L., T. — Born Leavenworth,
Kan., Sept. 23, 1874. Pupil of Paxton,
Hale, McCarter, Johansen. Award :
Hon. mention, St. Paul Inst., 1917.
GRANT, Charles H(enry), Bohemian
Club, San Francisco, Cal.
Marine P. — Born Oswego, N. Y., Feb.
6, 1866. Pupil of deHaas, and NAD.
M e m b e r : San. F. AA. : Bohemian
Club; Sequoia Club. Work: "Salute
to the Flag," Oswego (N.Y). City Hall;
"Safe in Port," Syracuse Museum of
Art; "After the Rain," Sequoia Club,
San F. ; "Arrival of Atlantic Battleship
Fleet in Golden Gate, San Francisco,
433
GRANT
WHO'S WHO IN ART
GREEN
1908," Memorial Museum, SanF.; "They
Made the World Safe for Democracy,"
Bohemian Club, San Francisco.
GRANT, Frederic M., 139 East Ontario
St., Chicago, 111.
P., I., E., T.— Born Sibley, Iowa, Oct. 6,
1886. Pupil of Chase, Miller, Vander-
poel and Jonas Lie. Member: Chi-
cago SA; Chicago AG; Chicago AC.
Awards: Goodman prize, AIC, 1914;
Fine Arts Bldg. prize, Chicago AG, 1916;
Cahn prize and Butler prize, AIC, 1917;
Municipal AL prize, AIC, 1917; popular
prize, Chicago AC, 1918; hon. mention,
Chicago AG, 1918; Eisendrath prize,
AIC, 1919.
GRANT, Gordon, 137 East 66th 'St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Port Jefferson,
L. I., N. Y.
P., I. — Born San Francisco, Cal., June
•7, 1875. Pupil of Heatherley's and Lam-
beth's Schools, in London. Member:
AWCS; SI 1911; Salma. C. 1901.
GRANT, Isaac H., 10 Olds PL, Hartford,
Conn.
P. — M ember: Conn. AFA.
GRANT, Lawrence W., Studio Arcade,
Bronxville, N. Y. ; Provincetown, Mass.
P.— Born Cleveland, O., June 10, 1886.
Pupil of Chase in New York; Laurens
and Lefebvre In Paris. Member:
Salma.C.
GRANVILLE. SMITH. See Smith, W.
Granville.
GRAVES, Abbott (Fuller), Kennebunk-
port, Me.
P., Arch. — Born Weymouth, Mass., Apr.
15, 1859. Pupil of Inst, of Technology,
Boston; Cormon, Laurens and Gervais
in Paris. Member: Boston AC;
Copley S.; Salma. C. 1909; Paris AAA.
Specialty, paintings of gardens. ,
GRAY, Abby, 1545 Blair Ave., Cincin-
nati, O.
P. — M ember : Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
GRAY, Kathryn, Van Dyck Studios, 939
Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Jefferson Co., Kansas, Nov.
18, 1881. Pupil of Weber; ASL of N. Y.;
and La Forge in Paris.
GRAY, Mrs. Leonia Perin, 211 Chelsea
Place, Delhi, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
GRAY, Lidie E., 400 Atlantic Ave., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
GRAY, Percy, 628 Montgomery St., San
Francisco, Cal.; h. Burlingame, Cal.
P.— Born San Francisco, Oct. 3, 1869.
Studied in San Francisco and New
York. Member: Bohemian C; Se-
quoia C. ; San F. AA. Award : Bronze
medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
GRAY, W(illiam) F(rancls), 10 South
18th St.; h. .2014 Mt. Vernon St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P., L., T. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., May
9, 1866. Pupil of Pa. Museum and
PAFA. Member: Phila. AC; Phila.
Sketch C. (pres,); Art Teachers' Assoc,
of Phila. Head of Art Department,
Central High School.
GRAYSON, Clifford P(revost), 262 South
15th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, July 14, 1857.
Pupil of PAFA; Gerome and Bonnat in
Paris. Member: Phila. A. C; Cen-
tury Assoc. Awards : $2,000 prize,
American Art Galleries, New York, 1886;
Temple gold medal, PAFA 1887.
Work: "Mid-Day Dreams," Corcoran
Gallery, Washington; "Rainy Day in
Pont Aven," Art Institute, Chicago.
GREACEN, Edmund W., 142 East 18th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, 1877. Pupil of
Chase and Du Mond in New York;
studied in Europe. Award : Shaw
Purchase Prize, Salma. C, 1921. Mem-
ber: ANA.; Salma. C. 1910; Soc. des
Artistes Independants, Paris; Allied Arts
Assoc, London; Allied AA; NAC.
GREASON, W., 1504 Broadway, Detroit,
Mich. (P.)
GREATHEAD, Miss K., Norwood, Pa.
P. — M ember: Phila. AA.
GREBEL, Alphonse, 174 St. Nicholas Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
GRECO, Daniel, 608 Fifth Ave., New Ken-
sington, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
GREEN, Bernard I., 1058 South Blvd.,
The Bronx, New York, N. Y.; summer,
Gloucester, Mass.
P., E., T. — Born Swerzen, Russia, Feb.
12, 1886. Pupil of Douglas Volk, Fran-
cis Jones, Edgar M. Ward and Pressig.
Member: N. Y. SE; Chicago AG.
Work: "Girl Reading," Museum of
Oakland, Cal.
GREEN, Elizabeth Shippen. See Mrs.
Huger Elliott.
GREEN, Mrs. Erik H., Oldtown, North
Attleboro, Mass.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
GREEN, Frank Russell, care of Salma-
gundi Club, 45 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
P. — Born Chicago, Apr. 16, 1856. Pupil
of Boulanger, Lefebvre, Collin and
Courtois in Paris. Member: ANA
1897; AWCS; NYWCC; Salma.C. 1887;
Lotos C. Awards: Lotos Fund, NAD
1896; hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1900;
Morgan prize, Salma.C. 1903; bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; Shaw prize,
Salma.C. 1908.
GREEN, Harold, 284 Asylum St.; h. 50
Ashley St., Hartford, Conn.
P. — Born Montreal, Canada, Nov. 10,
1883. Pupil of Flagg and Brandagee.
Member: Conn. AFA. Awards:
Dunham prize, Conn. AFA, 1918. Hon.
mention, Farmington, 1904; Dunham
prize. Conn. AFA, 1918.
434
GREEN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
GRIFFIN
GREEN, H(iram) H(arold), Fort Erie.
Ont.. Can.
P., I., E. — Born Paris, Oneida Co., N.
Y., Nov.. 15, 1865. Punil of H. ■&. Mow-
bray, Cox, Bridgman. Award : Al-
bright Prize, Albright Art Academy,
1898.
GREEN, Mildred C, Fort Erie, Ontario,
Canada; summer, Clayville, N. Y.
P., L, T.— Born Paris, Oneida County,
N. Y., Apr. 18, 1874. Pupil of Bridg-
man, Hitchcock and Dufner. Mem-
ber: Buffalo SA; Buffalo Guild of
Allied Arts; Buffalo Fine Arts Academy.
Instructor, Buffalo School of Fine Arts.
GREEN, William Bradford, 151 North
Beacon St., Hartford, Conn.
P. — M ember: Conn. AFA.
GREENBAUM, Mrs. Edward S. See
Schwarcz, Dorothy.
GREENBERG, Benjamin, 4221 Florida
Ave., Northside, Cincinnati, O.
P. — M em b e r : Cincinnati AC.
GREENBERG, Maurice, 608 South Dear-
born St.; h. 5759 South Michigan Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
I. — Born Milwaukee, Wis., in 1893,
Pupil of Wisconsin School of Art; AIC.
Member: Palette and Chisel C.
GREENBERG, Morris, 563 Howard Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
E., W., T. — Pupil of Birge Harrison and
Maynard. Member: Brooklyn Mu-
nicipal AS; Brooklyn SE.
GREENE, Albert V(an Nesse), 223 N.
11th St., Philadelphia, Pa.; summer,
Chester Springs, Pa.
P., I., E.— Born Jamaica, L. I., N. Y.,
Dec. 14, 1887. Pupil of Corcoran Gal-
lery, ASL. of N. Y., PAFA. Mem-
ber: Phila. Sketch C, Fellowship
PAFA.
GREENE, Fred Stuart, Ye Hollie Studio;
h. 115 High St., Westerly, R. I.; summer.
North Stonington, Conn.
P. — Born North Stonington, Conn., June
23, 1876. Pupil of R. I. School of De-
sign; ASL of N. Y. Member:
Alumni Assoc, R. I. School of Design;
Providence WCC.
GREENE, Helen, 1840 Madison Road, Cin-
cinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
GREENE, Mary Shepard. See Mrs. E. L.
Blumenschein.
GREENE, Sarah Morris, 7 West 9th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M e m b e r : N. A. Women PS; Con-
temporary.
GREENFIELD, E. J. Forrest, The Wil-
lows, Point Pleasant, N. J.
P., C, W.. T.— Born London, England,
June 24, 1866. Pupil of Karl Scheaver.
Member: S. Indp. A.; Needle and
Bobbin Club.
GREENING, Harry Cornell, 9 N. Grove
St., E. Orange, N. J.
I.— Born Titusville, Pa., May 30, 1876.
Pupil ASL of N. Y. Comic cartoons
for "Herald," "Judge," etc.
GREENLAW, Emma V., 34 Bull St., New-
port, R. I. (P.)
GREENLEAF, Ray, 263 West 11th St.,
New York, N. Y.
I. — Member: SI.
GREENLEAF, Richard C(ranch), Law-
rence, L. L, N. Y.
P. — Born Berlin, Germany, Nov. 15, 1887.
Pupil of Collin, Courtois, Simon and
Menard in Paris.
GREENOUGH, Buhler. See Mrs. Hardy.
GREENWOOD, Joseph H., 2 Woodbine
St.; h. 21 Merrick St., Worcester, Mass.
P. — Born Spencer, Mass., Oct. 8, 1857.
Pupil of R. Swain Gifford in New York.
Member: Conn. AFA. Award :
Hon. mention. Conn. AFA. 1918. Work:
"Autumn," Worcester Art Museum.
GREER, Blanche. 1840 Mintwood PL,
Washington, D. C.
P., I., Dec. — Born Eldora, la., Aug. 9,
1884. Pupil of Chase and Eben F. Com-
ins. Member: Phila. WCC; Plastic
C; Fellow.ship PAFA; Wash. WCC;
Phila. Alliance. Award : Beck prize,
Phila. WCC, 1916.
GREGORY, John, 38 West 66th St., Ne\T
York, N. Y.
S. — Born London, Eng., May 17, 1879.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Beaux-Arts,
Paris; American Academy, Rome.
Member: Beaux-Arts Institute of
Design (hon.); NSS; N. Y. Arch. Lg.
Awards : American Acad, in Rome
Fellowship, 1912-15; N. Y. Arch. Lg.
medal in Sculpture 1921. Director of
Sculpture Dept., Beaux-Arts Inst, of
Design; Associate in Modeling, Columbia
University.
GREGSON, Marie E. (Mrs. A. C. Greg-
son), Bell Ave. and Rocky Hill Road,
Bayside, L. I., N. Y.
P.— Born New York City, Dec. 16, 1886.
Pupil of Twachtman and Cox. M e m-
b e r : N. A. Women PS'.
GREIMS, Mary Hearn (Mrs. Herbert S.
Greims), Ridgefield, Conn.
P. — Born New York. Pupil of Cooper
Union and George Smillie in New York;
Philadelphia School of Design for Wo-
men and PAFA. Member: Plastic
C; Fellowship PAFA; N. A, Women PS.
GRENHAGEN, Merton, Oshkosh. Wis.
Port. P. — Born near Oshkosh, Wis. Pu-
pil of Chase in Phila.; Laurens in Paris;
Chicago AI, Member: Chicago SA;
Wis. PS.
GRIEST, Mary C. Johnson, Westview St.,
Germantown, Philadelphia. Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
GRIFFIN, J(ames) M(artin), 3342 Chest-
nut St.. Oakland, Calif.
P., E., T.— Born Cork, Ireland, Feb. 20,
1850. Pupil of James Brenan at School
of Art, Cork. Member: WCS of
Ireland.
GRIFFIN, Walter, care Portland Society
of Art, Portland, Me.
P.— Born Portland, Me., 1861. Pupil of
Collin and Laurens in Paris. Mem-
ber: ANA 1912; Allied AA; NYWCC;
Paris AAA; Salma. C. Award:
435
GRIFFITH
WHO'S WHO IIS ART
GROSS
Medal of honor. P. -P. Exp., San F.,
1915. Represented in Memorial Art Gal-
lery, Rochester, and Buffalo Fine Arts
Academy.
GRIFFITH, C. Beatrice B. (Mrs. C. F.
Griffith), 1830 South Rittenhouse 'Sq.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
S. — Born Hoylake, Cheshire. Eng-., Aug-.
6, 1890. Pupil of Giuseppe Donato.
Member : Phila. Alliance. Work :
Marble portrait of Edith Wynne Mathi-
son, Bennett School. Millbrook; marble
portrait, President Ewing-, Lahore Union
College, T/ahore. India; portrait of How-
ard B. French in College of Pharmacy,
Philadelphia.
GRIFFITH, Edward N., Avon Park, Fla.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
GRIFFITH, Louis Oscar, 1702 Auditorium
Tower, Chicago, 111.
Ldscp. P., Etcher. — Born Greencastle
Ind., Oct. 10, 1875. Pupil of Frank
Reaugh; St. Louis School of Fine Arts;
AIC; studied in New York and Paris.
Member: Palette and Chisel C.
(pres.); Chicago SA; Chicago SE; Chi-
cago AG. Award : Bronze medal for
etching, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915. Rep-
resented in Union League Club of Chi-
cago. "Winter," Chicago Commission
purchase; Delgado Museum, New Or-
leans, La.; Oakland (Cal.) Museum.
GRIFFITH. W(illiam) A(lexander), La-
guna Beach, Calif.
P., L. — Born Lawrence, Kan.; Aug.
19, 1866. Pupil of St. Louis School of
Fine Arts; Lefebvre and Constant in
Paris. Member: Laguna Beach
AA.
GRIFFITHS, Elsa Churchill, 1114 9th
Ave., West, Seattle, Washington.
Min.P. — A ward :
GRIGWARE, Edward T., 1204 Century
Bldg., 202 State St.; h. 162 Taylor Ave.,
Oak Park, 111.
P., I., T. — Born Caseville, Mich., Apr.
3, 1889. Pupil of Chicago AFA.
Member: AIC.
GRIMES, Frances, 229 East 48th St.,
New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Braceville, O. Pupil of Pratt
Inst, in Brooklyn. Me m b e r : NSS
1912; N. A. Women PS. Award: Sil-
ver medal for medals, P. -P. Exp., San
P., 1915; McMillin sculpture prize, N.A.
Women PS, 1916. Association Medal,
NA Women PS, 1920. Work: Over-
mantel, Washington Irving High School,
New York City; "Girl by Pool" and
"Boy with Duck," Toledo Museum of
Art.
GRINAGER, Alexander, Mohegan Heights,
Tuckahoe, N. Y.
P. — Born Minneapolis, Minn. Pupil of
Royal Academy, Copenhagen, Denmark;
Laurens and Constant in Paris;
studied also in Norway, Italy and
Sicily. M ember: Allied AA; Sal-
ma.C. 1908; Minneapolis A.Lg.
GRIN NELL, G. Victor, 40 East Main St.,
Mystic, Conn.
P. — M ember: New Haven PCC.
GROLL, Albert L(orey), 222 West 59th
St., New York, N. Y.
Ldscp. P. —Born New York, Dec. 8, 1866.
PupiA of Gysis and Loefftz in Munich.
Member: ANA 1906, NA 1910;
NYWCC; AWCS; A.Fund S.; Salma.C.
1900; Lotos C; NAC. Awards: Mor-
gan prize, Salma. C. 1903; hon. mention,
Munich; Shaw prize, Salma.C. 1904;
silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; Ses-
nan medal, PAFA 1906; medals, Buenos
Aires and Santiago Exp., 1910; Inness
gold medal, NAD 1912; silver medal,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915. Work: "No
Man's Land — Arizona," Corcoran Gal-
lery, Washington; "California Red-
woods" and "Washoe Valley, Nevada,"
Brooklyn Institute Museum; "Acoma
Valley, New Mexico," National Gallery,
Washington; "Hopi Mesa," Public Gal-
lery, Richmond, Ind.; "Laguna River,
New Mexico," Art Museum, Montclair,
N. J.; "Silver Clouds," Metropolitan
Museum, New York; "The Milkv Way,"
Minneapolis Institute of Arts; "On the
Beach," and "The Garden of the Gods,"
Lotos Club; "'Storm Cloud, Arizona,"
Fort Worth (Tex.) Museum; "In New
Mexico," Boston Museum; "Arizona
Desert," St. Louis Museum; "Passing
Shadows," National Arts Club, New
York; "In Arizona," St. Paul Museum.
Specialty, Western scenes. "Land of
the Sage Brush," Carnegie Museum,
Pittsburgh.
GRONHOLDT, A., 458 Pearl St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
GROOIV!, Emily, Genesee Depot; h. 325
Cambridge Ave., Milwaukee, Wis.
P. — Born Wayland, Mass., Mar. 17, 1876.
Pupil of AIC; Brangwyn in London.
Member: Wis. PS; Concord AA;
NYWCC; N.A.Women PS. Awards:
Gold Medal, St. Paul Inst., 1917; hon.
mention, Milwaukee Art Inst., 1918;
Medal of honor, Milwaukee Art Inst.,
1920. Work: "Hillside— November," St.
Paul Inst.; and in Milwaukee Art Inst.
GROOME, Esther M., Library Bldg.,
State Normal School, West Chester,
Pa.; h. Carlisle, Pa.; summer, Glou-
cester, Mass.
P., E., T.— Born York County, Pa. Pu-
pil of Fuchs, Castaigne, William M.
Chase, Henri, and Cecilia Beaux.
Member: Fellowship PAFA.
GROSBECK, Dan Sayre. care of Foster
and Kleiser, 287 Valencia St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif. (P., I.)
GROSS, Albert R., 1230 St. Paul St.,
Baltimore, Md.
F. — M ember: Char. C.
GROSS. Mrs. Juliet White, 1720 Sansom
St., Philadelphia, Pa.; summer, Sellers-
ville, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., .Tune 19.
1882. Pupil of Philadelphia 'School of
Design; PAFA. Member: Fellow-
ship PAFA. Award: Mary Smith
piize, PAFA, 1919; Fellowship PAFA
prize, 1920.
GROSS, Oskar, 19 East Pearson St., Chi-
cago, 111.
P. — Born in Vienna, Austria, 1870. Pu-
436
GROSSE
WHO*S WHO IN ART
GUDEBROD
pil of Imperial Royal Academy of Fine
Arts, Vienna; studied in Munich and
Paris. Member: Wiener Kunstler-
Genossenschaft; Austrian Artists'
Assoc, (hon.); Chicago SA. Work:
"Dreams of Future," Chicago Municipal
Commission purchase; "At the Mar-
ket," Municipal Gallery, Vienna.
GROSSE, J. L., 906 Union Avenue, Bronx,
N. Y. (P.)
GROSSMAN. Edwin Booth, 133 East 21st
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Boston. Mass.. Apr. 9. 1S8?
Pupil of W. M. Chase and Richard
Miller. M e m b e r : S.Indp.A.
GROSSMAN, J(oseph) B(ernard), 1722
Chestnut St.; h. 2508 North 33rd St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P., T. — Born Szagory, Russia, July 2,
1888. Pupil of PAFA. Member:
Fellowship PAFA.
GROSVENOR, Thelma Cudlipp, 128 East
61st St., New York, N. Y. ; summer,
York Harbor, Me.
I.— Born Richmond, Va., Oct. 14, 1891.
Studied ASL. of N. Y., St. John's Wood
School, London, England. Member:
SI. Covers for "Vanity Fair," "Town
and Country." Illustrations for "Satur-
day Evening Post," "Harper's," "Cen-
tury," "McClure's," "Vanity Fair."
GROUT, H. L., care of Pedlar, Inc., 246
Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. (I.)
GROVER, Oliver Dennett, 9 East Ontario
St., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Earlville, 111., Jan. 29, 1861.
Pupil of Frank Duveneck in Munich;
Boulanger, Lefebvre and Laurens in
Paris. Member: ANA 1913; Art
Service Lg. ; Chicago SA (ex-pres.);
Salma.C; Alumni Assoc. AIC (pres.);
Port. P.; NAC; Cliff Dwellers, Chicago.
Awards : First Yerkes prize, Chi-
cago SA, 1892; silver and bronze
medals, St. Louis Exp., 1904; Fine
Arts Bldg. prize, Chicago, 1906; Munici-
pal Art League and Fortnightly prize,
Chicago, 1910; Cahn prize, AIC 1913;
Fine Arts Bldg. prize, SWA 1914;
silver medal, P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915;
French memorial gold inedal, AIC 1918.
Work: Decoration of Branford (Conn.)
Public Library; "The Arts," Chicago
Public Library; "Mending the Nets,"
Union. League Club, Chicago; "On the
Riva," "Mountain, Sea and Cloud" and
"June Morning, Lake Orta," Art In-
stitute of Chicago; "A Fresh Breeze,"
Art Museum, St. Louis; "Street Scene,
•Venice," Art Institute. Detroit; "Gen-
oese Coast," Cincinnati Art Museum.
GROVES, Hannah Cutler, Pressor Bldg.,
1710 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.; h.
214 King's Highway, East, Haddonfield,
N. J.
P., T.— Born Camden, N. J., Dec. 30,
1868. Pupil of William M. Chase and
School of Design, Phila.
GRUB, Henry, Studio 53, Greenwich Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., S., I., Arch.— Born Baltimore, Md.,
Dec. 10, 1884. Pupil of Maynard, Ward
and Bridgman. Member: Lg. of
N.Y.A.; S.Indp.A.
GRUBB, Ethel McAllister, 224 Presidio
Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
P. — Born San Francisco, Calif. Feb. IS,
1890. Pupil of San F. AI; ASL of N.
Y. M e m 1) e r : San Francisco AA.
GRUENFELD, Caspar, 209 East 31st St.,
Los Angeles, Cal.
P. — M ember: Cal. AC.
GRUPPE, C(harles) P(aul), 106 West 55th
St.; h. 138 Manhattan Ave., New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born Picton, Canada, Sept. 3, 1860.
Studied in Holland; chiefly self-taught.
Member : NYWCC; AWCS; AC
Phila.; Salma.C. 1893; NAC; Rochester
AC; Pulchre Studio, The Hague.
Awards: Gold medal, Rouen; gold
medal, AAS 1902; two gold medals,
Paris; silver medals for oils and
for water color, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
bronze medal, Appalachian Exp., Knox-
ville, 1910; Tuthill prize, AIC, 1917.
Work: "The Old Water Wheel,"
Brooklyn Institute Museum; "A Dutch
Canal," Inst, of Arts. Detroit; Na-
tional Arts Club, New York; Art Club
of Philadelphia; "The Meadow Brooks,"
National Gallery, Washington, D. C. ;
"Homeward Way," Reading (Pa.), Mu-
seum; water color in Butler Museum,
Youngstown, O.
GRUPPE, Emile A(li3ert), 158 Manhat-
tan Ave., New York, N. Y.
P., I., T.— Born Rochester, N. Y., Nov.
23, 1896. Pupil of Bridgman, John F.
Carlson ; ASL of N. Y. Member:
Salma.C.
GRUPPE, Karl H(einrich), 141 Sixth
Ave., New York, N. Y.
S., P.— Born Rochester, N. Y., Mar. 18,
1893. Pupil of Karl Bitter. Member:
YS; NSS (asso.); NL Arch. Lg. (asso.).
W o r k : Final figure, Italian towers,
P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915; Memorial Tab-
let, City Club, New York; Memorial
Tablet, Princeton Charter Club.
GUARINA, Salvatore Anthony, care of
Salmagundi Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P., E. — Born Girgenti, Sicily, May 16,
1883. Pupil of Whittaker and Blum.
Member: Salma.C; P-G.; Wash.
AC. Award : Chevalier of the
Crown of Italy. Work: "II Mago
della Via C," in the Modern Art Gal-
lery, Palermo, Sicily.
GUDEBROD, Louis A(lbert), 69 Silver
St., Meriden, Conn.
S.— Born Middletown, Conn., Sept. 20,
1872. Pupil of Yale Art School; ASL
of N. Y., under Mary Lawrence and
Augustus Saint Gaudens; Dampt in
Paris. M e m b er : NSS 1902; N.Y. Arch.
Lg. 1902; Conn. AFA.; New Haven
PCC. Awards : Silver medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902; gold medal, Pan-
ama-Pacific Exp., San Francisco, Calif.,
1915. Assistant to Saint Gaudens in
Paris. Director of Sculpture, Charles-
ton Exp., 1902. Work: "Anderson
Prison Monument" for New York State
at Andersonville, Ga. ; "Henry Clay
Work Memorial," Hartford, Conn.
437
GUENTHER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HAFFNER
GUENTHER, Lambert, 162 West 48th
St., New York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: Salma. C.
GUERIN, Jules, 50 E. 23rd St.; h. 24
Gramercy Park, New York, N. Y.
I., P.— Born St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 18,
1866. Pupil of Constant and Laurens
in Paris. Member: AWCS; NYWCC;
SI 1901; Nat.Inst.AL; The Players;
N.Y.Ach.Lg-. 1911; Mural P.; ANA 1916;
N. Y. Art Com. Awards : First
Yerkes medal, Chicago; hon. mention,
Paris Exp., 1900; hon. mention for
drawings, Pan- Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; Beck
prize, Phila. WCC. 1913; gold medal,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915. Specialty,
architectural subjects and decoration.
Director of color, Panama-Pacific Exp.,
San Francisco, 1915. Painted decora-
tions, in Lincoln Memorial, Washington,
D. C, and Pennsylvania Station, New
York.
GUERNSEY, Eleanor Louise, James Mil-
liken University, Decatur, 111.; h. 2943
Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111.; and Fargo,
N. Dak.
S., T.— Born Terre Haute, Ind., Mar. 9,
1878. Pupil of AIC. Member: ASL
of Chicago; Ind. SS. Award: Wal-
ton prize, AIC 1909.
GUINNESS, Mrs. Benjamin, 8 Washing-
ton Sq., N., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember : N.A. Women PS.
GUINZBERG, Frederic Victor, 21 West
89th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
GUISLAIN, J. M., 725 West 172nd St.,
New York, N. Y.. h. 178 rue Americaine,
Brussels. Belgium.
P., W. — Born Louvain, Belgium, Mar. 27,
1882.
GULLEDGE, Josephine, Fairmont Sem-
inary, Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
GULLIVER, IVIary, 1101 Orange Ave.,
Eustis, Florida.
P., T.— Born Norwich, Conn,, Sept. 9,
1860. Pupil of Boston Museum of Fine
Arts School under Grundmann. Vonnoh
and Crowninshield; Whistler, Collin,
Delance, Callot, Lazar and Prinet in
Paris. Member: Copley S. 1883.
GUNN, Archie, 120 West 49th St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Inglesea Bunga-
low, East Rockaway, L. I., N. Y.
P., I., E., T. — Born Taunton, Somerset-
shire, England, Oct. 11, 1863. Pupil of
Archibald Gunn, P. Calderon in London.
GUNN, Edwin, 252 Mt. Hope Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
GUSSOW, Bernard, 54 Charles St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Irvington, N. Y.
P., T.— Born in Russia, Jan. 1880. Pu-
pil of Bonnat in Paris. Member:
S. Indp. A.; Modern Artists of America.
GUSTIN, Paul Morgan, 1113-35th St.,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
GUTHERSON, F. Gerome, 2007 Forbes
St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. A A.
GUTMANN, Bernhard, Silvermine (R. F.
D. No. 43), New Canaan, Conn.
I., P., T. — Born Hamburg, Germany,
Sept. 26, 1869. Studied in Diisseldorf
and Karlsruhe, Germany, and in Paris.
Member: Allied AA; S.Indp.A.;
Salma. C.
GUYSI, Alice V., 209 Longfellow Ave.,
Detroit, Mich.
P., T., L.— Born Cincinnati, O. Pupil
of Colarossi Academy and of Harry
Thompson in Paris. Lecturer on the
history and criticism of art. Mem-
ber: Cincinnati Woman's AC; Detroit
SAC. Supervisor of drawing in Public
Schools, Detroit.
GUYSI, Jeannette, 209 Longfellow Ave.,
Detroit, Mich.
P., C, T. — Born Cincinnati, O. Pupil of
Colarossi Acad, and of Harry Thomp-
son in Paris. Member: Cincinnati
Woman's AC; Detroit SAC; Grafters,
HAAG, Charles, Winnetka, 111.; summer,
Silvermine, Norwalk, Conn.
S. — Born Norrkoping, Sweden, 1867.
Pupil of Junghaenel Ziegler and Injal-
bert. Awards : Bronze and silver
medal; first prize, Swedish-American
Exhibition. Work: "Cornerstone of
the Castle" in Winnetka; "Accord,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York; se-
ries of fountains, among them the
"American Fountain," at Johnstown,
Pa, Sculptor of Symbolic and Poetic
Art.
HAAS, Fridolin, 41 Union Square, New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
HACK, Gwendolyn Dunlevy Kelley (Mrs.
Charles Wesley Hack), 12 West 93rd
St., New York, N. Y.
Min. P. — Born Columbus, O., Nov. 10,
1877. Pupil of Mme. Debillemont, Mme.
Gallet and Julian Academy and Col-
arossi Academy in Paris. Decorated by
Queen Margherita of Italy for miniature
painting.
HACKETT, Grace E(dith), 297 Newbury
St., Boston, Mass.
P., L— Born Boston, Sept. 22, 1874. Pu-
pil of Mass. Normal Art School in Bos-
ton; H. B. Snell in Europe. Member:
Boston SAC; NYWCC. Supervisor of
drawing in public schools, Boston.
HADEN, Elmer S., Nyack, N. Y.
P. — Born in United States. Pupil of
Flameng in Paris.
HADLEY, Mary Hamilton, 355 Willow
St., New Haven, Conn.
P. — M ember: New Haven Paint and
Clay Club.
HADLEY, Paul, 44 Union Trust Bldg., In-
dianapolis; h. Mooresville, Ind.
P.. D. — Born Indianapolis, Ind. Pupil
of Pa. Museum, Phila. Member:
Ind. AC. Work: Decoration In
Eagle's Club, Indianapolis, Ind.; design
for Indiana flag accepted by the legis-
lature, 1917.
HAFFNER, F. J., 684 Downing St., Den-
ver, Colo.
I. — M ember: Denver AA.
438
1
HAPTEL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HALE
HAFTEL, Charles, 9 East Tenth St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
HAGEN, Louise, 130 West 57th St.; 112
Waverly Place, New York, N. Y.; h.
1300 North Dearborn St., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Chicago, 111., Mar. 16, 1888.
Pupil of Henri, Hawthorne, and Jonas
Lie,
HAGENDORN, Max, Bullard St., Sharon,
Mass.
P., D., T.— Born Stuttgart, Germany,
June 27, 1870. Pupil of Faller, Kurtz,
Seubert in Stuttgart; Gebhard Fugel in
Munich; Royal Academy of Fine and
Industrial Arts, Stuttgart. Award :
Prize, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
HAGGIN, Ben All, 875 Madison Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P. — A ward : Third Hallgarten prize,
NAD 1909. Member: ANA 1912; Port. P.
HAGIUDA, Shinyo, 131 West 23rd St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
HAGUE, Maurice S(tewart), 1194 Oak St.,
Columbus, O.
Ldscp. P. — Born Richmond, Jefferson
Co., O., May 12, 1862. Me m b e r : S.
Indp.A. Work in Columbus Gallery
of Fine Arts.
HAIGH, Eliza V., Citizen Bldg., Winsted,
Conn.
P. — M ember: Conn. AFA.
HAIGHT, Mrs. Charles V., Norwood, O.
P. — Member: Cincinnati Woman's AC.
MAILMAN, Johanna K, Woodwell (Mrs.
James Hailman), 7010 Penn Ave., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — Born Pittsburgh, 1871. Member:
N. A. Women PS; Pittsburg AA.
Awards : Second prize, Pittsburgh
AA, 1911; silver medal, P. -P. Exp., San
F., 1915.
HAINES, B(owen) Aylesworth, 402 Hay-
ward Bldg., Rochester, N. Y.; h. Hilton,
N. Y.
P., I.— Born in Canada, Dec. 21, 1858.
Pupil of Frank Smith and Mrs. Emma
Lampert Cooper. Member: Roches-
ter AC.
HAINES, Marie Bruner, "Studio House,"
368 Peachtree St.; h. 45 Gammon Ave.,
Atlanta, Ga.
P., I., C, W., L., T.— Born Cincinnati,
Ohio, Nov. 16, 1885. Pupil of Noble,
Volk, Francis Jones, DuMond, Dimitri
Romanofsky, Member: Atlanta
AA.; PBC; Arts and Crafts, Atlanta.
A w" a r d : 1st portrait prize. Southern
Artists Exhibition, Atlanta, 1917; 1st
prize figure painting, Macon, 1920.
Work: "Dr. F. B. Clark," "The
Path," State College, Texas.
HAKE, Otto E., 29 Quincy St., Chicago,
111.
P., I. — Born in Germany in 1876. Pupil
of AIC; Matisse in Paris; Debschitz in
Munich. Member: Palette and
Chisel C; Chicago SA.
HALBERG, Charles Edward, 1114 North
Parkside Ave., Austin, 111.
Marine P. — ^Born Gothenburg, Sweden,
Jan. 15, 1855. Member: Chicago SA;
Swedish-American AS. Award :
Rosenwald purchase prize ($200), AIC
1914, Represented in Stockholm Mu-
seum and Gothenburg Museum.
HALE, Ellen Day, 1748 N St., Washing-
ton, D. C; summer, Lanesville Station,
Gloucester, Mass.
P. — Born Worcester, Mass., Feb. It,
1855; daughter of Rev. Edward Everett
Hale. Member: Wash. SA; Wash,
WCC. Award : Third Corcoran prize,
S.Wash.A., 1905. Work: "The Lily,"
St. Paul Institute.
HALE, Gardner, 25 Charlton St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
HALE, Lilian Westcott (Mrs. Philip L.
Hale), Federal Hill, Dedham, Mass.
P.— Born Hartford, Conn., Dec. 7, 1881.
Pupil of Tarbell and Chase. Mem-
ber: Conn. AFA; Boston GA. ; Con-
cord AA. ; Port P. Award: Bronze
medal, Buenos Aires Exp., 1910; gold
medal and medal of honor, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915; gold medal, Phila., AC,
1919; Potter Palmer Gold medal, AIC,
1919. Represented in the collection of
the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts and the Philadelphia Club,
HALE (Mary Powell) Helme (Mrs. Wil-
liam Hale), 45 Middle St., Gloucester,
Mass,
P., S., T. — Born Kingston, R. I., Apr. 12,
1862. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. ; R. I.
School of Design; Chase; Saint Gau-
dens; Duveneck; Knowlton. Member:
Alumni Assoc. R. I. School of Design;
Cape Ann Artists.
HALE, Philip L(eslie), Fenway Studios,
30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.; h. Fed-
eral Hill, 213 Highland St., Dedham,
Mass.
P., T., W.— Born Boston, May 21, 1865;
son of Rev. Edward Everett Hale. Pu-
pil of J. Alden Weir in New York.
Member: Phila. AC; St. Botolph C;
Boston GA; ANA, 1917; San F. AC;
Fellowship PAFA (assoc); Eclectics;
Port. P. A w a r d s : Hon, mention, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; bronze medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904; gold medal, Buenos
Aires Exp., 1910; Harris silver medal
($500), AIC 1914; hors concours (jury of
awards), P,-P,Exp,, San F., 1915; Proc-
tor prize, NAD 1916; Lea prize, Phila.
WCC, 1916; popular prize, PAFA.
1919. Instructor at Boston Mu-
seum School and PAFA, Work:
"The Crimson Rambler," Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia; "Spirit of An-
tique Art," Museum of Montevideo,
Uruguay; "Girl with Muff," Corcoran
Gallery, Washington, D. C; "Girl with
Pearls," Philadelphia AC.
HALE, Robert, 670 Portland Ave.. St.
Paul, Minn.
P., E., W., L., T,— Born Chicago, 111.,
Feb. 26, 1876. Work: "Triptych of
Villaggio Regina Elena," in Royal
Palace, Rome,
439
HALL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HAMILTON
HALL, Florence S(locum), 63 West On-
tario St., Chicago, III.; summer, General
Delivery, Denver, Colo.
P., T. — Born Grand Rapids, Mich. Pupil
of AIC and Johansen. Member:
Chicago ASL.
HALL, Mrs. Frances Devereux Jones,
"Spring-aide," Chestnut Hill, Philadel-
phia, Pa.
P., S., Arch. — Born New Orleans, La.
Pupil of Sophie Newcomb College, New
Orleans; John Twachtman, Howard
Pyle, Charles Grafly. Member :
Phila. Alliance.
HALL, Frederick G., 120 Riverway, Bos-
ton, Mass. (P.)
HALL, George F., 806 Union Trust Bldg.,
Providence, R. I.
P. — -M ember: Providence AC.
HALL, Margaret, Central Ave., Wilmette,
111.
P.— M ember: Chicago WCC.
HALL, Susan, 130 West 57th St., New
York, N. Y.
S. — M ember: N. A. Women PS,
HALL, T. Victor, 115 East 34th St., 57
West 37th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Member: Salma. C.
HALL, Thomas, Holbein Studio, 63 West
Ontario St.; h. 5757 Fifth Ave., Chicago,
111.
P.— Born in Sweden, Apr. 23, 1883. Pu-
pil of Freer, Wolcott, Reynolds. M e m-
ber: S.IndpA. ; Swedish Soc, Chi-
cago; Scandinavian Am. Soc, New
York.
HALL, W. W., 235 South 11th St., Phila-
delphia, Pa. (P.)
HALLADAY, Milton R., Providence Jour-
nal Co., Providence, R. I.
I. — M ember: Providence AC.
HALLER, Alfred J., 2203 Center Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
HALLIDAY, Laura. See Mrs. L. H. De
Beukelaer.
HALLOWELL, George H(awley), 299
Park Ave., Arlington Heights, Mass.;
summer, Jefferson Highlands, N. H.
P., I., C, Arch.— Born Boston, Dec. 5,
1872. Pupil of Benson and Tarbell in
painting; Rotch and H. L. Warren in
architecture. Member: Boston WCC;
NYWCC 1904. Awards: Beal prize,
NYWCC 1904; gold medal, St. Louis
Lxp., 1904; gold medal tor water colors,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 191&.
HALLOWELL, May. See Mrs. Loud.
HAMACHI, Seimatsu, 53 Kast 59th St.
New York, N. Y. (P.JI
HAMBIDGE, Jay, Yale tTnlverslty Press,
New Plaven, Conn.
I., P., W., L. — Born Slmcoe, Canada,
Jan. 13, 1867. Pupil of ASL and Chase
in New York. Member: Graphic AC
of Toronto. Discoverer of Dynamic Sym-
metry.
HAMILTON, Agnes, Ft. Wayne, Ind.; and
146 W. Lehigh Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
HAMILTON, Mrs Ethel Heaven, 9 West
14th St., New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Pontoosuc Studio, Lanesboro, Mass.
P. T.— Born in Mexico, July 14, 1871.
Pupil of Chase, MacMonnies, Colorossi
School, Paris. Member: N. A.
Women PS; NYWCC.
HAMILTON, George (Theodore), 37 East
Hancock Ave., Detroit, Mich.
I., T., W., L.— Born Philadelphia, Pa.,
Feb. 25, 1882. Pupil of Pa. Museum
School of Industrial Art and Denman
Ross. Member: Detroit SAC; De-
troit FAS; Alliance. Director of De-
troit School of Design since 1911.
HAMILTON, Hamilton, R. F. D. 43, Nor-
walk, Conn.
P.— Born 1847. Member: ANA 1886,
NA 1889; AWCS. Work : "The Valley
of Fountains," "Sunset After a Storm"
and '"Summer in the North Woods,"
Fine Arts Academy, Buffalo, N. Y.
HAMILTON, Helen, Silvermine, Nor-
walk, Conn. (P.)
HAMILTON, J(ames) Whiteiaw, The
Grange, Helensburgh, Scotland.
P. — Born Glasgow, Scotland, Nov. 26,
1860. Pupil of Dagnan-Bouveret, A.
Morot. Member: ARSA; RSS of
Painters in Water Color; Chevaher of
the Order of the Crown of Italy,
Associate of the Royal Scottish Acad-
emy, Royal Glasgow Institute of Fine
Arts. Award: Gold medal. Int. Exp.,
Munich, 1905. Works: "Richmond
Castle", the Corporation of Glasgow;
"Landscape Kircudbright," the Scottish
Modern Arts Asso., Edinburgh; "Clyde
Ship Yard", City Art Museum, St. Louis;
"Venice", Albright Art Gallery, Buf-
falo; "A Scottish Farm", Carnegie Inst.,
Pittsburgh; "Summer Night", Royal
Pinakothek, Munich.
HAMILTON, Jessie, Clinton St., Fort
Wayne, Ind.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
HAMILTON, John McLure, Hermitage,
Kingston-on-Thames, England; and
Stone Hall, Wolf Castle, Pembrokeshire,
England.
Port. P., I.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Jan.
31, 1853. Pupil of PAFA; Royal Acad,
in Antwerp; Ecole des Beaux-Arts in
Paris. Member: Phila. WCC (hon.);
Fellowship PAFA; Royal Soc. of Port.
P.; Pastel Soc. Award : Hon. men-
tion, Paris Salon, 1892; gold medal,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; gold medal,
St. Loizis Exp., 1904; hors concours
(jury of awards), P.-P.Exp., San F.,
iyi5; gold medal of honor, PAFA, 1918.
Work: "Gladstone at Downing Street,"
"Hon. Richard Vaux," "George Mere-
dith," "William T. Richards," "Henry
Thouron" and "Cardinal Manning,"
Pennsylvania Academy, Philadelphia;
"Sketch No. 4," Carnegie Institute,
Pittsburgh, "Gladstone," Luxembourg
Museum, Paris; "Prof. Tyndall," "Ais-
low Ford," "Cosmo Monkhouse"; Ridley
Corbet," Nat. Gallery, London.
440
HAMILTON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HANSELL
HAMILTON, Norah, 62 Washington Sq.,
New York, N. Y.; Hull House, Chi-
cago, 111.
E.— Born Fort Wayne, Ind., 1873. Pupil
of Cox in New York; Whistler in Paris.
Member: Chicago SE.
HAMILTON, Robert, 9 West 14th St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Pontoosuc Studio.
I^anesboro, Mass.
P., T." — Born County Down, Ireland.
Studied in London and Paris.
HAMILTON, Wilbur Dean, Trinity Court,
Dartmouth St., Boston, Mass.
P., I., C— Born Somerfield, Ohio, 1864.
Pupil of Eicole des Beaux-Arts in Paris.
Member: Copley S. 1903 ; Boston GA;
St. Botolph C. Awards: Jordan
prize in Boston; medal, Atlanta Exp.,
1895; gold medal, P,-P. Exp., San F.,
1915. W o r k : "Beacon Street, Bos-
ton," R. I. School of Design, Providence.
Instructor at Mass. Normal Art School.
W o r k in Boston Museum, Boston
University, American University, etc.
HAMMELL, Mrs. George M., 2 Collins
PI., Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cinn. Woman's AC.
Hammer, Oscar F., Leechburg, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
HAMMER, Trygve, 1931 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.; h. Douglaston, L. I., N. Y.
S., C. — Born Arendal, Norway, Sept. 6,
1878. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. and NAD.
Member: S.Indp.A. ; Lg. of N.Y.A.
HAMMERSLOUGH, Ruth H(elprin), 31
Rue Campagne Ire, Paris, France.
P.— Born Washington, D. C, Sept. 3,
1883. Pupil of Chase.
HAMMERSMITH, Paul, 116 Michigan St.;
h. 567 Belleview PL, Milwaukee, Wis.
E.— Born Naperville, 111., March 17, 1857.
Self-taught. Member: Milwaukee AS;
Cal. SE; Chicago SE; Wisconsin PS.
Work in: New York Public Library;
Newark Public Library. Award :
Bronze medal for etching, St. Paul Inst.,
1916; silver medal for etching, St. Paul
Inst., 1918.
HAMMITT, Clawson S(hakespeare), 12th
and Jefferson St.; h. 1108 Jefferson St.,
Wilmington, Del.
P., T.— Born Wilmington, Del., Nov. 7,
1857. Pupil of Eakins and Chase; Con-
stant and Lefebvre, Paris. Member:
Fellow.ship PAFA; AAS; Phila. Sketch
C. Work: Portraits of James Lati-
mer and Henry Latimer, in Diplomatic
Gallery, U. S. Capitol; 25 portraits in
State House, Dover, Del.; 4 portraits in
State College, Newark, Del.; portraits
of Delaware naval heroes on Battleship
Delaware.
HAMMON, Walter E., 4003 Aurora Ave.,
Seattle, Wash. (S.)
HAMMOND, Arthur J., 424 Humphrey St.,
h. 81 King St., Swampscott, Mass.; sum-
mer, Deei-field, N. H.
P. — Born Vernon, Conn., Apr. 3, 1875.
Pupil of Eric Pape, Charles Woodbury
and G. L. Noyes. Member: Conn.
AFA. A wa r d : Hon. mention. Conn.
AFA, 1919.
H.^MMOND, Edith, 1701 Chase Ave.,
Rogers Park, Chicago, 111.
P., S., T.— Born Omaha, Neb. Pupil of
Fursman, Polasek, Vanderpoel, Clute,
Mulligan. Member: Alumni AIC;
Chicago ASL. Work: Painting in
civic art collection, Chicago Municipal
Pier. Assistant instructor. Summer
School of Painting, Saugatuck, Mich.
HAMOND, Richard Henry, 806 Barr St.,
Cincinnati, O.
P. — Born Cincinnati, Aug. 2, 1854. Pupil
of Noble, Weber and Duveneck in Cin-
cinnati. Member: Cincinnati AC;
Poster Artists' Assoc, of America.
Awards: Silver medal, 1873; gold
medal, 1877.
HANCOCK, Joseph Lane, Lakeside,
Mich.; and 5454 University Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.
Ldscp.P.— Born Chicago, April 12, 1864.
Pupil of AIC.
HANDFORTH, T. S., 421 North Sixth St.,
Tacoma, Wash. (P.)
HANDY, Ray D., News-Tribune; h. 1922
E. Superior St., Duluth, Minn.
I- — Born Minneapolis, Aug. 21, 1877.
Cartoonist on Duluth News-Tribune.
HANEY, Irene W., 6828 Lyric St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
HANEY, James Parton, 500 Park Ave.:
h. 1233 Third Ave., New York, N. Y.
P., T., W., L.— Born New York, Apr. 16,
1869. Pupil of Bell, Du Mond, Mucha and
Woodbury. Member: Salma.C. 1901;
N.Y.Municipal A.S.; MacD.C; School
Crafts C. (pres. 1901); School Art Lg.
Nat. Educational Assoc; Council of
Supervisors of Manual Arts (pres. 1901-
04); Nat. Soc. for Promotion of Indus-
trial Education (sect. 1908); Int. Fed.
for Art Teaching; Nat. Asso. Decora-
tive Arts and Industries, 1918-19. Dir.
of art, elementary public schools of New
York (Manhattan and Bronx), 1896-
1909; Dir. of art, high schools of New
York, since 1909; Dir. of art. N. Y
Univ. Summer School since 1907.
HANNA, Theodore, 212 Lexington Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
HANNA,
N. J.
I., P.— Born Kansas City, Mo., Apr. 10,
1872. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: SI 1904; Salma. C; Guild of Free
Lance Artists. Work in National Art
Gallery, Sydney, N. S. W., Australia.
HANNAFORD, Alice Ide (Mrs. Foster
Hannaford), 1900 Dupont Ave., South,
Minneapolis, Minn.; summer, Manitou
Island, White Bear, Minn.
S. — Born Baltimore, Md., Aug. 28, 1888.
Pupil of Eraser and ASL of N.Y.
Work: "Wigwam Dance," Brooklyn
Institute Museum.
HANSELL, Ingeborg, Lawrence Park,
Bronxville, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
T(homas) K(ing), Caldwell,
441
HANSEN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HARHDERGER
HANSEN, Armin Carl, 716 Pacific St.;
h. 621 Cass St., Monterey, Calif.
P., E., T.— Born San Francisco, Calif.
Oct. 23, 1886. Pupil of Mathews; Grethe
at Royal Academy, Stuttgart, Germany.
Member: San F. AA; Calif. SE;
Salma. C; Allied AA, Wis. PS.
Societe Royale des Beaux-Arts, Brus-
sels. Awards : Prize International
Exp., Brussels. 1910; silver medal, Pan-
ama-Pacific Exp., 1915; silver medals
for drawing and painting, San F. AA.
purchase prize, San F. AA. 1918; gold
medals for drawing and painting, San
F. AA, 1919; first Hallgarten prize,
NAD, 1920. Represented in Memorial
Museum, San Francisco; Los Angeles
Museum of History, Science and Art;
Palace of Fine Arts, San Francisco.
HANSEN, Hans Peter, 467 West 159th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born in Denmark, Oct. 4, 1881.
Member: Kunst Gewerbe Verein.
Award : Mention, collaborative com-
petition, N.Y.Arch.Lg., 1915. Instructor
Art Students' League, New York.
HANSON, Floy Katherine, 1947 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y. (P.)
HANSON, Henry T(hurland), 225 West
39th St.; h. 867 West 181st St., New
York, N. Y.; summer, 228 2nd Ave.,
Laurel Beach, Milford, Conn.
P., I.— Born Chicago. 111., Aug. 12, 1888.
Pupil of DuMond, Bridgman, Snell and
John Carlson.
Woodstock, N. Y.
NYWCC, Art Direc-
HANSON, Maude,
P. — M ember:
tors' Club.
Leopold, 114 Roland Ave.
Pittsburgh AA.
HANWELL, T.
Crafton, Pa.
P. — M ember
HAPGOOD, Alice Hathaway (Mrs. Harold
Goodwin, Jr.), 3927 Locust St., Phila-
delphia, Pa. ; summer, Weekapang, R. I.
P., I., C, T. — Born Hartford, Conn.,
Nov. 5, 1893. Pupil of Breckenridge
and Emil Carlsen.
HARBESON, Georgiana (Newcomb)
Brown, (Mrs. John F. Harbeson), 5301
Knox St., Germantown, Pa.
P., I., C. — Born New Haven, Conn., May
13, 1894. Pupil of Hugh Breckenridge,
Joseph T. Pearson, Jr., Dan. Garber,
Violet Oakley. Member: Fellow-
ship PAFA; Philadelphia Alliance;
Plastic C.
HARDENBERGH, H. Elizabeth R(ut.
gers), 939 Eighth Ave., New York,
N. Y. ; summer, Byrdcliffe, Woodstock,
Ulster Co., N. Y.
P.,C. — Born New Brunswick, N. J. Pu-
pil of H. B. Snell and Mrs. E. M. Scott.
Member: Boston SAC; N. A. Wo-
men PS; NYWCC. Specialty, pottery.
HARDING, Charlotte. See Mrs. James
A. Brown.
HARDING, George, 10 South 18th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Mural Dec, I.— Born Philadelphia, Pa.,
Oct. 2, 1882. Pupil of PAFA and Howard
Pyle and studied abroad. Member:
SI; Salma. C; Phila WCC; Phila. AC;
Fellowship PAFA; Phila. Sketch C; N. Y.
Arch. Lg. ; Phila. Alliance. Special artist,
"Harper's Magazine," around the world,
1913. Mural decorations. Hotel Traymore,
Atlantic City, N; J. "Sourabaya Har-
bor," Phila. Art Club; Stanley Theatre,
Philadelphia and Capitol Theatre, Tren-
ton; War Dept. Collection, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D. C. Imperial
War Museum Library, London. M e m -
b er of Faculty, Architectural Dept.,
Univ. of Pa. Official artist, A. E. F.,
1918. Member of Faculty of the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
and Arch. Dept., University of Pa.
HARDWICK, Alice R. (Mrs. Melbourne
H. Hard wick), 486 Boylston St., Boston,
Mass.; summer, Annisquam, Mass.
P., W., T.— Born Chicago, Jan. 18, 1876.
Pupil of Du Mond, Birge Harrison, Mel-
bourne H. Hardwick; ASL of N. Y.;
studied in Holland and Belgium. Mem-
ber: Concord AA; S. Indp. A.; Copley S.
HARDY, Anna E., South Orrington, Me.
P.— Born Bangor, Jan. 26, 1839. Pupil
of George Jeanin in Paris; Abbott H.
Thayer in Dublin, N. H. Specialty,
flowers.
HARDY, Mrs. Beulah Greenough, Pelham
Court, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa.; sum-
mer, 30 Court St., Westfield, Mass.
P. — Born Providence, R. I. Pupil of
Collin, Merson, Courtois and Virginia
Reynolds in Paris; studied also in
Boston and London. Member: Soc.
of Miniaturists, London; Plastic C.;
Phila. Alliance.
HARDY, Charles, 27 East 22nd St., New
York, N. Y.; h. White Plains, N. Y.
L— Born in England, May 29, 1888.
Pupil of E. P. Kinsella. Member:
Guild of Free Lance A.
HARDY, Horace W., 3555 North 11th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
HARDY, Walter Manly, 159 Wilson St.,
Brewer, Me.
P., L— Born Brewer, 1877. Pupil of
Lazar in Paris; Blum, Brush, Cox,
Clark and Bridgman in New York.
HARE, Elizabeth Sage, 35 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Conn. AFA.
HARE, J. Knowles, 27 East 27th St., New
York, N. Y.
I.— Born Montclair, N. J., Jan. 19, 1882.
Designer of covers for "Saturday Even-
ing Post", "American Magazine", etc.
HARER, Frederick W., 319 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
E. — Born Blossburg, Pa., Nov. 15, 1880.
Pupil of PAFA vmder Anshutz and
Chase. Member: Chicago SE; Fel-
lowship PAFA. Represented in Penn-
sylvania Acedemy of the Fine Arts.
HARGENS, Charles, Jr., 216 South 45th
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
HARHBERGER, Mrs. Florence E.
Smith, 223 West Fayette St., Syracuse,
N. Y.
P., L, T.— Born Freetown, Cortland Co.,
N. Y., Nov. 19, 1863. Pupil of ASL and
Cooper Union in New York, under
442
HARLAND
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HARRISON
Brush, J. Alden Weir, Shirlaw and
Frederick Freer. Member: Utica
Art C; Utica Sketch C.
HARLAND, Mary, 1323 14th St., Santa
Monica, Cal.
P.— Born Yorkshire, Eng., Oct. 8, 1863.
Studied in London, Dresden and Paris.
Member: Cal.Soc.Min.P. Award :
Silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
HARLES, Victor Joseph. Hanley Road &
Canton Ave., Clayton, Mo.
P., T.— Born St. Louis, Mo., Feb. 22,
1894. Pupil of St. Louis School FA.
Member: St. Louis AL.
HARLEY, Charles R(ichard), 709 West
169th St., New York, N. Y. ; New Hope,
Pa.
S. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., March 25,
1864. Pupil of Spring Garden Inst, and
of PAFA in Philadelphia; Julian
Academy, Chapu, Falguiere and Dampt
in Paris, Member: Boston SAC;
N.Y.ArchLg. 1902; Fellowship PAFA.
Award : Bronze medal, Pan-Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901.
HARLOW, H(arry) IVl(errlck) S(utton),
47 Fourth Ave., Haverhill, Mass.
P., C— Born Haverhill, July 19, 1882.
Pupil of Eric Pape in Boston. Mem-
ber: Haverhill SAC. Work: Mural
decorations. Trinity Church, Haverhill,
Mass.; St. Martin banner, St. Augustine
and St. Martin Mission Church, Boston,
Mass.; panels in Chapel of the Society
of the Divine Compassion, New York
City; panels in Christ Church, Ports-
mouth, N. H. Specialty, illumination.
HARIVION, Evelyn Shaylor, 147 Pine St.,
Portland, Me. (Min. P.)
HARPER, Lois, 612 West 115th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
HARPER, Marian Dunlap, 847 Grove St.,
Giencoe, 111.
Min. P. — Studied at AIC and in Paris.
Member: Chicago SA; Chicago S.
Min. P.; Chicago AG,
HARRIS, A(lexandrina) R(obertson),
Quincy Arms, 186 Quincy St., Brooklyn,
N. Y.
Min. P. — Born Aberdeen, Scotland, July
11, 1886. Pupil of Phila. Art School
under Whitaker; ASL of N. Y.; Am.
School of Min. P. Member: N.
A. Women PS; Brooklyn S. Min. P.; Pa.
Soc. Min. P.
HARRIS, Charles X., 356 Mountain Road,
West Hoboken, N. J.
P.— Born Foxcroft, Me., 1856. Pupil of
Cabanel in Paris. Work in: Me-
morial Hall, Philadelphia; portraits
in Manor Hall, Yonkers; Mercantile
Library; Lambs' Club, New York;
stained glass window, Doylestown, Pa.;
Perc6, Quebec, Canada.
HARRIS, George E(dgerly), 356 Mountain
Rd., West Hoboken, N. J.
P. — Born Milford Hundred, Del., Oct.
22, 1898. Pupil of NAD.
HARRIS, Sarah L., 5538 Camelia St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
HARRIS, William Laurel, 120 Central
Park South, New York, N. Y. ; summer,
R. F. D. No. 1, Lake George, N. Y.
Mural P., C, W., L.— Born New York,
N. Y., Feb. 18, 1870. Pupil of T. W.
Dewing in New York; Gerome, Gallan"37
Lefebvre and Doucet in Paris. Mem-
ber: Mural P. ; N. Y. Arch. Lg.
1898; NAC; N.Y.Municipal AS (pres.
1912-14; A. Aid S. ; MacD.C; Fine Arts
Fed. of N. Y. Director of the Art Center;
contributing editor, "Good Furniture
Magazine." Work: "St Francis de
Sales before Pope Clement VIII," Cath-
olic University, Washington; "The
Holy Sacrifice" and "Our Lady of
the Lake," St. Mary's, Lake
George, N. Y.; "The Crucifixion" and
thirty other large mural paintings with
the entire decorative scheme of the
Paulist Church, New York; Tapestry
back to the Cardinal's Throne, St.
Patrick's Cathedral, New York; decora-
tive scheme and mural paintings for
Corpus Christi Chapel, New York; decor-
ations and color harmonies at St. Nich-
olas of the Children, Passaic, N. J.;
decorations in the Catholic Club, New
York, N. Y.
HARRISON, Helen, 477 State St., Bridge-
port, Conn.
P. — M ember: New Haven PCC.
HARRISON, (Lovell) Birge, New Hope,
Pa.
P., I., T., W.— Born Philadelphia, Oct.
28, 1854. Pupil of Cabanel in Paris.
Member: ANA 1902, NA 1910; SAA
1882; Nat. Inst. A.L.; Fellowship PAFA;
Century Assoc; NAC (life); MacD.C;
NYWCC; Allied AA; Salma.C; Ends
of the Earth Club; Rochester AC.
Award : 'Silver medal, Paris Exp.,
1889; medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago,
1893; bronze medal. Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; 2nd Corcorcan prize, S. Wash-
ington A., 1904; silver medal, St. Louis,
Exp., 1904; gold medal, AAS Phila., 1907;
1st medal, Dallas, Tex., 1912; "Hors Con-
cours," Paris Salon. Founder, summer
school of ASL of N.Y. Author of
"Landscape Painting." Work: "The
Mirror," Wilstach Gallery, Philadelphia;
"Autumn Sunset" and "A Glimpse of
the St. Lawrence." Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia; "Fifth Avenue
at Twilight," Institute of Arts, Detroit;
museums at Quimper and Marseilles,
France; Spartanburg, S. C; "Wood-
stock Meadows," Toledo Museum of
Fine Arts; "Rose and Silver Moonrise,"
Corcoran Gallery, Washington, D. C;
"The Flatiron After Rain," City Art
Museum, St. Louis; "Drifting," St. Paul
Institute; "Summer Night," Omaha Mu-
seum of Fine Arts; "Early Lamplight,"
municipal collection, Spartanburg, S. C;
"Moonlight on the St. Lawrence," mu-
nicipal collection, Oakland, Cal.; "Sun-
set on the St. Charles," Art Association,
Lincoln, Neb.; "The Harbor Light,"
Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis;
"Quebec from the Harbor," Atlanta
Art Association; "Early Candle-light,"
Brooks Memorial Art Gallery, Memphis,
Tenn,; "Floating Ice," California Club,
Los Angeles; "The Soaring Cloud," Na-
443
HARRISON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HARTSON
tional Arts Club. New York; "St.
Michael's, Charleston," and "Bridge at
Cos Cob," Mahoning Institute of Art,
Youngstov^^n, O.; "Bryant Park Twi-
light," Lawrence (Kan.) Art Museum;
"Calling Home the Cows," Chicago Art
Institute. Represented in collections of
Dallas (Tex.) Art Asso.; Richmond
(Ind.) Art Asso.; Calumet Club. New
York; Chicago Club, Chicago; "Moon-
light on the River," Luxembourg, Paris.
HARRISON, (Thomas) Alexander, 6 Rue
du Val de Grace, Paris, France; and
Century Assoc, 7 West 43d St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Jan. 17,
1853. Pupil of PAFA; Ecole des Beaux-
Arts, Bastien-Lepage and Gerome in
Paris. Member: SAA 1885; ANA
1898, NA 1901; AC Phila. ; Paris SAC;
Fellowship Penna. Acad, of Fine Arts;
Century Assoc; Phila.WCC(hon.) ; Cer-
cle d'Union Artistique; SocNat.des
Beaux- Arts; Royal Inst, of Painters in
Oil Colors, London; Socof Secessionists,
Berlin and Munich (cor.); Nat.Inst.A.L.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1885; Temple silver medal, PAFA 1887;
gold medal, Paris Exp., 1889; second
medal, Munich Salon, 1891; medal of
honor, Brussels and Ghent 1892; gold
medal of honor, PAFA 1894; medals of
honor at Vienna and Berlin. Chevalier
of Legion of Honor 1889, Officer 1901;
Officer of Public Instruction, by French
Government. Work: "L'Arcadie" and
"Solitude," Luxembourg Museum, Paris;
"The Wave," Pennsylvania Academy,
Philadelphia; "Crepuscule," St. Louis
Museum; "Crepuscule," Corcoran Gal-
lery, Washington, D. C. ; "Sables et
Lune," Quimper Museum, France; "Les
Amateurs," Art Institute, Chicago;
"Nude," Royal Gallery, Dresden; "A
Festival Night," "Boys Bathing, East
Hampton," "Le Grand Miroir" and
"Marine," Wilstach Gallery, Phila-
delphia; "Castles in Spain," Metropoli-
tan Museum, New York; "Golden
Dunes," St. Paul Institute.
HARRITON, Abraham, 272 Third Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., E. — Born Bucharest, Roumania, Feb.
9, 1893. Pupil of J. W. Maynard and
C. F. Mielatz. Member: S. Indp. A.
Represented in Oakland (Cal.) Public
Museum.
HARSH E, Robert B., 2764 Hampton Ct.,
Chicago, 111.
P., E., T., W.— Born Salisbury, Mo., May
26, 1879. Pupil of AIC; ASL of N. Y.;
Univ. of Mo.; Teachers Col., New York,
under Dow; Laszlo in London; Cola-
rossi Academy in Paris. Member:
Cal.SE (hon.); Brooklyn SE rhon);
Chicago SE; N.Y.SE. Work in:
Luxembourg Museum, Paris. Asst.
chief, Dept. of Fine Arts, Panama-
Pacific Exp., San Francisco, 1915; ex-
asst. director, Dept. of Fine Arts, Car-
negie Institute, Pittsburgh, Pa., Director
of AIC.
HART (George Overbury), Coytesville,
N. J.
P.— Born Cairo, 111., May 10, 1868. Self-
taught. Member: AWCS.
HART, Lance W., 36 1/, Heron St., Aber-
deen, Wash. (P.)
HART, Leon, 311 West 24th St., New
York. N. Y.
P.— M ember: S. Indp. A.
HART, Letitia B(ennet), 94 First Place,
Brooklyn, New York; N. Y. ; summer,
Lakeville, Conn.
P. — Born New York, Apr. 20, 1867. Pu-
pil of her father, Jam.es M. Hart; NAD
under Edgar M. Ward. Award :
Dodge prize, NAD 1898. Work: Miss
Mattie Harris, Virginia College,
Roanoke.
HART, William H(oward), 131 East 66th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Fishkill-on-Hudson, N. Y.,
1863. Pupil of ASL and J. Alden Weir
in New York; Boulanger and Lefebvre
in Paris. Member: Salma.C. 1898.
HARTING, G(eorge) W., 51 West 10th
St., New York, N. Y.
I., P., T.— Born Little Falls, Minn., Dec.
11, 1877. Pupil of Henri, Chase, Mora,
Miller and Koehler. Member: SI
1912; Dutch Treat C; 'Salma C, 1917.
Illustraiions in magazines — "McClure's,"
"Harper's," "Vogue," "House and Gar-
den," etc.
HARTLEY, Joseph, 1442 Minford PL, New
York, N. Y.
S.— Born Albany, N. Y., May 19, 1842.
Member: Salma. C.
HARTLEY, Marsden, 550 East 85th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S. Indp. A.
HARTLEY, Thomas R., 5825 Fifth Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
HARTMAN, C. Bertram, care of the
Montross Gallery, 550 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P., Dec. — Born Junction City, Kan.,
Apr. 18, 1882. Studied at AIC; Royal
Acad., Munich; and in Paris. Mem-
ber: Chicago SA; AWCS; N. Y. Arch.
Lg. ; Mural P.
HARTMAN, Sydney K., 13 West 30th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I., T. — Born in Germany, Aug. 2,
1863. Pupil of Laurens and Benjamin
Constant in Paris.
HARTRATH, Lucie, 4 East Ohio St.,
Chicago, 111.
P., T. — Born Boston. Pupil of Rixens,
Courtois and Collin in Paris; Angelo
Jauk in Munich. Member:' Chi-
cago SA; Chicago WCC; Cordon
C; Chicago AC; Chicago AG; Kiinst-
lerinen Verein, Munich. Awards:
Butler purchase prize, AIC 1911; Young
Fortnightly prize, AIC 1912; Rosenwald
purchase prize ($200), AIC 1915; Carr
landscape prize, AIC 1916.
HARTSON, Walter C, Was.saic, Dutchess
Co., N. Y.
P. — Born Wyoming, la., Oct. 27. 1866.
Member: NYWCC; Salma.C; S.
Indp. A.; Allied AA. Awards:
Bronze medal and hon. mention,
Atlanta Exp., 1895; third Hallgarten
prize, NAD 1898; gold medal, AAS 1902;
first landscape prize, Osborne compe-
tition 1904.
444
HART WELL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MASS AM
HARTWELL, Edith, 27 East 35th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
HARTWELL, G(eorge) K(enneth), 556
West 180th St., New York, N. Y.
P., I., C. — Born Fitchburg, Mass., June
6, 18;)1. Pupil of Frank DuMond, Ken-
neth Miller, W. R. Leigh. Member:
American Fakirs. Award : Fakir
prize, 1920. Work: Covers for
"Architectural Record," "Century,"
"Scribner's," "Farm and Fireside."
HARTWELL, Marjorie, 44 Casper Street,
Hartford, Conn. (P.;
HARVEY, Eli, 50 Cliarles St., New York,
N. Y.
S., P., C— Born Ogden O., Sept. 23,
1860. Pupil of Cincinnati Academy
under Leutz, Noble and Rebisso; Julian
Academy in Paris under Lefebvre, Con-
stant and Doucet; Delecluse Academy
under Delance and Callot, and of Fre-
miet at the Jardin des Plantes. M e m-
ber : NSS 1902; N. Y. Arch. Lg. 1903;
Paris AAA; School Art Lg. Awards:
First class gold medal for painting,
Paris-Province Exp., 1900; Wanamaker
prize for sculpture, Paris AAA 1900;
bronze medal for sculpture. Pan. -Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; bronze medal St.
Louis Exp., 1904; bronze medal P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915. Work: "Maternal
Caress" and American bald eagle for
honor roll, Metropolitan Museum, New
York; sculpture for Lion House, New
York Zoo; recumbent lions for Eaton
Mausoleum; portrait of "Dinah,"
gorilla, for New York Zoological So-
ciety; medal commemorating entry of
the United States into the war, for
American Numismatic Society; repre-
sented in museums of St. Louis, London,
Liverpool, Newark, Cinciniati.
HARVEY, George W(ainwright), 47 River
Road, Annisquam, Mass.
, P., E. — Born Gloucester, Mass., Jan. 13,
1855. Studied in Holland.
HARVEY, Paul, R. F. D. No. 1, Santa
Barbara, Cal.
P.— Born Chicago, 111. Pupil of AIC;
Boston Museum School. Member:
Boston AC; Cal. AC. Work: "The
Cedars," Boston Art Club.
HARWOOD, J(ames) T., 9232 Cherry St.,
Oakland, Calif.
P., T.— Born Lehi, Utah, 1860. Pupil
of Laurens and Bonnat in Paris.
Member: Soc. Utah Artists.
HARWOOD, Sara B., 8 West Hill Place,
Boston, Mass. (S.)
HASKELL, Ernest, 540 Sutter St., San
Francisco, Calif.
P., Lith., Etcher, W. — Born Woodstock,
Conn., July 30, 1876. Member: Chi-
cago SE.; P.-G. Award: Bronze
medal for etching, P.-P.Exp., San F.,
1915.
HASKELL, Ida C, 232 East 15th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Brookhaven,
L. I., N. Y.
P.— Born in California. Studied in Chi-
cago, Philadelphia and Paris. Mem-
ber: N.A.Women PS.
HASLER, William N., Hillside Ave.,
Caldwell, N. J.
Ldscp.P. — Born Washington, D. C, May
9, 1865. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: Salma.C. 1908.
HASSAM, Childe, 130 West 57th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., E.— Born Boston, Oct. 17, 1859. Pupil
of Boulanger and Lefebvre in Paris.
M e m b e r: ANA 1902; NA 1906; AWCS;
NYWCC; Boston AC; Ten Am. P.;
P.-G.; Munich Secess. (cor.); Assoc.
Soc.Nat.des Beaux-Arts; Nat.Inst.A.L.;
Am. Acad. A.L. Awards : Bronze
medal, Paris Exp., 1889; gold medal,
Munich, 1892; medal, AC Phila. 1892;
bronze medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago,
1893; prize, Cleveland Art Assoc. 1893;
Webb prize, SAA 1895; prize, Boston AC
1896; second class medal, C.I.Pittsburgh,
1898; Temple gold medal, PAFA 1899;
silver medal, Paris Exp., 1900; gold
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
gold medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; Clarke
prize, NAD 1905; third class medal, C.L
I'ittsburgh, 1905; Lippincott prize,
PAFA 1906; Carnegie prize, SAA 1906;
third prize, Worcester, 1906; Sesnan
gold medal, PAFA 1910; third W. A.
Clark prize, Corcoran AG 1910; Evans
prize, AWCS 1912; first W. A. Clark
prize ($2,000) and Corcoran gold medal,
Washington, 1912; Altman prize ($500),
NAD 1918; Hudnut prize, AWCS,
1919; Phila. WCC prize 1919; Converse
gold medal, PAFA 1920. Work: "Isles
of Shoals" and "Golden Afternoon, Ore-
gon," "The Brush House" and "Street in
Portsmouth, New Hampshire," Metro-
politan Museum, New York; "North-
east Headlands — New England Coast"
and "New York Window," Corcoran
Gallery, Washington; "Pont Royal,"
"The Calker" and "House on the
Place Lannion," Cincinnati Museum;
"Fifth Avenue in Winter" and "Spring
Morning," also set of twenty-nine
drawings, Carnegie Institute, Pitts-
burgh; "Summer Sea," Museum of
Art, Toledo; "Church at Old Lyme"
and "Brook Back of New Canaan,"
Fine Arts Academy, Buffalo; "The
Messenger Boy" and "Street Scene,"
Rhode Island School of Design, Provi-
dence; "The Breakfast Room, New
York," "Yonkers from the Palisades"
and "Sylph's Rock, Appledore,"
Worcester Art Museum; "Spring —
Navesink Highlands" and "The Geor-
gian Chair" (Evans Col.) and "The
Chinese Merchants" (Freer Col.), Na-
tional Gallery, Washington; "Cat Boats
— Nev^'port," Pennsylvania Academy,
Philadelphia; "Cliffe Rock — Appledore,"
Art Association, Indianapolis; "Place
Centrale and Fort Cabanas Havana,"
Institute of Arts, Detroit; "Contre-
Jour." Art Institute, Chicago; "Isles of
Shoals," Minneapolis Institute of Arts;
"View of Central Park," Brooklyn In-
stitute Museum; "Diamond Cove, Isles
of Shoals," "The East Window" and
"The Fete of Lannion, Gray Evening,"
City Art Museum, St. Louis.
445
HASSELBUSCH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HAWTHORNE
Arch St.,
Pa.; sum-
1863.
under
Royal
Phila.
San
HASSELBUSCH, Louis, 1026
Philadelphia, Pa.; h. Logan,
mer, Edison, Pa.
P. — Born Philadelphia, Nov. 8,
Pupil of PAFA; Academy Julian
Constant and Lefebvre in Paris;
Academy in Munich. Member:
Sketch C. Specialty, portraits.
HASTE, L. B., 1411 Sixth Ave.,
Francisco, Calif. (I.)
HASWELL, Ernest Bruce, 148 East 4th
St.; h. 818 Oak St., W. H., Cincinnati, O.
S., W., L., T.— Born Kentucky, July 25,
1887. Pupil of Barnhorn, Meakin, Du-
bois. Member: Cin. MacD. S.; Cin-
cinnati AC; Crafters' Guild. Work:
"Spinoza," bas-relief. Hebrew Union
College and Spinoza House, The Hague;
"Northcott Memorial," Springfield, 111.;
Cincinnati Museum, Cincinnati Mac-
Dowell Society, Rookwood Pottery; St.
Coleman's Church, Cleveland.
HATCH, Emily Niciiois, 62 Washington
Sq., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Newport, R. I. Pupil of John
Ward Stimson, Chase and Hawthorne.
Member: N. A. Women PS; SPNY;
P.B.C. Award : McMillin prize, N. Y.
Woman's AC, 1912. Represented in Na-
tional Museum, Washington.
HATFIELD, Joseph Henry, Canton Junc-
tion, Mass.
P. — Born near Kingston, Canada, June
21, 1863. Pupil of Constant, Doucet and
Lefebvre in Paris. Awards: Silver
medal, Mass. Charitable Mechanics'
Assoc, Boston, 1892; second Hallgarten
prize, NAD 1896. W o r k in Boston Art
Club.
HATHERELL, W., care of Harper &
Bros., London, Eng. (I.)
HAUENSTEIN, Eugenia, 105 Ashland
Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. (P.)
HAUPT, Erii< G., care of the Charcoal
Club, 1230 St. Paul St.; Baltimore, Md.
P. — Born Cassel, Germany, Aug. 7,
1891. Pupil of Laurens and Richard
Miller in Paris.
HAUSEMAN, George, 116 West 30th St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
HAUSER, Josephine, 128 East 54th St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
HAUSHALTER, George M., Sheepscot,
Maine; New Hope, Pa.
P.— Born Portland, Me., Jan. 9, 1862.
Pupil of Julian Academy and Ecole des
Beaux- Arts, Member: AWCS; Roch-
ester AC. Work: Decorations in St.
Andrew's and St. Philip's Church, Roch-
ester, N. Y.
HAVENS, Belle. See Mrs. H. M. Walcott.
HAWEIS, Stephen, Nassau, N. P., Ba-
hama Islands, B. W. I.
P., C, E., W — Born London, England.
Pupil of Alphonse Mucha and Eugene
Carriere in Paris. Work: Mural deco-
rations in War Memorial Chapel of St.
Francis Xavier, Nassau, Stone Ridge
Church, New York; painted windows in
St. Anselm's Church, Bronx, N. Y. ;
paintings in Detroit Institute and
Toledo Museum; etchings in the Na-
tional Gallery, Sydney, Australia. Au-
thor of "The Book about the Sea
Gardens, Nassau."
HAWKS, Rachel M(arshall) (Mrs. Arthur
W. Hawks), Ruxton, Baltimore Co.,
Md.
S., T. — Born Port Deposit, Md., March
20, 1879. Pupil of Maryland Institute,
Rinehart School of Sculpture under
Ephraim Keyser, Charles Pike. Mem-
ber: Handicraft C. of Baltimore; Mary-
land Int. Alumni. Work: Bust of Dr.
Basil Gildersleeve, Johns Hopkins Uni-
versity, Baltimore. Specialty, mural
decorations in relief.
HAWKINS, Edward M (ack) C(urtis), 120
East State St., Ithaca, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, Nov. 24, 1877. Pu-
pil of Whistler, Cazin, Monet, and
Beardsle. Awards : Silver medal,
Liege, Belgium, 1899-1902; Order of
Leopold of Belgium; Iron Crown, Rou-
mania. Works owned by Queen of
Rbumania, King of Serbia and late King
Leopold of Belgium.
HAWLEY, Benjamin, Queen Lane Manor,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: AC Phila. ; Fellowship
PAFA.
HAWLEY, Carl, 615 Walnut Ave., Syra-
cuse, N. Y. (P.)
HAWLEY, Margaret Foote, 20 St. Botolph
St., Boston, Mass.
Min. P. — M ember: Am.S.Min.P.; Pa.
S.Min.P.; Boston GA; Wash.WCC; New
Haven PCC. Awards : Medal of honor,
PAFA, 1918; Lea prize ($50), PAFA,
1920. "Work in: Metropolitan Museum,
New York.
HAWLEY, Theodosia, 141 East 40th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: NA. Women PS.
HAWORTH, Edith E., 96 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
HAWTHORNE, Charles W(ebster), care
of Salmagundi Club, 47 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Province-
town, Mass.
P., T.— Born in Maine, 1872. Pupil of
NAD and ASL in New York; Chase at
Shinnecock, L. I. Member: ANA
1908, NA 1911; Salma.C. 1900; NAC;
Lotos C; A.Fund S.; Players; SocigtS
Nat. des Beaux-Arts, Paris. Awards:
Obrig prize, Salma.C. 1902; first Hall-
garten prize, NAD 1904; Evans prize,
Salma.C. 1904; Shaw prize, Salma.C.
1904; second prize, Worcester, 1904; sec-
ond Hallgarten prize, NAD 1906; hon.
mention, C.I.Pittsburgh, 1908; silver
medal, Buenos Aires Exp., 1910; Clarke
prize, NAD 1911; Isidor medal, NAD
1914; Temple gold medal, PAFA 1915;
silver medal, P.-P. Exp., San P.,
1915; Altman prize ($1,000), NAD 1915.
Work: "The Trousseau," Metropoli-
tan Museum, New York; "Fisherman's
Wife," Corcoran Gallery, Washington;
"Mother and Child," Syracuse Museum
of Fine Arts; "Net Mender" and "Girl
in White," Rhode Island School of
Design, Providence; "Venetian Girl,"
Worcester Museum; "The Family," Buf-
446
J
HAWTHORNE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HAZEN
falo Fine Arts Academy; "Refining Oil,"
Detroit Institute; "Madonna of the
Fishermen," City Art Museum, St.
Louis; "The Florist's Daughter," Hack-
ley Art Gallery, Muskegon, Mich;
"Little Sylvia," Art Institute of Chi-
cago; "Fisher Boys," Peabody Institute
of Baltimore; "Provincetown Fisher-
man," Herron Art Inst., Indianapolis;
"The Mother," Boston Museum of Art;
"Florist's Daughter," Engineer's Club
of New York.
HAWTHORNE, Marion G(ambell) (Mrs.
Charles W. Hawthorne), care Macbeth
Gallery, 450 Fifth Ave., New York, N.
Y.; Provincetown, Cape Cod, Mass.
P.— Born Joliet, 111. Pupil of AIC;
Chase. Member: N. A. Women's
PS.
HAY, Alice. See Mrs. Clay.
HAYDEN, Eila Frances, 160 Taber Ave.,
Providence, R. I.; summer, Blandford,
P. — Born Boston, Mass., Mar. 21, 1860.
Pupil of NAD; Delecluse School, Paris;
National Art School, Munich; Cowles
Art School, Boston. Member: Prov-
idence AC; Providence WCC. Specialty,
landscapes.
HAYDEN, Florentine H., 146 Pine St.,
AVaterbury, Conn.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
HAYDEN, Sara S., 3319 Michigan Ave.,
Chicago. 111.
P., L., T. — Born Chicago. Pupil of AIC;
Collin, Merson and Lazar in Paris;
Chase and Duveneck. Member: Chi-
cago SA.
HAYES, Chester C, Etaples, France. (P.)
HAYES, Lee, 1020 West Bldg., Butte,
Mont.
P., E.— Born in Platteville, Wis., Oct. 13,
1854. Self-taught.
HAYES, Louisa, 217 North St., Buffalo,
N. Y. ; summer, "Shore Oaks," Ridge-
v^^ay. Ontario, Cunada.
P., S., C— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Jan. 15,
1881. Pupil of Buffalo Albright Art
School, Robert Reid. Member: Buf-
falo SA; Buffalo GAA.
HAYNES, Caroline Coventry, Highlands,
N. J.
P. — Born New York. Pupil of ASL of
N. Y. ; Alfred Stevens and Courtois in
Paris. Member: NYWCC. ; N. A.
Women PS.
HAYMAKER, Susan I., 35 King Edward
Apts.. Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
HAYS, George A., Room 42, Woods Bldg.,
19 College St., Providence, R. L
Ldscp.P. — Born Greenville, N. H., Nov.
23, 1854. Self-taught. Member:
Providence AC; Copley S. 1892; S.
Indp. A. Specialty, landscapes with
cattle.
HAYS, William J(acob), Millbrook. N. Y.
P.— Born Catskill. N. Y.. July 1, 1872:
son of Wm. J. Hays, ANA. Pupil of
NAD in New York; Julian and Colarossi
academies in Paris. Member: ANA
1909; Salma. C. 1900. Award : Shaw
prize, Salma. C. 1912.
HAYWARD, Alfred, 200 South 15th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.;
Phila. WCC. Award : Dana gold
medal, Phila. WCC, 1919. ^
HAZARD, Artliur Merton, 64 Common-
wealth Ave., Boston, Mass.; h. Brook-
line, Mass.
P., T. — Born North Bridgewater, Mass.,
Oct. 20, 1872. Pupil of School of Mu-
seum of Fine Arts and Cowles'
Art School in Boston; Prinet and
Henri Blanc in Paris. Member:
St. Botolph C; Copley S.; Awards:
Medal, Mass. Charitable Mechanics'
Assoc, 1892. Work: "Israel, the
Light of the Nations," mural dec.
Temple Israel, Boston; work in State
House, Boston, and Court House, Bal-
timore. Specialty, portraits and mural
decorations.
HAZELL, Frank, 130 East 31st St., New
York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Hamilton, Canada, June 7,
1883. Pupil of ASL of N.Y., Alphonse
Mucha. Member: Saim.a. C: ST.,
NYWCC: Guild of Am. Painters; Guild
of Free Lance Artists.
HAZELTON, I (saac) B(rewster), 2 East
23rd St., Nutley, N. J.; summer. Isle
au Haut, Me.
P., I.— Born Boston, Dec. 30, 1875. Pu-
pil of Tarbell, Benson, and W. F.
Brown. Member: Guild of Free
Lance A.
HAZELTON, Mary Brewster, 304 Fen-
way Studios, Boston; h. Wellesley Hills,
Mass.
P.. T.— Born Milton, Mass. Pupil of
Edmund C. Tarbell. Member: Cop-
ley S.; Boston GA. Awards: First
Hallgarten prize, NAD 1896; Paige
traveling scholarship, School of Boston
Museum of Fine Arts, 1899; hon. men-
tion, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901: bronze
medal, P. -P. Exp., San F.. 1915: Popular
Prize. Newport AA, 1916. Work:
Decoration for chancel, Wellesley Hills
Congregational Church, 1912.
HAZELWOOD, Ella, Allegheny High
School, N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
HAZEN, Bessie E(Ma), care of Southern
California Branch of the University of
California; h. 1042 West 36th St., Los
Angeles. Calif.
P.. E., T.— Born Waterford, New Bruns-
wick, Canada. Pupil of Columbia Univ.,
New York. Member: Cal. AC;
Calif. P.M.; Calif. SE.; Laguna Beach
AA. Awards : Second prize for Avater
color, Arizona State Fair, 1916; second
prize for watercolor and prize for black
and white, Arizona State Fair, 1917;
second ]irize for water color, Arizona
State Fair. 1919.
HAZEN (Fannie) Wilhelmina (Mrs.
P.. F. Ledford), 240 Golden Gate Ave.,
San Francisco. Cal.; summer, care
A. T. Hazen, Santa Cruz, Cal.
P. S., T.— Born Murphy's Gulch, Cal.,
Aug. 27, 1877. Pupil of Hopkins Inst.,
San Francisco, and Academic Moderne,
Paris.
447
HAZZARD
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HEKKING
HAZZARD, Sara, 29 East 29th St., New
York, N. Y.; h. 516 Second St., James-
town, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N.A. Women PS.; Pa.
S. Min.P.
HEARD, Mrs. Edith V. R., 6314 Marchand
St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
HEARN, Mary H. See Mrs. Herbert
Greims.
HEATH, Alice, 61 West 92nd St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
HEATH, Howard P., 294 West 11th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. Norwalk, Conn.
P., I.— Born Boulder, Colo., Oct. 2, 1879.
Pupil of AIC; ASL of N. Y.; Frank
Nankivell. Member: Salma.C; SI
1911; NYWCC.
HEATON, (Augustus) G(eorge), 1400
South Olive St., West Palm Beach. Fla.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., April 28,
1844. Pupil of Cabanel at Ecole des
Beaux-Arts 1863 and of Bonnat 1879 in
Paris. Member: Phila. Sketch C.
(pres. 1867); 'S. Indo. A.; Salma. C. 1908,
Amer. Numismatic Assoc, (pres. 1888).
Award: Bronze medal, Columbian
Exp., Chicago, 1893. Work: "The
Recall of Columbus," U. S. Capitol,
Washington; "Washington's First Mis-
sion," Union League Club, Philadelphia;
"Baron Steuben at Valley Forge," War
College, Washington; portraits in State
Dept. and Navy Dept., Washington,
D. C; Delaware State House; New
York Historical Society; Tulane Univ.;
Cornell Univ. Author: "The Heart of
David," "Fancies and Thoughts < in
Verse," "Mint Marks," etc.
HEAVEN, Ethel R. See Mrs. Hamilton.
HEBER, Carl Augustus, 51 West 10th
St., New York, N. Y.; h. Nyack-on-
Hudson, N. Y.
S. — Born Stuttgart, Germany, April 15,
1874. Pupil of Taft in Chicago. M e m -
ber: NSS 1904; N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1911.
Awards : Bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; bronze medal, P.-P.Exp., San
F., 1915. Work: "Pastoral," Art Insti-
tute, Chicago, 111.; "Champlain Memo-
rial," Crown Point, N. Y. ; "Champlain
Statue," Plattsburg, N. Y.; "Schiller
Monument," Rochester, N. Y. ; "Ben-
, jamin Franklin," Princeton University.
HECHT, Victor D(avid), 205 East Broad-
way; h. 14 East 60th St., New York,
N. Y.
P. — Born Paris, France, May 15, 1873.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Lefebvre and
Robert-Fleury in Paris. Member:
Port.P.
HECKMAN, Albert W., 525 West 120th
St., New York. N. Y. (P.)
HEEBNER, Ann. See Mrs. McDonald.
HEERMAN, Norbert, Ralston Galleries, 4
East 46th St., New York, ■ N. Y.; sum-
mer, Woodstock, N. Y.
P., W. — Born Frankfort-on-the-Main.
Germany, May 10, 1891. Pupil of Rey-
nolds, in Chicago, Fleury in Paris, Cor-
inth in Berlin, Duveneck in Cincinnati.
Member: Cincinnati AC; Colorado
Springs AS. Works: "The Continental
Divide" (mural). Evanston School, Cin-
cinnati; "Cameron's Cone, Colorado",
Hughes High School, Cincinnati. Author
of "Frank Duveneck", a biography.
HEIDEL, Mrs. Edith Ogden, 2827-28th St.,
N.W., Washington, D. C. (S.)
HEIFFEL, Eugene, 153 Avenue B, New
Y'ork, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
HEIL, Charles Emile, 1215 Grand Con-
course, New Y''ork, N. Y.
P., I., T.— Born Boston, Feb. 28, 1870.
Studied in Boston and Paris. Mem-
ber: Salma.C; Boston WCC; S.Indp.A.
Award: Gold medal for water color,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915. Represented in
Worcester (Mass.) Art Museum; Maiden
(Mass.) Public Library.
HEILPRIN, Gertrude, 2620 University PI.,
Washington, D. C. (P.)
HEINTZELMAN, Arthur William, care of
Frederick Keppel & Co., 4 East 39th
St., New York, N. Y.; 4 Square Des-
nouttes XV, Paris, France.
P., E.. L., T.— Born Newark. N. J..
Nov. 22. 1891. Pupil of R. I. School
of Design; studied in Holland, France,
Belgium, Spain, England and 'Scotland.
Member: Chicago SE; Providence
AC; Calif. P.M.; Calif. SE; Canadian
Soc. P.-G; Salma. C Awards:
Logan prize AIC, 2 yrs. ; Barnett Prize,
Brooklyn SE, 1920; 1st prize, Calif. P.M.,
1921. Etchings in Metropolitan Museum,
N. Y. ; Chicago Art Inst. ; New Y''ork
Public Library; Detroit Institute of
Arts; Library of Congress, Washington;
Newark Public Library; Milwaukee Art
Inst.; Los Angeles Museum; Rhode
Island School of Design; Cincinnati
Museum; Corcoran Gallery, Washing-
ton, D. C
HEINZ, Charles L(loyd), Shelbyville, 111.
P.— Born Shelbyville, 111., Jan. 8, 1885.
Pupil of R. M. Root; St. Louis School
of FA; Chicago Acad. FA. Awards :
Ten first and seven second prizes at
Indiana State Fair, Indianapolis; two
second prizes. State Fair, Springfield,
111.
HEINZMANN, Samilla L. Jameson, The
Willow Bridge Studio, 28 Terrace Ave.,
Princess Bay, S. I., N. Y.
P., S., I., C — Born Indianapolis, Ind.,
April 22, 1881. Pupil of Chicago Art.
Institute, Detroit Fine Arts Academy;
De Lug in Vienna. Member: S.
Ind. A.; Lg. of N.Y'.A.
HEITMULLER, Marian R(oeder), 1307
Fourteenth St., N. W., Washington, D.
C
P.— Born Washington, D. C, Dec. 22,
1894. Pupil of Howard Helmick.
HEKKING, William M(athews), 219 East
11th St., Kansas City, Mo.; 1447 Massa-
chusetts St., Lawrence, Kan.
P., I., L., T.— Born Chelsea, Wis., Mar.
10, 1885. Pupil of Laurens. Member:
College Art Asso. ; Wilmington Soc.
Painters. Work: Decorations in
Natural History Museum, State Univer-
sity of Kansas, Lawrence, Instructor
448
HELD
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HENS HAW
in drawing-, State University of Kansas,
Lawrence.
HELD, John, Jr., R.F.D. 12, Westport,
Conn.
P., E., I.— Born Salt Lake City. Utah,
Jan. 10, 1889. Member: P-G.
HELLER, Eugenie M., 502 West 113th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., S., C— Pupil of J. Alden Weir in
New York; Aman-Jean, Grasset and
Whistler in Paris.
HELLER, Helen West, East Walnut St.,
Limits, Canton, 111.
P., W. — Born Rushville, 111. Member:
S.Indp.A. Subjective painter.
HELMUTH, Jessie L., 4722 Calumet Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
S., P.— Born Chicago, 111., July 20, 1892.
Pupil of Mulligan, Crunelle, Polasek
and Charles Schroeder.
H EL WIG. Albert M(ettee), Baltimore Sun
Bldg., Baltimore and Charles Sts.; h.
1223 East North Ave., Baltimore, Md.
I.— Born Baltimore. Md., Sept. 27, 1891.
Pupil of C. Y. Turner and Henry B.
S'nell. Pupil of Maryland Inst. School
of Art. Member : Charcoal C.
HETMING, Arthur, 72 Madison Ave., Tor-
onto, Canada; summer Old Lyme, Conn.
I., W. — Born Paris, Ontario, Canada,
Jan. 17, 1870. Pupil of Frank Brangwyn,
Frank V. DuMond. Member: SI;
Arts and Letters Club of Toronto.
Represented in Canadian National Gal-
lery; 10 pictures in The Royal Ontario
Museum. Author and illustrator —
"Spirit Lake," "The Drama of the
Forests."
HENCKE, Albert, Box 116, Manas^uan,
N. J. (I.)
HENDERSON, A. Elizabeth, 79 Hamil-
ton PL. New York, N. Y.
Min. P.— Born Ashland, Ky., Oct. 25,
1873. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. ; New York
School of Art, and Cincinnati Academy.
Member: N. A. Women PS.
HENDERSON, William Penhallow, care
of the Cliff Dwellers, Orchestra Hall,
Chicago, 111.; Santa Fe, N. M.
Mural P., T. — Born Medford, Mass.,
1877. Pupil of Boston Museum School
under Tarbell. Holder of Paige travel-
ing scholarship, Boston Museum School.
Member : Denver A A. Work : "The
Green Cloak"; series of Indian dance
pastels, Art Institute of Chicago; Mar-
quette and Joilet mural decorations,
High School, Joilet, 111.; "Felipe de los
Valles," Denver Art Association.
HENDRICKSON, David, Occidental Ho-
tel, San Francisco, Calif. (I.)
HENIUS, L(illian) G(race), 1315 Cordova
Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— Born Aug. 6, 1879. Pupil of Henry
Keller, Chas. W. Hawthorne, and George
Sotter. Member: Pittsburgh AA;
S.Indp.A.
HENNING, Ludwig H., Valley Engrav-
ing Co., Johnstown, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
HENNINGS, E. Martin, Tree Studio Bldg.,
4 East Ohio St.; h. 3705 West Irving
Pk. Blvd., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born Pennsgrove, N. J., Feb. 5,
1886. Pupil of AIC; Nat. Acad., Munich.
Member: AIC; Palette and Chisel C.
Award : Palette and Chisel Club gold
medal, 1916; Englewood Woman's Club
prize AIC 1916.
HENOCH, Hanley, 51 Chalton St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
HENRI, Mrs. Robert. See Organ, Mar-
jorie.
HENRI, Robert, 10 Gramercy Park, New
York. N. Y.
P. — Born Cincinnati, O., June 24, 1865.
Pupil of PAFA; Julian Academy and
Ecole des Beaux- Arts in Paris; .studied
in Spain and Italy. Member: SAA
1903; ANA 1904, NA 1906: Nat. Inst. AL;
Port.P.: Mac.D.C; NAC (life); Am. PS.
Taos 'SA; Los A. Modern A. Soc; S.
Indp. A.; Boston AC; Lg. of N.Y.A.;
N.Y.Soc.A. Awards: Silver medal.
Pan. -Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; Harris prize
($500), AIC 1905; gold medal, AC Phila.,
1909; silver medal, Buenos Aires Exp.,
1910; Beck medal. PAFA 1914; silver
medal, P. -P.Exp., San F.. 1915; Portrait
Prize, Wilmington SFA, 1920. Work:
"La Neige," Luxembourg Gallery, Paris;
"Young Woman in Black," Art Insti-
tute of Chicago; "The Eqyestrian,"
Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh; "Girl
with Red Hair." Gallery of Spartan-
burg, S. C; "Happy Hollander," Art
Association, Dallas, Tex.; "Dancer In
Yellow Shawl," Gallery of Fine Arts,
Columbus, O.; "Spanish Gypsy Girl,"
Art Association, New Orleans; "Laugh-
ing Girl" and "Landscape," Brooklyn
Institute Museum; "Girl vv^ith Fan,"
Pennsylvania Academy, Philadelphia;
"Girl of Toledo," Carolina Art Associa-
tion, Charleston, S. C. ; "The Blue Neck-
lace," Art Institute of Kansas City;
"Lillian," San Francisco Institute of
Art; "The Spanish Gipsy," Metropolitan
Museum, New York; "Romany Girl,"
National Arts Club, New York; "Por-
trait of a Boy," Minneapolis Institute
of Arts; "Tam Gan," Fine Arts Acad-
emy, Buffalo; "Spanish Gipsy Girl,"
Oberlin (O.) College Gallery; "Diegito
Roybal," Museum of Art and Archae-
ology, Snnta Fe, N. M. ; "Achille Girl,"
Memphis (Tenn.) Museum.
HENRY, Alice, 2011 Murray Ave., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA; S.
Indp. A.
HENRY. J.. 545 West 158th St., New
York, N. Y. (I.)
HENRY, Sarah, P. O. Box 28, West
Chester, Pa.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
HENSHAW, Anne Bigelow, 100 Bowen
St., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
HENSHAW, Gorham, 87 Weybosset St.,
Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
HENSHAW, Julia.
Dewey.
See Mrs.
M.
449
HENTSCHEL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HESS
HENTSCHEL, W. E., care of Art Alliance
of America, 19 East 47th St., New York,
N. Y.
E. — M ember: Chicago SE.
HEPPENSTALL, George M. P., 1139 Mel-
lon St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts, AA.
HERDLE, George Linton, 47 Clinton Ave.,
N.; h. 19 Sumner Pk., Rochester, N. Y,
P., C— Born Rochester, Aug. 27, 1868.
Studied in Holland and in Paris.
Member: Rochester AC; Rochester
Municipal Art Com.; Director, Memorial
Art Gallery of Rochester University.
HERGESHEIMER, Ella S., 8031/2 Broad
St., Nashville, Tenn.
P. — Born Allentown, Pa. Pupil of
PAFA under Cecilia Beaux and Chase;
Prinet and Mucha in Paris and in Italy
and Spain. Member: Fellowship
PAFA. Awarded traveling schol-
arship PAFA. Director of art schools
in Tennessee and Kentucky.
HERING, Elsie Ward (Mrs. Henry
Hering), 65 Irving PL, New York, N. Y.
S. — Studied in Denver, Colo. Pupil of
Augustus Saint Gaudens. M e ni b e r :
Denver AC. Awards : Silver medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902; bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904. Work: Schermer-
horn memorial font in Chapel of Our
Savior, Denver, Colo.; W.C.T.U. drink-
ing fountain, St. Louis Museum.
HERING, Henry, Waldorf BIdg., 16 West
33d St.; h. 65 Irving PL, New York,
N. Y.
S.— Born New York City, Feb. 15, 1874.
Pupil of Augustus Saint Gaudens,
Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1910; NSS
1913. Awards : Silver medal for
medals and bronze medal for sculpture,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915. Work:
Civil War Memorial, Yale University,
New Haven; Robert Collyer Memorial,
Church of Messiah, New York; Sculp-
ture on Field Museum of Natural His-
tory, Chicago.
HERMAN, Leonora Owsley, 1521 Pine St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P., E.— Born Chicago, July 2, 1893.
Pupil of Simon, Menard, Hellen, Leon
in Paris. Member: Phila. Alliance;
Fellowship PAFA,
HERMAN, Max, 246 Fulton St., Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
HERN DON, Lawrence, 1947 Broadway,
New York, N, Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
HERR, Laetitia (Neff). See Mrs. John
E. Malone.
HERR, Margaret, 244 Riverside Drive,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
HERRICK, Margaret Cox, 312 Pacific
Ave,. Piedmont Calif.
P. — Born San Francisco. Calif.. June 24.
1865. Pupil of Carlsen. Fred Yates and
Mary C. Richardson. Member: San
F. AA. Work: Lunette in Y. W. C.
A., Oakland, Calif.
HERSCHEL, S. Frances, The Dupont,
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash.WCC.
HERTER, Adele (Mrs. Albert Herter),
130 East 67th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born New York. Pupil of Cour-
tois, Bouguereau and Robert-Fleury
in Paris. Member: N.A. Women
PS. Awards : Hon. mention Pan-
Am. Exp.. Buffalo, 1901; bronze medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904.
HERTER, Albert, 114 Chapala St., Santa
Barbara, Cahf.; h. East Hampton, L. I.,
N. Y.
Mural P., C— Born New York, March 2,
1871. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Under
Beckwith; Laurens and Cormon in
Paris. Member: SAA, 1894; ANA.
1906; AWCS; NYWCC; Mural P; N.Y.
Arch.Lg.l901; Century Assoc. Awards:
Hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1890; medaL
Atlanta Exp., 1895; Lippincott prize,
PAFA 1897; hon. mention, Nashville
Exp., 1897; Evans prize, AWCS 1899;
bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1900; silver
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
Work: Painting, "Two Boys," Met-
ropolitan Museum, New York; "Hour
of Despondency," Brooklyn Institute
Museum. Specialty, mural paintings
and portraits.
HERTER, Christine, 30 East 68th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Irvington-on-Hudson, N. Y.,
Aug. 25, 1890. Pupil of Sergeant Ken-
dall. Member: NYWCC; New
Haven PCC; N. A. Women PS; Newport
AA. Award: Second Hallgarten prize,
NAD, 1916.
HERTHEL, Alice, 3841 Flora Blvd., St.
Louis, Mo.
P.— Born St. Louis, Pupil of St. Louis
School of Fine Arts; Simon and
Anglada-Camarasa in Paris. Mem-
ber: Soc. of Ancients, St. Louis; St.
Louis AG,
HERZEL, Paul, Beaux-Arts Institute of
Design, 126 East 75th St,, New York,
N, Y.
S., P., L— Born Silesia, Aug. 28, 1880.
Pupil of St. Louis School of Fine Arts;
Beaux-Arts Inst, of Design, New York.
Member: NSS. (assoc.) Awards:
Mrs. H. P. Whitney "Struggle" prize,
1915; Barnett prize, NAD. 1915,
HERZOG, Lewis, 80 West 40th St„ New
New. N, Y.; h, Scarsdale, N, Y.
P. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Oct. 15,
1868, Studied in London, Rome, Berlin,
Diisseldorf, Munich and Venice. Mem-
ber: AC Phila.; NAC; Salma.C.
Awards: Gold medal, Munich; hon,
mention, Berlin; bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904.
HESS, Alexander, 439 W. 123rd St., New
York, N. Y.
P., E.— Born Bath, N. Y., Aug. 17, 1892.
HESS, Emma Kipling. See Mrs. D. W.
Ingersoll.
450
HESS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HIGGINS
HESS, Mary G. See Mrs. Karl A. Buehr.
HESS, Sara (M.), Hillsdale, N. J.
P., T.— Born Troy Grove, 111., Fj'o. 25,
1880. Pupil of Richard Miller, Ossip
Linde, AIC. Member: N.A. Women
PS; Nanuet Painters; Lg. of N.Y.A.
HETZEL, Mrs. Lila B., Hetzel Farm,
Somerset, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
HEUERMANN, Magda, Fine Arts Bldg.;
h. 2031 Fremont St., Chicago, 111.; sum-
mer. Palisades Park, Mich.
P., I., W., L.— Born Galesburg, 111. Pupil
of F. H. C. Sammons in Chicago; Roth,
von Lenbach and Duerr in Munich.
Member: Chicago S.Min.P. (pres.) ;
Chicago AG; Chicago AC; Chicago
Woman's C; Cordon C; Schleswig-
Holstein, Kunstlerbund; Chicago Press
League; Chicago SA. Awards : Med-
als at New Orleans, Philadelphia, At-
lanta, Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893.
Author of "How I Paint A Head," "Min-
iatures Old and New," etc. Represented
in Carnegie Library, Joliet, 111., and in
University of Iowa.
HEUSY, Charles W., 15 School St., Etna,
Pa
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
HEUSTIS, Edna F. See Mrs. Simpson.
HEUSTIS, Louise L(yons), 53 East 56th
St., New York, N. Y.
Port. P., I. — Born Mobile, Ala. Pupil of
ASL of N. Y. under Chase; Julian
Academy, Lasar and MacMonnies in
Paris. Member: N.Y.Wioman's AC;
N.A.Women PS.
HEWES, Horace G., Technology Cham-
bers, Boston, Mass.; summer, Ogun-
quit, Me.
P. — Born Boston, Mass. Pupil of Low-
ell Inst, and Massachusetts Inst, of
Technology. Represented in the Port-
land Museum of Fine Arts.
HEWITT, Edwin H., 716 Fourth Ave., S.;
h. 126 E. Franklin Ave., Minneapolis,
Minn.
A., P. — Born Red Wing, Minn., March
26, 1874. Studied architecture at Paris
Ecole des Beaux-Arts under Pascal.
Member: Fellow AIA; Minn. State
Art Commission (pres.) Director, Min-
neapolis Art Inst. (bd. of directors).
Awards : Hon. mention for painting,
Minn. State Art Society, 1914; gold
medal in architecture.
HEWLETT, J. Monroe, 345 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y. (Mural P.)
HEWTON, Otto, 294 Seward St., Roch-
ester, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
HEYER, H(erman), Douglaston, L. I.,
N. Y. ; summer, Deer Park, L. I., N. Y.
P., I., E., C. — Born in Germany, July
31, 1876.
HEYLER, Mary P. Ginther (Mrs. M. P.
G. Heyler), Gable End, Buckingham,
Pa.
P., I., C, W.— Born Phila., Pa. Pupil
of PAFA. Member: Plastic C. ;
Fellowship PAFA. Stained glass win-
dows, "St. John on Patmos," Church of
the Restoration, Philadelphia; "Peter
and John at the Tomb," and angel pan-
els below, St. John's Church, Suffolk,
Va. Illustrates for magazines and
books,
HEYWOOD, Mona, 5564 29th St., N. E.,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
HI ATT, Miss Maurine, 2021 East Mercer
St., Seattle, Wash. (P.)
HIBBARD, Aidro T., 90 Somerset St.,
Belmont, Mass.; summer. Summer
School, 71 A Main St., Rockport, Mass.
P. — Born Falmouth, Mass., Aug. 25,
1886. Pupil of De Camp, Major and
Tarbell. Member: Boston GA.; St.
Botolph C. Award: First prize at
Duxbury, 1920. Work: "The Moate
Range," National Academy of Design;
"Winter,"- Boston Art Museum.
HIBBARD, Frederick Cleveland, 923 East
60th St., h. 6209 Ellis Ave., Chicago, 111.
S.— Born Canton, Mo., June 15, 1881.
Pupil of AIC under Taft. Member:
Chicago SA; Cliff Dwellers. Awards:
Hon. mention, AIC 1913; 'Shaffer prize
($100), AIC 1914. Work: "Mark
Twain," Hannibal, Mo.; "Gen. James
Shields." CarroUton, Mo.; "The Vir-
ginian," Winchester, Va. ; "U. D. C.
Shiloh Memorial," Shiloh National Park,
Tenn.; "General Grant," Vicksburg,
Miss.; "Dr. G. V. Black," Lincoln Park,
Chicago, 111.; "Volney Rogers," Youngs-
town, O.; "Gen. H. W. Lawton," Ft.
Wayne, Ind.
HIBBEN, Helena, 5433 University Ave.,
Indianapolis, Ind.
S. — Born Indianapolis, Nov. 18, 1882.
Pupil of William Forsyth at Herron Art
Inst.; Lorado Taft at AIC; James Earle
Frazer at ASL of N. Y. Member:
NSC; Ind. SS.
HICKEY, Isabel, 1820 Wallace St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Oct. 25,
1872. Pupil of Chase, Pyle, Hayley
Lever and Martha Walter. Member:
Plastic C; Fellowship PAFA.
HICKMAN, Harriet, Erie and Edwards
Rd., Hyde Park, Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
HICKMAN, Harry L., Arnold, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
HICKS, Amy Mali, 9 East 17th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., C, W., L., T.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y.
Pupil of William M. Chase and J. W.
Stimson. Member: Boston SAC;
N. Y. Soc. C; Alliance; S. Indp. A.
Awards : Hon. mention. World's
Fair, Chicago, 1893, and St. Louis
World's Fair, 1904. Work: Memorial
tablets in Bowdoin College, Maine. Au-
thor, "The Craft of Hand-made Rugs."
HICKS, Herbert, 1223 Sixth St., S. W.,
Washington, D. C. (P.)
HIGGINS, Eugene, 182 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., E., S.— Born Kansas City, Mo., Feb.,
1874. Pupil of Laurens, Benjamin
Constant, GSrome and Ecole des Beaux-
Arts in Paris. Member: P-G. ;
NYWCC ; Brooklyn SE ; ANA. Work:
451
HIGGINS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HILLS
"The Little Mother," Carnegie Inst.,
Pittsburgh; etchings in New York Public
Library and Brooklyn Museum; Con-
gressional Library, Washington, D. C.
HIGGINS, (W.) Victor, 1700 Auditorium
Tower; 220 South Michigan Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.; summer, Taos, N. M.
P., T.— Born Shelbyville, Ind., June 28,
1884. Pupil of AIC and Academy of
Fine Arts in Chicago; R6ne Menard and
Lucien Simon in Paris; Hans von
Hyeck in Munich, Member: Chicago
SA; Palette and Chisel C; Chicago Com-
misson for Encouragement of Local Art;
Taos Society of Artists; P-G.; Los
Angeles Modern AS. Awards : Gold
medal. Palette and Chisel C, 1914;
Municipal Art League purchase prize,
1915; Cahn prize ($100), AIC -1915; Butler
purchase prize ($200), AIC 1916; Chicago
SA medal 1917; Logan medal, AIC 1917;
Hearst prize, AIC 1917; Altman prize
($1,000), NAD 1918. Work: "Moor-
land Piper," Terre Haute Art Associa-
tion; "Moorland Gorse and Bracken,"
Municipal Gallery, Chicago; mural deco-
rations in Englewood Theater, Chicago;
"Women of Taos," Santa Fe Railroad;
"Juanito and the 'Suspicious Cat," Union
League C, Chicago; "The Bread Jar,
City of Chicago; "A Shrine to St. An-
thony," collection of Des Moines Asso-
ciation of Fine Arts, etc. Instructor,
Chicago Academy of Fine Arts.
HILDEBRANDT, Cornelia (Ellis), 39
West 67th St., New York, N. Y.; sum-
mer. New Canaan, Conn.
P. — Born Eau Claire, Wis, Pupil of AI,
Chicago; Augustus Koopman and Vir-
ginia Reynolds in Paris. Member:
N. A. Women PS.
HILDEBRANDT, Howard 'L(ogan), 306
East 51st St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Allegheny, Pa., Nov. 1, 1872.
Pupil of Ecole des Beaux-Arts under
Constant and Laurens in Paris; NAD
in New York. Member: ANA;
Salma. C. 1899; NYWCC; Lotos C;
AWCS; NAC; Pittsburgh AA; Allied
AA; S. Indp. A. Awards: Evans
prize, AWCS 1906; first honor, Asso-
ciated Artists of Pittsburgh, 1911.
Work : "Cleaning Fish." John Her-
ron Art Institute, Indianapolis, repre-
sented in Lotos Club, New York; Butler
Art Inst., Youngstown, O.
HILDER. G. Howard, Charleston, S, C.
P., I. — Born London, England, Sept. 28,
1868. Pupil of Bouguereau, Ferrier,
Dagnan-Bouveret, De la Gandara and
Jacque in Paris; De Bock in Amster-
dam, Member: St. Lucas Soc,
Amsterdam, Holland; Newport AA.
HILDRETH. Susan W., 425 ^West llSth
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, care of
A. R. Kimball, Orange, N. J.
P. — Born Cambridge. Mass. Pupil of
Ross Turner; ASL of N. Y.
HILGENDORF, Fred C. llSSVa Island
Ave., Milwaukee, Wis.
P.— Member: Wis. PS.
HILL, A(rthur) T(urnbull), 33 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, April 26, 1868. Pu-
pil of Brooklyn Inst. Art School; chiefly
452
self-taught; studied works of George
Inness. Member: A.Fund S,; Brook-
lyn AC; NAC (life); Salma C. ; Lg. of
N.Y.A. Work: "The Dunes— Ama-
gansett" and "The Marshes— Amagan-
sett," Museum of the Brooklyn Insti-
tute; "After a Storm," National Gallery,
Washington, D. C. ; "Low Tide —
Amagansett," National Arts Club, New
York.
HILL, Clara, Arts Club, 2017 I St.; 808
17th St., Washington, D. C.
S. — Born in Massachusetts. Pupil of
Augustus Saint Gaudens; Julian Acad-
emy under Puech, and Colarossi
Academy under Injalbert, in Paris.
Member: S. Wash. A.; Allied AA.
Award: Grand prize, Seattle Exp., 1909,
HILL, James Jerome II., 260 Summit
Ave., St. Paul, Minn.
P.— M ember: S. Indp. A.
HILL, Pearl L(avinia), 10 South 18th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I. — Born Lock Haven, Pa., Dec. 11,
1884. Pupil of Pa. Museum & School of
Indus. Art, PAFA. Member: Plastic
C; Fellowship PAFA; Phila. Alliance.
HILL, R(obert) Jerome, I8O2V2 Elm St.,
Dallas, Texas.
P., I., T. — Born Austin, Texas. Pupil
of ASL of N. Y. ; and with Kunz-Meyer.
Mem b e r : Dallas AA; Texas Art Lg. ;
Dallas AC.
HILL. Sara B., 135 East 66th St., New
York, N. Y.
E.^Born Danbury, Conn. Pupil of
Alphaeus Cole. Member: American
Bookplate Soc, Bookworkers Guild."
HILL, W. E., Hotel Margaret, 97 Colum-
bia Hgts., Brooklyn, N. Y. (I.)
HILLBOIVI, Henrik, Wallingford, Conn,;
summer, Shady-in-the-Catskills, N, Y.
P., C— Born Sweden, Apr. 3, 1863. Pu-
pil of Lef ebvre and Constant. Mem-
ber: Conn. AFA; NeXv Haven PCC.
Silver designer with Wallace Mfg. Co.
since 1899.
HILLER, Lejaren A., 135 West 44th St.;
h. 332 West 28th St., New York, N. Y.
I., P. — Born Milwaukee, Wis., July 3,
1880. Pupil of AI Chicago. Member:
SI 1910.
HILLS, A(nna) A(lthea), Laguna Beach,
Calif.
P., L.. T.— Born Ravenna, Ohio. Pupil
of AIC, Cooper Union; Julian in Paris,
Member: Calif. A(j; Laguna Beach
AA. Awards : Bronze medal, Pan-
ama-Calif. Exp., San Diego, 1915;
Bronze medal, Calif. State Fair, 1919.
HILLS, Laura Coombs, 66 Chestnut St.,
Boston Mass.
Min.P. — Born Newburyport, Mass., Sept,
7, 1859. Pupil of Helen M. Knowlton;
Cowles Art School in Boston; ASL of
N. Y. Member: SAA 1897; ANA
1906; Boston WCC: Coplev S. 1892;
Boston GA; Am.S. Min.P. Pa.S. Min.P.
Awards : Bronze medal, Paris Exp.,
1900; second Corcoran prize, S. Wash. A.
1901; silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; silver medal, Charleston Exp.,
I
HIMMELSBACH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HOBBS
1902; gold medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
medal of honor, P.-P.Exp., San F.,
1915; medal of honor, PAFA 1916; Lea
prize ($100), PAFA, 1920. Work:
"Persis," Metropolitan Museum, New-
York.
HIMMELSBACH, Paula B. See Mrs.
Balano.
H INCH MAN, John H., Woodmont, Conn.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
HINCHMAN, Margaretta S., 3635 Chest-
nut St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I., Dec. — Born Philadelphia. Pupil of
Howard Pyle and Kenyon Cox. Mem-
ber: Plastic C; Phila ACG.; Phila.
Alliance; Fellowship PAFA; Print C.
HINEY, Elsie I., 4046 Powelton Avenue,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
HINSDALE, Mrs. Mabel F., 2654 Madison
Rd., Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
HINTERMEISTER, H(enry), 4622 14th
Ave., Brooklvn. New York, N. Y.
P., I.— Born New York. N. Y., June 10,
1897. Pupil of Will Taylor, Otto Wal-
ter Beck, Anna Fisher. Member:
NYWCC; AWCS.
HINTON, Charles Louis, 74 Card Ave.,
Armour Villa Park, Bronxville, N. Y.
P., L, S.— Born Ithaca, N. Y., Oct. 18,
1869. Pupil of NAD under Will H.
Low; Gerome and Bouguereau, in
Paris. Member: Mural P. (treas.);
NSS; A. Aid S. (sec); N. Y. Arch.
Lg. 1911; ANA 1916. Award : Trav-
eling scholarship, NAD 1893. Work:
Mural decoration in court house,
Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Illustrated "Emmy
Lou." etc.
HIRAMOTO, Masaji, 102 W. 123rd St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., S.— Born Tokyo, Japan, Dec. 8, 1882.
Pupil of A. Dow. Member: S. Indp.
A.
HIRSCH, Stefan A., Hotel Ansonia, 72nd
St. and Broadway, New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
HIRSCHBERG, Carl, Kent, Conn.
P., I.— Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Ecole
des Beaux-Arts under Cabanel in Paris.
Member: Salma.C.
HIRSH, Alice, 51 West 10th St.; h. 161
West 76th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
HIRSIG, Alma M. See Mrs. Bliss.
HIRST, Claude Raguet (Mrs. W. C. Fit-
ler), 65 West 11th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Cincinnati, O. Pupil of Cin-
cinnati Art Academy under Noble;
Agnes D. Abbatt. George Smillie and
Charles C. Curran in New York.
Member: N. A. Women PS.
Awards : First hon. mention, Syra-
cuse, 1897; second prize, Syracuse, 1898.
Work in: Boston Art Club; Art Club
of Philadelphia.
HITCHCOCK,
Hitchcock).
Cecil Jay (Mrs.
See Jay, Cecil.
George
HITCHCOCK, D(avid) Howard, Lania-
keal; h. 25 Judd St., Honolulu, Ha-
waiian Islands.
P., S., I.— Born Hawaii, May 15, 1861.
Pupil of Virgil Williams; Bouguereau
and Ferrier in Paris. Member:
Salma.C. 1904.
HITCHCOCK, Lucius Wolcott, Premium
Point Park, New Rochelle, N. Y.
P., I.— Born West Williamsfleld, O., Dec.
2, 1868. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. ; Le-
febvre, Constant, Laurens and Colarossi
Academy in Paris. Member: SI 1904;
Salma.C.1907. Awards: Silver medal
for illustration, Paris, 1900; hon. men-
tion, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver
medal for illustration and bronze for
painting, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
HITCHCOCK, Mary D., 118 West 91st St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
HITCHNER, Mary R., 235 South 11th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
HITTLE, Margaret A., 550 Arlington PL,
Chicago, 111.
P., I., E., L., T.— Born Victor, Iowa Co.,
Iowa, April 19, 1886. Pupil of AIC;
ASL of Chicago. Member: Chicago
SA. Work: Three panels, "Miles
Standish," James R. Doolittle School,
Chicago; panel, "The Rolling Mills,"
Lane Technical High School, Chicago.;
ceiling and frieze of Bennett Museum,
Garrett Biblical Institute, Evanston, 111.
HOARD, Margaret, 140 Wadsworth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
S.— Born in Iowa. Pupil, ASL. of N. Y.
Member : L'Union Internationale des
Beaux- Arts et des Lettres, Paris, 1914;
ASL of N.; NA Women PS. Award:
Hon. mention, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915.
Represented in Metropolitan Museum
of Art. New York, N. Y.
HO BAN, Frank J., 608 South Dearborn
St.; h. 5345 Winthrop Ave., Chicago, 111.
P., Des. — Born Cincinnati, O. Mem-
ber: Palette and Chisel C.
HOBART, Clark, 1371 Post St., San
Francisco, Cal.
E., P.— Born in Illinois. Pupil of Mark
Hopkins Inst, of Art in San Francisco;
ASL of N. Y. under Bridgman and Rob-
ert Blum; studied in Paris. Mem-
ber: San Francisco SA; Cal.SE.
Award : Silver medal for monotype,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915; Crocker prize
($100), San F. AA., 1918. Work in
Golden Gate Museum. Editor, Burr-
Mclntosh Monthly, 1903-10.
HOBART, Gladys Marie, 907 Valencia St.,
San Francisco. Calif.
P., T.— Born Santa Cruz. Calif. Aug.
28, ^m2. Pupil of J. C. Johansen. Mem-
ber: 'San F. AA.
HOBART, Helen F., 246 West 14th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
HOBBS. George L.. 705 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
HOBBS, Louise. See Allen.
453
HODGE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HOLLOWAY
HODGE, Mrs. Helen F(rancis), 714 Kan-
sas Ave.; h. 1515 Boswell Ave., Topeka,
Kan.
P., L. — Born Topeka, Kan. Pupil of
Corcoran School of Art in Washington,
George M. Stone. Member: Topeka
AG. Awards : Five first prizes,
Kansas State Fair.
HODGE, Margaret M(agill), 2312 19th St.,
Washington, D. C.
P. — Born Washington. Pupil of Cor-
coran School of Art. Member: Wash.
WCC.
HODGSKIN, Helen, 869 President St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
HOECKNER, Carl, 63 W. Ontario St.,
Chicago, III.
P. — Born Munich, Germany, Dec. 19,
1883. Studied in Hamburg and Cologne.
Member: Chicago SA., "Cor Ar-
dens."
HOELZEL, Elise Emilia, 2700 Gilliam Rd.,
Kansas City, Mo.
P. — Born Kansas City, Mo., Jan. 8,
1897. Pupil of C. A. Wilimovsky.
HOFFBAUER, Charles, The Players Club.
16 Gramercy Park, New York, N. Y. ;
summer, 70 bis Rue Notre-Dame-des-
Champs, Paris, France.
P. — Born Paris, France, June 28, 1875.
Pupil of Gustave Moreau, F. Flameng
and Cormon in Paris. Member :
Soci6t4 des Artistes Frangais; So-
ciety Internationale: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1912.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1898; second class medal, Paris Salon,
1899; bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1900;
Bourse de Voyage, 1902; Prix Rosa Bon-
heur, 1902; Prix National du Salon, 1906;
Knight of the Legion of Honor.
Work: "Les Gueux," Museum of
Rouen; "The Roof Garden," Carnegie
Institute, Pittsburgh; "Revolte de
Flamands," Memorial Hall, Philadel-
phia; "Coin de Bataille," Luxembourg,
Paris; "Sur les Toits," National Gallery,
Sydney, N. S. Wales; mural decorations
in Confederate Memorial Hall, Rich-
mond, Va.
HOFFHINE, Helen G., 182 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
HOFFMAN, Frank, 6809 Greenview Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
P. — M ember: Chicago SA.
HOFFMAN, Gustave Adolph, 5 Laurel St.,
Rockville, Conn.
P., E., L. — Born Brandenburg, Germany,
Jan. 28, 1869. Pupil of NAD and Royal
Acad. FA., Munich. Represented by a
series of etchings in the National Gal-
lery, Berlin; Royal Gallery, Munich;
National Gallery, Leipzig; Art Gallery,
Frankfort; British Museum, London;
Lenox Library, New York City; Capitol,
Hartford, Superior Court, Rockville,
Conn.
HOFFMAN, Harry Leslie, 50 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, Old
Lyme, Conn.
P. — Born Cressona, Pa. Pupil of ASL
under Du Mond in New York; Julian
Academy in Paris. Member: Salma.
C. 1908; MacD.C; Allied AA; S.Conn.P.;
A. Aid S. ; Lotos C. ; AWCS. Award :
Gold medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
HOFFMAN, Malvina, 157 East 35th St.;
h. 120 East 34th St., New York, N. Y.
S., P. — Born New York City, June 15,
1887. Pupil of Rodin in Paris; Gutzon
Borglum in New York. Member:
Nat. Inst. of Social Sciences; Three Arts
Club. N. Y. (hon.); N. A. Women PS.;
Appui aux Artistes (treas.). Awards :
First prize, "Russian Dancers" exhibit,
Paris; hon. mention for sculpture, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915; Shaw memorial
prize, NAD, 1917; Widener gold medal,
PAFA, 1920; Barnett prize, NAD, 1921.
Work: "Russian Bacchanale," Lux-
embourg Museum, Paris; "Head of Mod-
ern Crusader," Metropolitan Museum of
Art; "Pavlowa Gavotte," Detroit In-
stitute; "Modern Crusader," AIC.
HOFFMANN, Maximilian A., 4 East Ohio
St., Chicago, 111.
S., P. — Born Trier, Germany, Feb. 6,
1888. Pupil of Milwaukee ASL; Royal
Academy, Munich. Member: Chi-
cago SA; SW. Sc.
HOFFSTETTER, W. A., Glenside, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA;
Phila. WCC; Phila. AC.
HOFTRUP, J. L., 1947 Broadway, New
York. N. Y.
P.— M ember: Buffalo SA.
HOLBERG, Richard A., 232 West 22nd
St., New York, N. Y. (P.)
HOLBERG, Mrs. R,
New York, N, Y.
A., 232 West 22nd St.
(P.)
454
HOLLAND, F(rancis) Raymond, 627 Mad-
ison Ave., New York, N. Y.; summer,
Darien, Conn.
P.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., Jan. 10, 1886.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Member:
S.Indp.A.; Silvermine Group; Conn. SA. ;
Pittsburgh AA. Award: Second
prize, Pittsburgh AA, 1916. Work:
"Marsh House," Darien, Conn.
HOLLAND, W. J., 5545 Forbes St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
HOLLISTER, Antoinette B., Foster Hall,
University of Chicago, Chicago, 111.
S.— Born Chicago, 111., Aug. 19, 1873.
Pupil of AIC; Injalbert and Rodin in
Paris. Member: SW. Sc. ; Chicago
SA. Award: Hon. mention for
Sculpture, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915;
Shaffer prize for sculpture, AIC, Chi-
cago, 1919.
HOLLOWAY, Edward Stratton, 1327
Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa.
I.,P.,C.,W. — Born Ashland, Green Co.,
N. Y. Pupil of PAFA. Award : Bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904. Art di-
rector, J. B. Lippincott Co.; joint author,
"The Practical Book of Interior Decora-
tion."
HOLLOWAY, Ida H(oiterhoff) (Mrs.
George C. Hollo way), Norway Ave.,
Avondale, Cincinnati, O.
P., I., C. — Born Cincinnati. Pupil of
HOLM
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HONIG
Cincinnati Art Academy under Frank
Duveneck; Henry B. Snell, and studied
in Europe. Member: Cincinnati
Woman's AC; MacD.C; The Crafters
C, Cincinnati.
HOLM, Victor S., School of Fine Arts,
Washington University, St. Louis, Mo.;
h. Clayton, Mo.
S., T. — Born Copenhagen, Denmark,
Dec. 6, 1876. Pupil of AIC under Dor-
ado Taft; Philip Martiny in New York.
Member: NSS, 1913; St. Douis AG;
St. Douis AD; 2 x 4 S. of St. Douis;
Municipal Art Com. (pres.); Alumni
AIC. Awards: Silver medal. Mo.
State Fair, 1913; Carleton prize ($100),
St. Douis AG, 1914, 1916, 1917; hon. men-
tion, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915. Work :
Parker Memorial, State University Di-
brarv, Rolla, Mo.; Ives Memorial, City
Art Museum, St. Douis; Barnes Memo-
rial, Barnes Hospital, St. Douis; Mis-
souri 'State Monument at Vicksburg,
Miss.; Gov. Carlin Monument, Carroll-
ton, 111.; Washington Fischel Monument,
Bellefontaine, St. Douis, Mo.; "Boy With
Father's Sword," St. Douis Public Di-
brary; decorations on exterior of St.
Pius' Church, St. Douis.
HOLMAN, Abigail, 31 East 18th Ave.,
Denver, Colo.
P., T. — M em b e r : Denver AA. Direc-
tor, Fine Arts Academy of Denver.
HOLMES, Ethel G(reenough) (Mrs. Mas-
sey Holmes), 1040 West 53rd St., Kansas
City, Mo.; summer, care of M. S. Greeh-
ough, Nahant, Mass.
P.— Born Boston, Mass., May 30, 1879.
Me m b e r : S. Indp. A.
HOLMES, Frank G., Denox, Inc., Tren-
ton, N. J.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
HOLMES, Harriet Morton (Mrs. J. Gar-
nett Holmes), 826 North Central Ave.,
Phoenix, Ariz.
E. — Born Portland, Me. Member :
Calif Print Makers; Calif. SE.
HOLMES, Mrs. Kate Osgood, 1454 Bel-
mont St., Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
HOLMES, Ralph, Atascadero, Calif.; P.O.
Morro, Calif.
P., L, T.— Born Da Grange, 111., Oct. 1,
1876. Pupil of AI Chicago; studied in
Europe.
HOLMES, Rhoda Carleton Marian. See
Mrs. Nicholls.
HOLMES, William H., National Museum,
h. 1454 Belmont St., Washington, D. C.
P. — Born Harrison Co., O., Dec. 1,
1846. Member: S.Wash.A.; Wash.
WCC; NYWCC. Awards: First Cor-
coran prize. Wash. WCC 1900; Parsons
prize. Wash. WCC 1902. Work: "Mid-
summer," Corcoran Gallery, Washington,
"The Wanderlusters' Rest," National
Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C;
Director, National Gallery of Art, Smith-
sonian Institution, Washington.
HOLMWOOD, Loren C, 161 Columbus
Ave., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
HOLSLAG, Edward J., 1012 North Dear-
born St., Chicago, 111.
P., Dec— Born Buffalo, N. Y„ 1870.
Pupil of NAD and John Da Farge.
Member: Mural P.; Chicago SA;
Palette and Chisel C. Award: Scripps
traveling scholarship. Work: Mural
paintings in Dibrary of Congress, Wash-
ington, D. C, and in numerous hotels.
HOLSMAN, Elizabeth Tuttle, 1224 East
57th St., Chicago, 111.; summer, Dotua
Island, Lauderdale Dakes, Wis.
P., S.— Born Brownville, Neb., Sept. 25,
1873. Pupil or AIC. Member: Chi-
cago SA; Chicago AC. Award: Sil-
ver medal, St. Paul Inst., 1916. Work:
"Still Waters," Omaha Society of Fine
Arts; "Portrait of David Rankin,"
bronze bas-relief, and "Portrait of
Joseph Addison Thompson," Tarklo
College, Tarkio, Mo.; bronze bas-relief
of Dr. C. E. Bessey, University of Ne-
braska, Dincoln, Neb.; bronze bas-relief
of Dean Reese, Daw School, University
of Nebraska, Dincoln, Neb.; war me-
morial bas-relief "Dieut. Alexander Mc-
Cornick" in U. S. Destroyer "The Mc-
Cornick"; war memorial "Victory" with
honor roll in Harrison Technical High
School, Chicago.
HOLTERHOFF, Ida. See Mrs. George
C. Plolloway.
HOLZER, J. A., 182 East 72d St., New
York, N. Y.
Mural P., S. — Born Berne, Switzerland,
Oct. 30, 1858. Pupil of Fournier and
Bernard in Paris. Member: N.Y.
Arch.Dg. 1894; S. Indp. A. Award:
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893. Work:
"Homer," mural decoration, Prince-
ton University, Princeton, N. J.; mosaic
windows at Troy. N. Y.
HOLZHAUER, Emil, 78 Perry St., New
York, N. Y.
P., S. — Born Schwilbisch Gmiind, Ger-
many, Jan. 21, 1887. Pupil of Robert
Henri, Homer Boss. Member: S.
Indp. A.; Dg. of N.Y.A.
HOMER, Eleazer B., 270 Blackstone
Blvd., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
HOMER, Ruth Wellington, 270 Blackstone
Blvd., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC,
HONIG, George H., 315 Mercantile Bank
Bldg., Evansville. Ind.
Port. P., S.— Born Rockport, Ind., 1881.
Pupil of NAD and H. A. MacNeil in
New York. Work: Spanish-American
war memorial at Salina, Kan.; "The
Spirit of 1861" and "The Spirit of 1916,"
on Vanderburg County Soldiers' and
Sailors' Coliseum, Evansville, Ind. "The
Hiker," Fairview Park, Denver, Colo.;
portrait of Cleo Baxter Davis in Court
House, Bowling Green. Ky. ; portrait in
bronze of J. B. Gresham for War Moth-
ers of America, Evansville, Ind. ; war
memorials in: Elks House, Princeton,
N. J.; Evansville, Ind. and Mt. Vernon,
Ind., in Eagles Home at Anderson and
Richmond, Ind.; in Masonic Temple,
Evansville Ind. ; in Court House at
Bloomington, 111. and Evansville, Ind.
455
HOOKER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HORTER
HOOKER, Evelyn, 3639 Reading Rd.,
Avondale. Cincinnati, O.
P. — M e m b er : Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
HONORE, Paul, 4729 Fourth Ave., De-
troit, Mich.; summer, Birmingham,
Mich.
P., I., E., W., L., T.— Born Pennsyl-
vania. May 30, 1885. Pupil of Brangwyn
and Wicker. Member: Scarab C. :
Assoc, for Culture. New York; Fine and
Industrial Art Guild.
HOOPER, Mrs. Annie Blakeslee, 200 Fifth
Ave., New York, N. Y. ; h. Kew Gardens,
L. I., N. Y.
P., I.. C. — Born in California. Pupil
of San Francisco Art School; ASL of
N. Y. and Charles Melville Dewey.
Member: NYWCC.
HOOPER, Will Phillip, 200 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Biddeford. Me. Pupil of
Benjamin Fitz and A'SL of N. Y. ;
Mass. Normal Art School, Boston.
Member: NYWCC; Salma. C.
HOOVER, Bessie M. See Mrs. H. H.
Wessel.
HOPKINS, C(harles) E(dwin), 3525 Trim-
ble Ave., Evanston, Cincinnati, O.
P.. E.— Born Cincinnati, O., Dec. 19.
1886. Pupil of Nowottny and Barnhorn.
Member: Cincinnati AC.
HOPKINS, Edna Boies ^Mrs. James R.
Hopkins), 55 rue de Dantzig, Paris,
France.
Engr. — Born in Michigan. Member :
Societe Internationale des Graveurs en
Couleurs; Societe Internationale des
Graveurs sur Bois; Societe Nationale
des Beaux-Arts in Paris. A av a r d :
Silver medal, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915.
Work in Library of Congress, Wash-
ington, D. C; Walker Art Gallery,
Liverpool; National Museum, Stock-
holm; Kunst Gewerke Museum, Berlin;
Bibliotheque d'Art et Archaeologie,
Paris; Cincinnati Art Museum; Detroit
Institute of Arts.
HOPKINS. James R., 55 Rue de Dant-
zig, Paris, France; and Art Academy
of Cincinnati. O.
P.— Born in Ohio, 1878. Pupil of Cin-
cinnati Art Academy. M e m b "^ r :
ANA; Paris AAA. Award: Lippin-
cott prize. PAFA 1908; bronze medal,
Buenos Aires. 1910; gold medal, P. -P.
Exp.. San F., 1915; Harris bronze
medal and prize ($300) ATC 1916: Clarke
prize, NAD, 1920. Work: "Frivol-
ity,^' Cincinnati Museum; "A Kentucky
Mountaineer," Chicago Art Inst.; "Re-
flections," Atlanta Art Association.
HOPKINS, Mark, Giverny-par-Vernon.
Eure, France; and Williamstown. Mass.
S.— Born Williamstown, Mass. Feb. 9,
1881. Pupil of F'rederick MacMonnies.
Member: Societe des Artistes Fran-
gais; Union Internationale des Beaux-
Arts.
Hr>DK!NSON. Ch=irles Sidney, Fenway
Studios, 30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.;
h. Manchester, Mnss.
P. — Born Cambridge, Mass., July 27.
1869. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: Boston AG; Boston WCC; SAA
1898; Copley S. 1898; Port P. Awards:
Bronze medal, Pan-Am. Exp., 1901;
bronze medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
second prize ($200), Worcester Mu-
seum, 1902 and 1905; Beck gold medal,
PAFA. 1915; silver medal, P. -P.Exp.,
San F., 1915. Represented in Rhode
Island School of Design; Harvard Uni-
versity, National Gallery of Art, A\^ash-
ington.
HOPP, George, 49 West 37th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
HOPPE, Leslie F., 415 South Claremont
Ave., Chicago, 111.
Des.— Born Jerseyville, 111., 1889. Pupil
of Chicago AFA and AIC. Member:
Palette and Chisel C.
HOPPER, Edward, 3 Washington Sq..
North, New York, N, Y.; summer, 53
North Broadway, Nyack, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Nyack, N. Y., July 22, 1882.
Pupil of Henri: Hayes Miller; Chase.
Me m b e r : S.Indp.A.; Whitney Studio
C. Represented in Calif. State Library.
HOPPIN, Howard, 32 Westminster St.,
Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember : Providence AC.
HOPPIN, Tracy, New Hope, Pa.
P. — M ember : Salma. C.
HOPSON, William Fowler, 730 Whitney
Ave., New Haven, Conn.
E., Engr.— Born Watertown, Conn., Aug.
30, 1849. Pupil of L. Sanford in New
Haven; J. D. Felter and August Will
in New York. Member: Grolier C,
New York; Rowfant C, Cleveland; AI
Graphic A.; Acorn C. and Paint and
Clay C, New Haven; Odd Volume C.
Boston. Award: Hon. mention for
copper engraving, Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901. Work in Chicago Art Insti-
tute. 'Specialty, bookplates.
HORE, Ethel. See Mrs. John Townsend.
HORNBY, Lester G(eorge), Dover, Mass.
I., Engr., P. — Born Lowell, Mass.,
March 27, 1882. Pupil of R. I. School
of Design, Providence; Pape School,
Boston; ASL of N. Y. ; Laurens and
others in Paris. Member: Provi-
dence AC; Providence WCC; Chicago
SE; N. Y. SE; Salma. C; Paris AAA
(dir. 1907-1908). Work in: Victoria
and Albert Museum. London; Library of
Congress, Washincton, D. C; New York
Public Library; Art Institute of Chi-
cago; Detroit Institute; R. I. School of
Design, Providence; Carnegie Institute.
Pittsburgh. Illustrated "Sketch-book of
London," Edinburgh, Paris, Boston,
Series of war etchings.
HORNE. Laura Trevitte, Woodstock, N.
Y. ; h. 854 W. 81st St., New York, N. Y.
P.. W., L.— Born Dalton, Ga., June 30,
1891. Pupil of John Carlsen, Francis
Jones, Van Dearing Perrine. Mem-
ber: Newport AA.
HORTER, Earl, 4920 Parkside Ave., Phil-
adelphia, Pa.
T.— M ember: ST 1910. Award:
Silver medal, P.-P.-Exp., San F., 1915.
456
NORTON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HOWELL
NORTON, William S(amuel), 64 Rue de
la Rochefoucauld, Paris, France.
P., W. — Born Grand Rapids, Mich., Nov.
16, 1865. Pupil of ASL and NAD in New
York; Laurens and Julian Academy in
Paris. Member: NYWCC; Societe
Moderne, and Salon d'Automne, Paris.
Work: "Good Friday In Seville,"
Luxembourg Museum, and in the Musee
Carnavalet, Paris, France, and in the
Brooklyn Museum.
HOUGH, Walter, 1423 Monroe St., Wash-
ington, D. C.
P., W., L.— Born Morgantown, W. Va.,
April 23, 1859. Pupil of E. P. Andrews,
W. H. Holmes. Member: Wash.
AVCC.
HOULAHAN, Kathleen, 2159 Shelby St.,
Seattle, Wash.
P. — Born Winnipeg, Canada, Jan. 31,
1887. Pupil of Robert Henri. Mem-
ber: NAC; S.Indp.A.; Seattle Fine
Arts Soc.
HOUSTON, Grace, 211-B, Iroquois Apts.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
HOUSTON, Nora, 519 East Franklin St.,
Richmond, Va.
P., L., T.— Pupil of Kenneth Hayes
Miller, Connah, Henri and Chase; Si-
mon, Blanche, Menard and Cottet in
Paris. Award : Hon. mention, Ap-
palachian Exp., Knoxville, 1910.
HOVENDEN, Martha, Plymouth Meeting,
Pa.
S. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA;
Plastic C.
HOVER, Lillian Sooy (Mrs. John I.
Hover), 266 West 94th St., New York,
N. Y.
P. — Born Colorado Springs, Colo., Sept.
19, 1889. Pupil of Wilham Sartain.
HOW, Kenneth (Gayoso), 37 West 39th
St.; h. 469 Fourth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
P., A.— Born Wautaugh, L. L, N. Y.,
June 8, 1883. Pupil of Jane Peterson.
Member: NYWCC; N. Y. Arch.
Lg. ; Salma. C. "W o rk : Buckwood
Inn, Shawnee-on-Delaware, Pa.; addi-
tions to Hotel Gramatan, Bronxville,
N. Y.
HOWARD, Clara F(rances), Stuyvesant
Chambers, 20 Gramercy Park, New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Poughkeepsie,
N. Y.
Min.P., T.— Born Poughkeepsie, N. Y.,
Dec. 5, 1866. Pupil of NAD and ASL of
N. Y. under Brush and Chase. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; Am. S. Min.P.
HOWARD, Edith Lucile, 10 East 9th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. 10 Swarthmore
Ave., Ridley Park, Pa.
P., T.— Born Bellows Falls, Vt. Pupil
Phila. School of Design for Women
under Daingerfield, Snell. Member:
NYWCC; Phila. Alliance; Plastic C. ;
N.A. Women PS. Awards : Hon.
mention. Plastic C, 1915; gold medal.
Plastic C, 1917.
HOWARD, Eloise. 107 West 47th St.,
New York, N. Y. (E.)
457
HOWARD, H(ugh) H (untington), 8820
Carnegie Ave., Cleveland, O.
P.— Born Cherry Valley, O., July 28,
1860. Member-: Cleveland SA.
HOWARD, Lizzie, 266 Exford St., Roches-
ter, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
HOWARD, Marion, 1517 H St., N.W.; h.
The Woodward, Connecticut Ave.,
Washington, D. C.; summer. Fir Lodge,
North Conway, N. H.
Ldscp.P.,Dec. — Born Roxbury, Mass.,
1883. Pupil of Boston Museum School
under Tarbell, Benson and Hale; also
of Chase and Edward H. Barnard.
Me m b e r : N. A. Women PS.
HOWARD, p. F., Westport, Conn. (L)
HOWE, Wallis E., 1208 Turks Head Bldg.,
Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
HOWE, William H(enry), Lawrence Park,
Bronxville, N. Y.
P.— Born Ravenna, O., 1846. Pupil of
Otto de Thoren and Vuillefroy in Paris.
Member: ANA 1894, NA 1897; SAA
1899; Nat.Inst.A.L.; Salma.C. 1891; A.
Fund S.; Lotos C. Awards: Hon.
mention. New Orleans Exp., 1885; hon.
mention, Paris Salon, 1886; third class
medal, Paris Salon, 1888; silver medal,
Paris Exp., 1889; Temple gold medal,
PAFA 1890; grand gold medal. Crystal
Palace, London, 1890; gold medal, Bos-
ton, 1890; medal, Columbian Exp., Chi-
cago, 1893; gold medal, California Mid-
winter Exp., 1894; gold medal, Atlanta
Exp,, 1895; Officer d'Academie, Paris,
1896; Chevalier of the Legion of Honor,
1899; silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901. Specialty, landscapes with
cattle. Work : "My Day at Home";
"Monarch of the Farm," National Gal-
lery, Washington, D. C.
HOWELL, Felicia Waldo, The Sherwood,
58 West 57th St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Sept. 8, 1897. Pupil of Cor-
coran Art School, Washington, D. C;
Phila. School of Design for Women;
and Henry B. Snell. Member: NY
WCC; PBC; N.A.WomenPS.; SPNY;
Wash. WCC; AWCS. Awards:
Prize, N. A. Women Painters and
Sculptors, 1916; 1st Hon. mention. Con-
cord Art Asso., 1919; silver medal, Soc.
Washington Artists, 1921; second Hall-
garten prize, NAD, 1921; silver medal,
TVash. WCC, 1921: Mr. and Mrs. Au-
gustus S. Peabody prize, AIC 1921.
T\^ o r k : "A New England Street."
Corcoran Gallery, Washington; "The
Return of the 27th Division," National
Gallery, Washington; "The Avenue of
the Allies," American Legion Bldg.,
Gloucester, Mass. Instructor in paint-
ing. New York School of Fine and
Applied Art.
HOWELL, Helen, 2417 Salutaris Ave.,
Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, O.
Ldscp. P., T.— Pupil of Cincinnati Art
Academy; summer schools in Indiana,
Michigan, and New York. Member:
Cincinnati Woman's AC; MacD. C of
Cincinnati. Specialty, silhouettes.
HOWELL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
HUGO
HOWELL, Josephine C, 14 East 44th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
HOWITT, John Newton, 147 West 23d
St., New York, N. Y.
P., I.^Born White Plains, N. Y., May
7, 1885. Pupil of ASL. of N. Y. Me m-
b e r : SI 1912; Salma. C; Guild of Free
Lance Artists; Lg. of N.Y.A.
HOWLAND, Mrs. Anna Goodhart, 1429
Belmont 'St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
P.— Born Atchison, Kan., May 10, 1871.
Pupil of J. H. Moser. Member:
Wash. WCC,
HOWLAND, Edith, 6 West 28th St., New
York, N. Y.; h. Catskill-on-Hudson,
N. Y.
S. — Born Auburn, N. Y. Pupil of Gus-
tave Michel in Paris; and of Augustus
Saint Gaudens. Member: ASL of
N. Y. ; N. A. Women PS. Award:
Hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1913.
HOWLAND, Elizabeth H., 1361 East 56th
St., Chicago, IlL; Provincetown, Mass.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
HOWLAND, George, 29 Quai Voltaire,
Paris, France.
P. — Born New York, Feb. 12, 1865. Pu-
pil of Benjamin-Constant, Laurens and
Collin in Paris. Awards : Hon. men-
tion, Paris Salon, 1914; silver medal,
Paris Salon, 1921. Member : Cheva-
lier of the Legion of Honor of France.
HOYT, Edith, 1301 21st St., N. W., Wash-
ington, D. C.
P.— Born West Point, N. Y. Pupil of
Charles Woodbury.
HUBBARD, C(harles) D(aniel), 37 Park
St., Guilford, Conn.
P., I., T. — Born Newark. N. J.. July 14,
1876. Pupil of Kenyon Cox and John H.
Niemeyer. Member: New Haven
PCC; Guild of Free Lance Artists.
HUBBARD, Kin, Indianapolis News, In-
dianapolis, Ind. (I.)
HUBBARD, iVIary W(ilson), 142 East 40th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Springfield, Mass. April, 1871.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Constant in
Paris. Member: N. A. Women PS;
NYWCC.
HUBBARD, Whitney iVI(yron), 511 First
St., Greenport, L. I., N. Y.
P. — Born Middletown, Conn., June 18,
1875. Pupil of F. V. Du Mond. Mem-
ber: Conn. SA; Brooklyn WCC; Conn.
AFA.
HUBBELL, Henry Salem, Carnegie Insti-
tute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa., and
■Silvermine, Norwalk, Conn.
P.— Born Paola, Kan., Dec. 25, 1870.
Pupil of AIC; Whistler, Collin, Laurens
and Constant in Paris. Member:
ANA 1906; Paris SAP; Port P.;
NAC; Alhed AA; Salma.C. Awards:
Hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1901; third
class medal, Paris Salon, 1904; sil-
ver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; third
prize, Worcester (Mass.) Museum,
1905; third Harris prize and bronze
medal, AIC 1910. Director, School of
Painting and Decoration, Carnegie Inst.
of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa. Work:
"Child and Cat," Luxembourg, Paris;
"The Samovar," Museum of Lille,
France; "Larkspurs," Government Col-
lection, France; "The Brasses," Wil-
stach Collection, Philadelphia; "Paris
Cabman," Union League Club, Philadel-
phia; "Woman with Fan," Art Associa-
tion, Grand Rapids.
HUBBELL, Katherine, 70 Grove St.,
New York, N. Y. (S.)
HUBER, Leo, 149 East 15th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
HUDNUT, Alexander, M., 5 Nassau St.;
h. 19 West 54th St., New York, N. Y.;
summer, Allenhurst, N. J.
P. — Born Princeton, N. J. Member:
Salma.C; Century Assoc; and Lotos
Club; NYWCC; Grolier C.
HUDSON, Charles W(illiam), 13 Hilton
St., Hyde Park, Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Boston, Aug. 21, 1871. Pupil
of Boston Museum School under Grund-
mann, Tarbell and Benson. Mem-
ber: Boston WCC; NYWCC.
HUDSON, Elmer F(orrest), Gramatan
Court, Bronxville, N. Y. ; summer, Mon-
hegan Island, Me.
Marine P. — Born Boston, Aug. 14, 1862.
Member: Boston AC; Copley S, 1895;
Salma.C.
HUDSON, Eric, Bronxville, N. Y. (P.)
HUDSPETH, R(obert) N(orman), 49
Thoreau St., Concord, Mass.
P., C, T.— Born Caledonia, Ontario,
Canada, July 2, 1862. Pupil of Aca-
demie Julian under Bouguereau, Fer-
rier, Bashet and Doucet. Work:
Portrait miniature owned by Lord Mil-
ner, England; vase owned by H. R. H.
Queen Mary of England.
HUESTIS, Joseph W., 564 Jefferson Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
HUEY, Florence G(reene) (Mrs. J. Wls-
ter Huey), Ruxton, Baltimore Co., Md.
P.— Pupil of Gabrielle D. Clements, Jo-
seph De Camp and Cecilia Beaux.
HUP, Karl (Philip), 16th and Locust
Sts.; h. 2721 North Fifth St., Philadel-
phia, Pa.
P., I.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 28,
1887. Pupil of PAFA.
HUFFINGTON, John C, Darien, Conn.
P.,I.,T.— M e m b e r : NYWCC; Conn.
AFA.
HUGHES, Daisy M., 1941 South Union
Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.; summer,
Carmel, Monterey Co., Calif.
P., T.— Born Los Angeles, Calif., Jan.
24, 1883. Pupil of L. E. Garden Macleod,
Ralph Johonnot, Rudolph Schaeffer,
and C. P. Townsley. Member : Calif.
AC; Liaguna Beach AA; Art Teachers'
Assoc, of Southern Calif,
HUGHES, R. v., 3137 Raleigh Ave., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
HUGO, Joseph, 836 Hazelwood Ave.,
Pittsburgh. Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
458
HULBERT
WHO'S WHO IIS ART
HURRY
HULBERT, Charles Allen, South Egre-
mont, Mass.
P. — Born Mackinac Island, Mich. Pu-
pil of PAFA; Metropolitan Museum Art
School, and Artist-Artisan Institute in
New York. Member: Salma.C;
Brooklyn SA. Work: "The Old
Trunk," Public Library, Erie, Pa.;
"Portrait of Secretary Edward Lazan-
sky," in the Capitol, Albany, N. Y.
HULBERT, Katherine Allmond (Mrs.
Charles A. Hulbert), South Egremont,
Mass.
P. — Born in Sacramento Valley, Cal.
Pupil of San Francisco School of De-
sign; NAD and John Ward Stimson
in New York. Me m b e r : N. A. Women
PS; Brooklyn SA. Work: "The Old
Mill," Library of Girls' High School,
Brooklyn.
HULL, Mrs. Marie Atkinson, 222 North
St., Jackson, Miss.
P., I., T. — Born Summit, Miss., Sept.
28, 1890. Pupil of PAFA, and of Carl-
son and Reid at the Broadmoor Art
Academy. Member: Mississippi
AA. Award : Miss. AA gold medal,
1920. Work: "Ancient Oaks, Biloxi,"
owned by Mississippi Art Association.
HUMPHREY, David W., 259 West 23rd
St.. New York, N. J.
P., I.— Born Elkhorn, Wis., Feb. 28,
1872. Pupil of AIC; Julian Academy,
Colarossi, and Whistler in Paris.
Member: S.Indp.A.
HUMPHREYS, Albert, 96 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P., S. — Born near Cincinnati, O. Pupil
of Gerome, Robert-Fleury and Alexan-
der Harrison in Paris. Member:
Paris AAA; Phila. Sketch C;
Inter. Soc. of Pts., Paris (hon.).
Award : Landscape prize, Paris
AAA. Represented by a painting in De-
troit Institute of Arts; paintings in Bos-
ton Public Library; sculpture in Na-
tional Gallery of Art. Washington; Chil-
dren's fountain, South Manchester,
Conn.
HUMPHRISS, Charles H., 162 East 35th
St.; h. 502 West 173d St., New York,
N. Y.
S. — Born in England, 1867. Mem-
ber: NSS, 1908; S.Indp.A.
HUNT, E. Aubrey, Val Verde, Dudley
Rd., Hastings, Sussex, England.
P. — Born Weymouth, Mass., Feb. 7,
1855. Pupil of GerOme in Paris. Mem-
ber: English Art Club, London. Rep-
resented in Leeds Gallery of Art, and
Leicester Gallery of Art, England.
HUNT, Esther, 1683 Oak St., San Fran-
cisco, Cahf.
P., S. — Born Grand Island, Neb., Aug.
30, 1885. Pupil of Chase. Award:
Gold medal for sculpture, Pan-Cal. Exp.,
San Diego, 1915.
HUNT, Leigh, Convent Ave. and 139th 'St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Housatonic,
Mass.
Etcher, T., W., L.— Born Galena, 111.,
May 19, 1858. Pupil of Henry Farrer.
Member: A. Fund S.; Soc. of Amer-
ican Etchers; Arti et Amicitae, Hol-
land (cor.). Professor, College of the
City of New York.
HUNT, Thomas, 198 Fingerboard Rd.,
Ft. Wadsworth, S. I., N. Y.
P.— M ember: NYWCC.
HUNT, Una Clarke (Mrs. Arthur P.
Hunt), 5 Chelsea Sq., New York, N. Y.?
summer, Pasaconaway, N. H.
P., I.— Born Cincinnati, O., Jan. 6, 1876.
Pupil of Boston Museum School and
Denman W. Ross. Member: Wash.
WCC. Work: Reredos in St. Michael's
Church, Geneseo, N. Y.
HUNTER, David Charles, 646 North Clark
St., Chicago, 111.
P., S., T.— Born in England. Pupil of
John Gelert and AIC. Member-
Palette and Chisel C.
HUNTER, Edward, 9 Troy St., N. S.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
HUNTER, Isabel, 2050 Santa Clara Av»„
Alameda, Calif.
P., I., T.— Born San Francisco, Calif.
Pupil of Arthur Mathews, Emil Carl-
sen, Joullin. Member: San F. AA.
Illustrates for "Sunset" Magazine.
HUNTER, Lizbeth C(Iifton), 58 West
57th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Gilroy, Cal. Member:
NYWCC; Boston WCC; N.A. Women
PS. ^
HUNTINGTON, Margaret Wendell, 5S
Washington Sq., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N.A. Women PS.
HURLBURT, Irving E., 15 Wolcott St.,
New Haven, Conn.
P. — M ember: New Haven PCC.
HURLEY, E(dward) T(imothy), Rook-
wood Pottery; h. 2112 St. James Place,
W. H., Cincinnati, O.
P., Etcher. — Born Cincinnati, O., Oct.
10, 1869. Pupil of Cincinnati Art
Academy under Frank Duveneck.
Member: Cincinnati AC; Chicago
SE; Richmond Art Assoc; Crafters
Company of Cincinnati. Awards :
Gold medal for originality in art
workmanship, St. Louis World's
Fair, 1904; Logan Medal, AIC, 1921.
Work: "Midnight Mass," Cincinnati
Museum; etchings in Richmond (Ind.)
Art Association; Art Association of
Indianapolis; Detroit Institute; Toledo
Museum of Art; New York Public
Library; Library of Congress, Wash-
ington, D. C; Chicago Art Institute;
British Museum, London, England.
HURLEY, Irene Bishop (Mrs. E. T. Hur-
ley), 2121 St. James Place, Cincinnati,
Ohio.
Min. P. — Born Colorado Springs, Colo.,
Dec. 5, 1881. Pupil of Cincinnati Art
Academy. Member: Cincinnati Wo-
man's AC.
HURRY, Mrs. Lucy Washington, 60
Greenwich St., Hempstead, L. I., N. Y.
P., C. Dec. — Born Hagerstown, Md.,
Oct. 17, 1884. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.
under Kenyon Cox; Marshall Fry; Fay-
ette Barnum. Member: NYWCC;
N.A. Women PS.
459
HURST
WHO'S WHO IN ART
IHRIG
HURST, L(ou) E., Avon, Lorain Co.,
Ohio.
P., I., C— Born Avon, O., Oct. 30, 1883.
Pupil of Cleveland School of Art, F. C.
Gottwald and H. G. Keller. Specialty,
botanical illustrating.
HURTT, Arthur R., 1518 Mohawk St.,
Los Angeles, Cal.
P., L— Born in Wisconsin, Oct. 31, 1861.
Pupil of Douglas Volk. Member:
Cal. AC. Award : Bronze medal,
Pan. -Cal. Exp., San Diego, 1915.
Painter of stage scenery, murals and
panoramas.
HUTAF, August W(illiam), 1— 31st St.,
TVoodcliff-on-Hudson, N. J.
P.. I.— Born Hoboken. N. J., Feb. 25,
1879. Pupil of W. D. 'Streetor. Mem-
ber: Am. Numismatic Society; SI.
Specialty posters, book covers and dec-
orations. Author of poster "The Spirit
of the Fighting Tanks", 5th Liberty
Loan.
HUTCHENS, Frank Townsend, 48 Bar-
row St., New York, N. Y.; h. Norwalk,
Conn.
P., L. — Born Canandaigua, N. Y., June
7, 1869. Pupil of ASL of N. Y., under
Wiles, Du Mond and Mowbray; Julian
Academy under Constant and Laurens,
and Calarossi Academy in Paris.
Member: Paris AAA; Salma. C. ;
AWCS. W^ o r k : "Betrayal of Christ,"
Carnegie Library, Sioux Falls, S. Dak.;
portrait of Gen. Edgar S. Dudley, Mu-
seum at West Point, N. Y.; "Autumn
Afternoon," Art Club, Erie, Pa.; "A
Winter Morning," Herron Art Institute,
Indianapolis; "Twilight in Picardie,"
Toledo Museum; "Hon. James W. Wads-
worth," Capitol. Albany; "Olive Garden,
Capri," Sioux Falls Art Asso.
HUTCHINS, John E(ddy), 709 Putnam
Ave., Brooklyn, New York, N. Y. ; sum-
mer, Kiamesha, N. Y.
P., C— Born Wyoming, Pa., Mar., 1891.
HUTCHINS, Will, Deerfield, Mass.; h.
1348 Euclid St., Washington, D. C.
P., W., L. — Born Westchester, Conn.,
June 11, 1878. Pupil of Yale School of
FA; Laurens in Paris.
HUTCHISON, D. C, 145 Hawthorne Ave.,
Yonkers, N. Y. (I.)
HUTCHISON, Mrs. Ellen Wales, 866
Elm St., New Haven, Conn.
P., T. — Born East Hartford, Conn., June
12, 1868. Pupil of C. E. Porter. Geo.
Thomson. Member: Conn. AFA.
HUTCHISON, F(rederick) W., 45 E. 59th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Montreal, Canada. Pupil of
Jean Paul Laurens, Benjamin-Constant.
Member: Allied AA. ; Salma. C.
HUTSON, Charles Woodward, 7321 Pa-
nola St., New Orleans, La.
P., W. — Born McPhersonville, S. C,
Sept. 23, 1840.
HUTTIO, E. W., Century Bldg., Pitts-
burgh. Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
HUTTY, Alfred H., 96 Fifth Ave., Ne-w
York. N. Y.; Woodstock, N. Y.
P.— Born Grand Haven, Mich., Sept
1877. Pupil of St. Louis School of Fine
Arts; ASL of N. Y. under Chase and
Birge Harrison. Member: Salma. C,
Woodstock AA; Carolina Art Asso.
Represented in Gibbes Memorial Art
Gallery, Charleston, S. C. Director.
School of Art of Carolina Art Associa-
tion.
HYATH, Winfred 8., Bryn Athyn, Pa
(P.)
HYATT, Anna Vaughn, 44 Gramercy Park
New York, N. Y.
S. — Born Cambridge, Mass., March 10,
1876. Pupil of Henry H. Kitson in Bos-
ton; H. A. MacNeil and Gutzon Borglum
in New York. Member: NSS
1905; ANA 1916. Awards: Bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; hon men-
tion, Paris Salon, 1910; silver medal,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915; purple rosette
from French Government, 1915; gold
medal. Plastic C, 1916; Saltus medal.
NAD, 1920. Work: "Lion," erected
at Dayton, O.; bronze "Fighting Ele-
phants," Carnegie Institute, Pitts-
burgh; "Joan of Arc," New York City.
Curator of Sculpture at French Muse-
um, New York, 1918. Specialty, ani-
mals.
HYATT, Harriet Randolph. See Mrs.
Mayer.
HYDE, Haliie Champlin (Mrs. Edward B.
Hyde). See Mrs. Fenton.
HYDE, Mary Elizabeth, 3 The Roanoke,
Clifton, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati's Woman's
AC.
HYDE, Russell Taber, 159 Summer St..
Waltham, Mass.; summer, Summer
'School of Painting, Ogunquit, Me.
P., E., L., T.— Born Waltham, Mass.,
July 14, 1886. Pupil of Laurens, Bachet,
Richer. Member: Dissenters.
HYDE, William H(enry), 829 Park Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Windsor,
Vt.
Port. P.— Born New York, Jan. 29, 1858.
Pupil of Boulanger, Lefebvre, Doucet
and Alexander Harrison in Paris.
Member: ANA 1900; SAA 1893; Cen-
tury Assoc. Awards : Hon. mention,
Paris Exp., 1900; bronze medal, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; hon. mention,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
HYETT, Will J., care of Gillespie Gal-
leries, 422 Wood St., Pittsburgh, Pa.;
h. Gibsonia, Pa.
P. — Born Chiltenham. England, Jan. IG,
1876. Pupil of Sir Alfred East. Mem-
ber: Pittsburgh AA; Pittsburgh Arch.
C. Awards: Bronze medal, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915; third honor, Pitts-
burgh AA, 1917.
IDE, Alice Steele. See Mrs. Foster Han-
naford.
IHRIG, Clara Louise, 12 Buffalo St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
460
ILLAVA
WHO'S WHO IN ART
IRVING
ILLAVA, Karl, 412 East 37th St., New
York, N. Y. (S.)
ILLIAN, George (John), 139 East 38th
St., New York, N. Y. ; h. 252 Garden
Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
I. — Born Milwaukee, Wis., Nov. 29, 1894.
Pupil of Milwaukee Art Inst.; AIC;
ASL of N. Y. Member: SI;Salma.
C. ; Guild of Free Lance Artists.
INGELS, Kathleen Beverley. See Robin-
son.
INGERLE, Rudolph F., McClurg Bldg.,
28 S. Wabash St.; h. 6851 Ridgeland
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born Vienna, Austria, April 14.
1879. Member: Chicago SA; Cliff
Dwellers; Palette and Chisel Club; Bo-
hemian AC. Work : "After the
Storm," City of Chicago; "Moonrise,"
Arche Club, Chicago.
INGERSOLL, Anna Warren, 1815 Walnut
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
INGERSOLL, Emma K. Hess (Mrs. D.
W. Ingersoll), Chestertown, Md.
P., T.— Born Chicago, 111., Jan. 18, 1878.
Pupil of AIC. Member: Designers'
Alumni of AIC. Award : Bronze
medal for miniatures, St. Louis Exp.,
1804.
INGHAM, Elizabeth Howell, (Mrs. F. S.
Smith), E. Palisade Ave., Englewood,
N. J.
P., I.— Born Easton, Pa. Pupil of PAFA
and Drexel Inst, in Phila. ; Whistler in
Paris, and studied in London. M e m-
ber: Phila. WCC; N. A. Women PS;
NYWCC; Wash. WCC.
INGLIS, John J., 144 North Union St.,
Rochester, N. Y.
P., I., C. — Born DubJin, Ireland, Aug.
26, 1867. Pupil of Gerome, Courtois,
and Collin in Paris, and studied in
London. Member: Royal Hibernian
Academy of Arts, Dublin; Rochester
AC. Award : Taylor Scholarship
for painting, Dublin Academy.
INGRAHAM, George Hunt, 1127 Guardian
Bldg.; h. 2052 Cornell Rd., Cleveland, O.
E., Arch. — Born New Bedford, Mass.,
Mar. 17, 1870. Pupil of Mass. Inst, of
Technology. Member: Cleveland
Chamber of Commerce.
INNESS, George, Jr., care of Century
Co., 353 Fourth Ave., New York, N. Y.;
summer, Cragsmoor, Ulster Co., N. Y.
P. — Born Paris, France, Jan. 4, 1853, of
American parents. Pupil of his father,
George Inness. Member: ANA 1893,
NA 1899; SAA1880; Boston AC; Salma.
C. 1876 (Life 1899); A. Fund S; Lotos C.
Awards : Gold medal, Paris Salon,
1899; silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; silver medal, Charleston
Exp., 1902; gold medal. AAS 1902.
Work: "Shepherd and Sheep," Metro-
politan Museum, New York; "Sheep
Grazing," Art Museum, Montclair, N. J.
INVERNIZZI, Prosper, 500 West 178th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
lORIO, Adrian J., Lang Studios, 6 New-
bury St.; h. 28 Park St., Boston, Mass.
P., I., W., L.— Born New York, N. Y.,
May 13, 1879. Pupil of Will H. Brad-
ley. Member: The Artists-Design-
ers Lg. of New England. Illustrations
for H. M. Caldwell Co.; Oliver Ditson
Co.; Ginn and Co.
lOUKAl, Kyahel, 106 West 55th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
IPSEN, Ernest L., 119 East 19th St., New
York, N. Y.
Port. P. —Born Maiden, Mass., Sept. 5,
1869. Pupil of Boston Museum School;
Royal Academy at Copenhagen. Mem-
ber: NAC (life); ANA; Allied AA;
Salma. C. Represented in Chicago Art
Institute; Massachusetts Institute of
Technology; Boston State House; Tren-
ton State House.
IRELAND, Leroy, 53 East 59th St., New
York. N. Y.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa.. Dec. 24,
1889. Pupil of Pennsylvania Academy
of Fine Arts, under Daniel Garber.
Work: "God of the Snake Dance,"
Dallas Art Association.
IRELAND, William Addison, Columbus
Evening Dispatch; h. 264 Woodland
Ave., Columbus, Ohio.
I.— Born Chillicothe, Ohio, Jan. 8, 1880.
IRISH, Margaret Holmes (Mrs. H. C.
Irish), Webster Grove, St. Louis, Mo.
P.— Born Chatham, Ontario, May 2,
1878. Pupil of Neb. State University;
St. Louis School of Fine Arts under
Cornoyer. M e m b e r : St. Louis Wom-
an's AL (pres.); S.Indp.A.; St. Louis
Art Students' Assoc; Twentieth Cen-
tury C. Awards: Hon. mention,
Woman's Art League, St. Louis; bronze
medal, MFWC; hon. mention and prize,
Missouri State Fair, 1912. Member:
Art Students' Assoc; St. Louis An-
cients.
IRVIN, Rea, Spuvten Duyvil, N. Y.
I. — Born San Francisco, Cal., Aug. 26,
1881. Pupil of Hopkins Art Institute,
San Francisco. Member: SI 1913.
IRVINE, M. Bell, Albemarle Court, Nor-
folk, Va.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
IRVINE. Wilson H.. Hamburgh, Conn.
Ldscp.P.— Born Byron, 111., Feb. 28,
1869. Pupil of AIC. Member: Chi-
cago SA; Chicago WCC; Cliff Dwellers;
Palette and Chisel C. Chicago; Salma.
C. Awards: Cahn prize. ($100),
AIC 1912; Carr prize ($100), AIC 1915;
silver medal, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915;
medal, Chicago SA 1916; Palette and
Chisel C. prize, AIC 1916; Grower prize,
AIC 1917. Work: "The Road" and
"Autumn," Art Institute of Chicago,
Mun. AL purchase, 1911.
IRVING, Anna D., 22 High St., New
Haven, Conn.
P. — M ember: New Haven Paint and
Clay Club.
461
ISRAEL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
JAEGERS
ISRAEL, Nathan, 15 Kossuth Place,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y. ; Dec. 21,
1895. Pupil of Max Weber, K. H.
Miller, B. Robinson. Member: ASL.
of N. Y.; S.Indp.A.
IVES, Neil McD(owe!l), Woodstock, N. Y.
P.— Born St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 27, 1890.
Pupil of Du Mond, Carlson and Das-
burg.
IVES, Percy, 22 West Mountain St.; h.
502 Cass Ave., Detroit, Mich.
Port. P., T. — Born Detroit, Mich., June
5, 1864. Pupil of L. T. Ives; Bougue-
reau, Gerome, Lefebvre and Boulanger
in Paris. Member: Detroit Art
Assoc. ; Fellowship PAFA. Award :
Hon. mention, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901.
IVINS, Mrs. Florence W., 75 West 55th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., Engr. — M ember: N. A. Women
PS.
IVORY, P. V. E., 51 West 10th St., New
York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: Salma. C,
IZOR, Esteile Peele, "The Wellington,"
West Michigan St., Indianapolis, Ind.
P.,W. — Pupil of Forsyth and Steel In
Indianapolis; Freer and Vanderpoel in
Chicago; Chase and Herter in New
York; H. D. Murphy in Boston. M e m-
b e r : Ind. AC.
JACKSON, Annie Hurlburt, 329 Tappan
St., Brookline, Mass.
P. — Born Minneapolis, Minn., Aug. 19,
1877. Pupil of Eric Pape; Murphy;
Woodbury. Member: Copley S. ;
Boston GA; Pa.S.Min.P.; Am.S.Min.P.
JACKSON, Chevalier, Schwenkville, Pa.
I., W., L., T.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa.,
Nov. 4, 1865. Pupil of A. Bryan Wall.
Member: Pittsburgh AA.
JACKSON, Elbert McGran, 116 East 66th
St., New York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
Illustrates for "Saturday Evening
Post."
JACKSON, Hazel Brill, 1386 Beacon St.,
Brookline, Mass. (P.)
JACKSON, John Edwin, 57 West 37th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Nashville, Tenn., Nov. 7,
1875. Pupil of NAD, ASL. of N. Y.
Member: Salma. C; SI; Guild of
Free Lance Artists. Illustrations for
"Scribner's," Century Co., "Harper's
Magazine," "Cosmopolitan."
JACKSON, (Miss) Lesley, "The Concord."
Washington, D. C,
P. — Born Rochester, Minn. Member:
S.Wash.A.; Wash.WCC; Wash.SFA;
N. A. Women PS; NYWCC. Award :
Second Corcoran prize, Wash.WCC,
1905.
JACKSON, Martin J(acob), Bradbury
Bldg. ; h. 222 South Mariposa Ave., Los
Angeles, Calif.
P. — Born Newburgh, N. Y., April 12,
1872. Pupil of Cooper Union and NAD
under Edgar M. Ward in New York;
Comelli in London; also studied in
Paris, Brussels and Antwerp. Mem-
ber: S.Indp.A. Awards: Silver
medal for oil painting and silver
medal for water colors, Alaska- Yukon
Exp., Seattle, 1909.
JACKSON, Mrs. May Howard, 1816 16th
St., Washington, D. C.
S.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., May 12, 1877.
Pupil of PAFA. Member: S. Indp. A.
Work: "Wilham P. Price," St. Thom-
as' Church, Phila. ; "Paul Lawrence
Dunbar," Dunbar High School, Wash-
ington, D. C. ; William H. Lewis, ex-
Asst. Attorney General; Kelly Miller,
Howard University, Washington, D. C.
JACKSON, Roy, 1015 Madison St., Seattle,
Wash. (P.)
JACOB, F. W., 2546 Melrose Ave., Nor-
wood, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati AC.
JACOBS, Harry W., 45 Brantford PL,
Buffalo, N. Y. (P., T.)
JACOBS, Michel, 58 West 57th St., New
York, N. Y.
Port. P., S., T.— Born Montreal, Canada,
Sept. 10, 1877. Pupil of Laurens in
Paris; E. M. Ward at NAD. Mem-
ber: Salma. C. Work: "Portrait
of Senator Underwood" and "Portrait
of Champ Clark", in the Capitol, Wash-
ington; 26 portraits in Baron de Hi|sch
Inst., Montreal, Canada; Medal for
"Military Order of World War."
Author of "The Art of Color."
JACOBSEN, Mrs. E. M. P. (See Plum-
mer.)
JACOBSON, Oscar B(rousse), University
of Oklahoma; h. 609 Chautauqua St.,
Norman, Okla.
P., L., T.— Born Westervik, Sweden,
May 16, 1882. Pupil of Birger Sandzen,
Weir, Albert Thompson and Neimeyer;
Yale Art School. Member: College
AA., Oklahoma AA. ; Work: "Prayer
for Rain," McPherson Art Gallery, Kans.;
"Voices of the Past," Bethany Art
Gallery, Lindsborg, Kans. ; "Portrait of
Gov. Williams," State Capitol, Okla-
homa City, Okla.; "Rio Grande," Hayes
Normal School. Represented in collection
of the University of Oklahoma, Norman.
JACOBY, Helen Eaton, 859 East 58th St.,
Indianapolis, Ind.; summer, 277 North
Shore Drive, South Haven, Mich.
P., I. — Born Indianapolis, Ind. Pupil
of Otto Stark in Indianapolis; Pratt
Inst. Brooklyn. Member: Indiana
Artists C.
JAEDIKER, Theodore, 19 East 28th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
JAEGERS, Albert, Suffern, N. Y.
S. — Born Elberfeld, Germany, March 28,
1868. Member: NSS 1899; N. Y.
Arch.Lg.; Nat.Inst.A.L. Work: Baron
Steuben statue, Washington, D. C.
Partorius monument, Germantown, Pa.
JAEGERS, Augustine, 404 Twelfth Ave.,
Long Island City, New York, N. Y.
S. — Born Barmen, Germany, Mar. 31,
1878. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; NAD;
Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris under
462
JAMAR
WHO'S WHO IN ART
J ESS UP
Merci6. Member: NSS, 1909.
Awards : Collaborative and Avery
prize, Arch. Lg. of N. Y., 1909.
JAMAR, S. Corinne, Elkton, Cecil Co.,
Md.
Min. P.— Born Elkton, Md. Pupil AIC;
Drexel Inst., Phila.
JAMES, Alexander R., Dublin, N. H.
P. — Born Cambridge, Mass., 1890. Pupil
of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, A. H.
Thayer. Work: "Portrait of Prof.
William James" and "Portrait of a
Girl," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
JAMES, Arthur E., 2 East 23rd St., New
York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: SI.
JAMES, Mrs. Esther M(orse), 16 Strath-
more Rd., Brookline, Mass.
Min. P. — Born Brookline, Mass., Oct. 15,
1885. Pupil of Hale and Benson.
JAMES, Faustina. See Mrs. John H.
Kelly.
JAMES, John Wells, 1239 Dean St., Brook-
lyn, New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Feb. 22, 1873.
Pupil of James Knox. Member:
Salma. C.
JAMES, William, Riverway Studios, Bos-
ton, Mass.; h, 89 Irving St., Cambridge,
P., T. — Born Cambridge, Mass., June 17,
1882. Pupil of Benson and Tarbell.
Member: Boston GA. Award:
Silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
JAMESON, Arthur E(dward), 141 Sixth
Ave.; h. 29 East 38th St., New York,
N. Y.
I.— Born in England, March 26, 1872.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Member: SI.
JANSSON, Alfred, 1851 Byron St., Chi-
cago, 111.
P.— Born in Sweden, 1863. Studied In
Stockholm and Paris. Member:
Palette and Chisel C; Chicago SA;
Chicago AC; Chicago AG. Awards:
Swedish American Artists 3d prize,
1911; Rosenwald purchase prize ($200),
AIC 1912; Carr landscape prize, AIC
1914. Work: "Icy Rocks," Municipal
Commission purchase.
JAQUES, Bertha E. (Mrs. W. K. Jaques),
4316 Greenwood Ave., Chicago, 111.
Etcher, Printer, W., T. — Born Coving-
ton, O. Pupil of AIC. Member:
Chicago SA; Chicago SE (sect.);
Cal. SE; Calif. P.M. Award : Bronze
medal, P.-P.Exp., San. F., 1915. Work
in: Art Institute of Chicago; New York
Public Library; Librarv of Congress,
Washington, D. C; St. Paul Institute of
Art.
JAQUISH, O. W., Jr., 217 West 33rd St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
JAY, Cecil (Mrs. George Hitchcock), 39
West 67th St., New York, N. Y.
P., Min. P.— M ember: NYWCC.
Awards : Hon. mention for oil
painting and silver medal for minia-
tures, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
JEMNE, Mrs. Elsa Laubach, 649 Endicott
Bldg., St. Paul, Minn.
P., I.— Born St. Paul, Minn., July 7, 1888.
Pupil of Violet Oakley, Cecilia Beaux,
Daniel Garber, Emil Carlsen and Jo-
seph Pearson. Member: St. Paul
AS; Fellowship PAFA. Awards:
Silver medal, St. Paul Inst., 1911; J. J.
Hill gold medal, St. Paul Inst., 1915;
Cresson European Scholarship, PAFA,
1914 and 1915; gold medal for painting,
•St. Paul Institute of Art, 1916.
JENKINS, Mrs. Hannah T(empest), Rem-
brandt Hall. Pomona College, Clare-
mont. Los Angeles Co., Calif.
P.. W., L., T. — Born Philadelphia, Pa.
Pupil of Spring Garden Inst.. 'School of
Industrial Art and PAFA in Philadel-
phia; Robert Fleury and Constant in
Paris. Member: Plastic C; Fellow-
ship PAFA. Award: Diploma, Alas-
ka-Yukon-Pacific Expo., Seattle. 1909.
Head of Art Dept. of Pomona College.
Claremont, Calif.
JENKINS, Mrs. Martha E., 5538 Cornell
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born Charleston, 111. Studied in
Boston and Chicago, and under Duve-
neck. Member: Chicago AC. ;
Washington AC.
JENKINS, Mattie M(aud), 704 Washing-
ton St., Whitman, Mass.; summer, By-
thesea Cottage, Brnnt Rock. Mass.
Min. P., I. — Born Whitman, Mass., July
29, 1867. Pupil of Henry Cook, Ethel
B. Colver and Charles W. Reid.
JENNEWEIN, Carl Paul, 560 West 26th
St.; 84 Grove St., New York, N. Y.
P., S.— Member: NSS; N. Y. Arch.
Lg. ; American Academy in Rome.
Alumni. Awards : Collaborative prize
for sculpture and Avery prize, N.Y.
Arch. Lg., 1912; mention, collaborative
competition, N.Y. Arch. Lg., 1915; Am.
Acad, in Rome Fellowship in Sculpture,
1916-19.
JENNEY, Edgar W(hitfield), 15 West
38th St., New York, N. Y.; h, 17 Sum-
mit St., Glen Ridge, N. J.
P., Arch. — Born New Bedford, Mass.,
Dec. 11, 1869. Pupil of Major in Bos-
ton; Laurens in Paris. Member:
Mural P. ; N. Y. Arch. Lg. Work:
Decorations in Wisconsin State Capi-
tol; Union Central Life Insurance Co.,
Cincinnati, O. ; Senate Chamber and
House of Commons, Ottawa, Canada;
Hibernia Bank, New Orleans, La.
JENNY, Charles O., 114 North 17th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (S.)
JENSEN, Dorothy Daiph, 2700 W. Hayes
St., Seattle, ^Vash. (P.)
JENSSEN, Haakon A., 22 Castro St.. S?an
Francisco, Calif.
P. — Born Kristiania. Norway, Dec. 10,
18S3. Member: San F. AA.
JENTTER, Charles, 14 Boyd Avenue,
Jersey City, N. J.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
JEPSON, Mrs. W. R. See Wiles, Gladys,
JESSUP, Josephine, Rowaton, Conn.
P., I. — Born New York. Pupil of Wyatt
Eaton. Member: N. A. Women PS.
463
JEWETT
WHO'S WHO IN ART
JOHNSON
JEWETT, Maude S. (Mrs. Edward H.
Jewett), 245 East 61st St., New York,
N. Y.
S. — Born Englewood, N. J., June 6, 1873.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Member:
N. A. Women PS. Work: Fountain
in Cleveland Museum.
JIROUCH, Frank L., 4821 Superior Ave.,
Cleveland, O.
P., S.— Born Cleveland, O., Mar. 3, 1876,
Pupil of Matzon, Ludikie, Grafly, Gar-
ber, Pearson. Member: Cleveland
AC. Work: Bronze relief in Church
of Lady of Lourdes; "Christ and An-
gels," stone. St. Colman's Church;
"Diana of Ephesus," Union National
Bank; Chapman Memorial, Cleveland
Ball Park; Altar of Sacrifice, Cleveland;
Fitzsimons bronze tablet, Paris.
JOCHIM, Arthur, 48 Leinan Place, Jersey
City. N. J.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
JOHANSEN, Anders D., 442 First St.,
' Brooklyn, N. Y. (P.)
JOHANSEN, John C(hristen), 12 West 9th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Copenhagen, Denmark, Nov.
25, 1876. Pupil of AIC; Duveneck;
Julian Academy in Paris. Mem-
ber: ANA 1911, NA 1915; Port.P.;
Players; NAC; Salma.C. 1906; MacD.C.
Awards : Municipal League Pur-
chase prize and Young Fortnightly
prize, AIC 1903; hon. mention, Arts
C. of Chicago, 1903; silver medal,
Chicago SA, 1904; bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; gold medal. Buenos
Aires Exp., 1910; Saltus gold medal,
NAD 1911; Harris silver medal ($500),
AIC 1911; hon. mention. CI Pittsburgh,
1912; H. S. Morris prize, Newport AA.
1915; gold medal. P.-P. Exp.. San F..
1915. Represented in National Gallery.
Santiago. Chili; Pennsylvania Academy
of the Fine Arts; "Piazza San Marco,"
Art Institute of Chicago; "Fiesole."
Public Gallery. Richmond, Ind. ; Mu-
seum. Dallas. Tex.; Conservative Club.
Glasgow; Art Museum, Syracuse, N. Y.;
Union League Club. Chicago; Proteus
Club. Des Moines. la.; Arche Club. Chi-
cago; University Club, Chicago; Gallery
of Vincennes, Ind.; State Normal
School, Terre Haute, Ind.
JOHANSEN, M. Jean McLane (Mrs. John
C. Johansen). See McLane.
JOHNSON, Mrs. Adelaide, care of the
National Women's Party, Washington,
D. C; 20 Vicolo di San Nicollo da
Tolentino, Rome, Italy; care of the
Lyceum Club, 128 Piccadilly, London,
Eng.
S.— Born Plymouth, 111. Pupil of Monte-
verde and Fabi Altinl In Rome.
Work: Portrait bust of Susan B. An-
thony, Metropolitan Museum, New
York.
JOHNSON, B. D., Studio 22001/2, Colum-
bia Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
JOHNSON, Burt W., 86 Grove St., Flush-
ing. N. Y. ; summer. Claremont. Calif.
S., T.— Born Flint, O., Apr. 25, 1890.
Pupil of Louis Saint Gaudens, J. E.
Fraser, Robert Aitken, 'George Bridg-
man. Instructor at ASL of N. Y.
Member: Laguna Beach AA.
Work: "Spanish Music Fountain" and
"Greek Tablet," Pomona College, Clare-
mont, Calif.; panel "Christ," St. Fran-
cis Hospital. La Crosse, Wis.; memo-
rial fountain, Huntington Park, Calif. ;
Pomona Valley memorial monument,
Pomona, Calif.; E. N. Dimick statue.
West Palm Beach, Calif.
JOHNSON, Charles M., 810 Classon Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
JOHNSON, Clarence R., 15 Windermere
Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. (P.)
JOHNSON, (Miss) Content, 200 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Bloomington, 111. Pupil of
Julian Academy under Constant and
Laurens in Paris; N.Y. School of Art
under Chase. Member: SPNY.
JOHNSON, Cordelia, 2346 South 34th St.,
Omaha, Neb.
P.— Born Omaha, July 11, 1871. Pupil
of J. Laurie Wallace. Member:
Omaha Art Guild.
JOHNSON, Frank Edward, 3038 N St.,
Washington, D. C; Havana, Cuba;
summer, Norwich, Conn.
P., W., L. — Born Norwich, Conn., July
6, 1873. Pupil of Laurens and Con-
stant in Paris. Member: Wash.
WCC.
JOHNSON, Frank Tenney, 48 Charles St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.. I.— Born Big Grove, la., June 26,
1874. Pupil of Lorenz, Heinle and Henri.
Member: NYW(:C; Allied AA; SI
1914; Salma. C; Soc. Animal P and S.
Award : Hon. mention. Wis. PS,
1919. Represented in National Gallery,
Washington, D. C, and Dallas Art
Asso.
JOHNSON, G(race) M(ott), 145 Tren-
chard St., Yonkers, N. Y.; Taos, N. M.;
summer, Woodstock, Ulster Co., N. Y.
S.— Born New York City, July L'8. 1882.
Pupil of Hermon McNeil and Gutzon
Borglum. Member: NSS (Assoc);
N A. Women PS.; S.Indp.A.; Soc. Ani-
mal P. and S. Award: McMillin
sculpture prize. N. A. Women PS 1917.
Specialty, animals.
■Swnrthmn^p, Pa.
Pa. S. Min. P.;
JOHNSON, Harry L.,
Min. P. — M ember
Am. S. Min. P.
JOHNSON, Herbert, 518 Walnut St.; h.
6333 Drexel Rd., Overbrook. Philadel-
phia, Pa.; summer, Huntingdon Valley,
• Pa.
I.— Born Sutton, Neb., 1878. Mem-
ber: SI 1913. Cartoonist for various
magazines.
JOHNSON, Jeanne Payne (Mrs. Louis C.
Johnson), 39 Remsen St., Brooklyn,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born near Danville, O., April 14,
1887. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. ; Mme. La
Farge, Richard Miller and Lucien Simon
in Paris. Member: Brooklyn Mini-
ature Soc,
464
JOHNSON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
JONES
JOHNSON, Margaret, 11 Willow PI.,
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
1.— Born Boston, Mass.. Apr. 5, 1860.
Pupil of Cooper Union and ASL in New
York. Author and illustrator: "The
Procession of the Zodiac," "A Bunch of
Keys," "Polly and the Wishing Ring,"
etc.
JOHNSON, Marie Runkle, 255 South Fair
Oaks Ave., Pasadena, Cal.
P. — Born Flemington, N. J., Dec. 21,
1861. Pupil of Collin, Girardot, Cour-
tois and Prinet, in Paris; Chase, in New
York. Member: Cal. AC. Award:
Medal, Pan. -Cal. Exp., San Diego, 1915.
JOHNSON, Merle DeVore, 1440 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.; h. Douglas-
ton, L. I., N. Y.
I.— Born Oregon City, Ore.. Nov. 24,
1874. Member: Guild of Free Lance
Artists. Manager, Art Dept., "Evening
Journal," 1910-1913.
JOHNSON, P. D., 147 West 23rd St.,
New York, N. Y. (I.)
JOHNSON, Robert, Leonia, N. J.
I.— M ember: SI.
JOHNSON, W. J., Uniontown, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
JOHNSON, W. Parke, 1133 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
JOHNSON, Wynne, 1223 K St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C. (P.)
JOHNSTON, Bertha Gill, 201 South Craig
St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
JOHNSTON, Frederick G., Leader Pub-
lishing Co.. Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
JOHNSTON, M(ary) Virginia Del C(as.
tillo), Riverdale, Md.
P. — Born Puerto Principe, Cuba, Aug.
16, 1865. Pupil of E. H. Andrews, E. C.
Messer, and Robert Henri, Member:
S. Wash. A.; League of Am. Pen Women.
JOHNSTON, Robert E., 490 Broad Ave.,
Leonia, N. J
1.— Born Toronto, Canada. Sept. 14, 1885.
Pupil of Harvey Dunn; Walter Sichert
in London. Member: SI; Arts and
Letters Club of Toronto.
JOHNSTON, Winant P., 3337 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa,
S.— M ember: Ind. SS.
JOHST, Paul Spener, 167 West 13th St.,
New Y^ork, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
JOINER, Harvey, 405 Equitable Bldg.,
Louisville, Ky. ; h. Prather, Ind.
P. — Born Charlestown, Ind., Apr. 8,
1852. Self-taught. Member: Louis-
ville Artists Lg. Specialty, Kentucky
beechwoods.
JONES, Albertus E., 93 Niles St., Hart-
ford, Conn.; h. South Windsor, Conn.
P., T.— Born South Windsor, Conn.. Oct.
31, 1882. Pupil of Charles Noel Flagg.
Member: Conn. AFA; S. Indp. A.;
Soc. of Conn. Artists. Award : Dun-
ham prize. Conn. AFA, 1912. Instruc-
tor of drawing and painting, Hartford
Art Society School.
JONES, Aristine M. P., 4306 Tenth St.,
N. E., Seattle, Wash. (Min. P.)
JONES, Bayard, 40 West 28th St., New
York, N. Y.; h. Merrick, L. I., N. Y.
I.— Born Rome, Ga., Oct. 9, 1869. Pupil
of Laurens and Constant in Paris.
Member: SI 1903.
JONES, Elizabeth Sparhawk. See Spar-
hawk-Jones.
JONES, Ernest E., 29 Ericsson S., Roch-
ester, N. Y.
P.. T.— Born Penn Yan, N. Y., July 27,
1885. Pupil of F. von der Lancken and
Otto Beck.
JONES. Frances Devereux. See Hall.
JONES, Francis C(oates), 33 West 67th
St.. New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Baltimore, Md., July 25,
1857. Pupil of Boulanger and Lefebvre
at Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris.
Member: ANA 1885, NA 1894
(treas.); SAA 1882; AWCS; N.Y.Arch.
Lg. 1888; Mural P; Nat.Inst.A.L.; NAC;
A. Aid S; Century Assoc. Awards:
Clarke prize, NAD 1885; silver medal,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; Shaw pur-
chase, SAA 1904; silver medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; Isidor medal, NAD
1913; silver medal, P.-P.Exp.. San F.,
1915.
JONES, Grace Church, 118 Sherman St.,
Denver, Colo.; summer, Taos. N. M.
P.. T.— Born West Falls, N. Y. Pupil of
Delance, Gaspard, Calot, Colarossi Acad-
emy in Paris. Member: Province-
town AA; Denver AA.
JONES, H(ugh) Bolton, 33 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y.
Ldscp.P.— Born Baltimore, Md., Oct. 20,
1848. Studied in France. Member:
ANA 1881, NA 1883; SAA 1881; AWCS;
Nat.Inst.A.L.; NAC; A.Fund S; Century
Assoc. Awards : Bronze medal,
Paris Exp., 1889; medal, Columbian
Exp., Chicago, 1893; bronze medal,
Paris Exp., 1900; Webb prize, SAA 1902;
Shaw Fund prize, SAA 1902; gold
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; silver
medal, P.-P.Exp.. San F., 1915. Work:
"Spring" and "Autumn," Metropolitan
Museum. New York; "Springtime," Cor-
coran Gallery, Washington; "Sheep
Pasture," Pennsylvania Academy of the
Fine Arts, Philadelphia; "Landscape,"
Brooklyn Institute Museum.
JONES, Leon Foster, Port Jefferson,
L. I., N. Y.
P.— Born Manchester, N. H., Oct. 18,
1871. Pupil of Cowles Art School in
Boston under Major and De Camp.
Member: Salma.C; A. Fund S.
Award: Silver medal, P.-P. Exp.,
San F., 1915.
JONES, Nancy C(hristine), Handicraft
Club, Benefit St., Providence, R. I.;
h. Diamond Hill, Manville, R. I.
P., T. — Born Providence, R. I., May 7,
1888. Pupil of R. L School of Design,
Charles Hawthorne. Member:
Handicraft Club; Sail-Loft Club, Provi-
dence.
465
JONES
WHO'S WHO IN ART
JUSTICE
JONES, Paul, 3031 Stanton Ave., Cincin-
nati, O. (P.)
JONES, Seth C, Municipal Bldg.; h. 435
East Main St., Rochester, N. Y. ; sum-
mer, Linden, N. Y.
P., I.. T.— Born Rochester, N. Y., July
15. 1853. Pupil of Wm. H. Holmes and
Thomas Moran. Member: Rochester
AC; Picture Painters C. (pres.); Muni-
cipal Art Com. (sec); Chicago A. G.
JONES, Thomas B., 5113 Chester Ave.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
JONGERS, Alphonse, 40 West 59th St..
New York, N. Y.
Port. P.— Born in France, Nov. 17, 1872.
Pupil of Ecole des Beaux-Arts under
Delaunay and Gustave Moreau; studied
two years in Spain. Came to U. S. in
1897. M em b er : SAA 1905; ANA 1906;
Lotos C. Awards: Silver medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; third class medal,
Paris Salon, 1909. Work: "William T.
Evans," National Gallery, Washington,
D. C; "Louise" and "Arthur H. Hearn,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York, N. Y.
JONSON, C. Raymond, 19 East Pearson
St., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Chariton, la., July 18, 1891.
Pupil of W. J. Reynolds. Member:
"Cor Ardens." Work: "The Bur
Reed," a decoration, City of Chicago;
"Irony," University of Oklahoma, Nor-
man; "Mountain Vista," Mississippi Art
Asso., Jackson, Miss.
JORDAN, David W(ilson), 19 West Ash-
mead PI., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
Ldscp.P. — Born Harrisburg, Pa., June 2,
1859. Pupil of PAFA under Schiissele
and Eakins. Member: ACPhila.;
Phila. Sketch C; Fellowship PAFA.
JORDAN, Mildred C, 129 Whalley Ave.,
New Haven, Conn.
Min.P. — Born Portland, Me. Pupil of
Yale School of Fine Arts. Member:
New Haven Paint and Clay C.
JOSEPH, Adelyn L., 4334 Drexel Blvd.,
Chicago, 111.
S., I., C, W. — Born Chicago, June 16,
1895. Pupil of Mulligan and Polasek.
Member: Chicago SA; SW Sc; Chi-
cago AG.
JOSEPH!, I(saac) A., 106 West 57th St.;
h. 321 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y.
Min.P., Ldscp.P.— Born New York. Pu-
pil of ASL of N. Y.; Bonnat in Paris.
Member: AS Min.P. (ex-pres.);
AWCS; Royal Soc. of Min. Painters, Lon-
don; Salma.C. 1890; Lotos C.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Exp.,
1900; silver medal, Charleston Exp.,
1902.
JOSLYN, Adele, 185 Lancaster Ave.,
Buffalo, N. Y. (P., T.)
JOULLIN, Mme. Luclle, Caffney Bldg.,
376 Sutter St.; h. 745 47th Ave., San
Francisco, Calif.
P.— Born Illinois, Aug. 7, 1876. Pupil
of John Vanderpoel, Fred Freer, Ralph
Clarkson, AIC, Arthur Mathews, San
Francisco Art Asso. Work: "Alger-
ian Slave," Bohemian Club, San Fran-
cisco, Calif,
JUDD, Neale M., National Museum,
Washington, D. C.
S.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
JUDSON, Alice, 58 West 57th St., New
York, N. Y.; h. 9 Leonard St., Beacon,
N. Y.
P.— Born Beacon, N. Y. Pupil of ASL of
N. Y. and J. H. Twachtman. Mem-
ber: N.A. Women PS. Work: Over
mantle decoration, Administration Bldg.,
Matteawan State Hospital, Beacon,
N. Y.
JUDSON, Almira, 123 Edgewood Ave.,
San Francisco, Calif; summer, Los
Gatos, Calif.
P. — Born Milwaukee, Wis. Pupil of
Woman's Academy, Munich; Colorossi in
Paris; Henri in New York. Member:
San F.A.A.
JUDSON, Jane Berry Castile, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
JUDSON, iVIrs. IVIinnie Lee, Main St.,
Stratford, Conn.
P.— Born Milford. Conn., Oct. 20. 1866.
Pupil of Yale School of Fine Arts.
Member: Conn. AFA.; New Haven
PCC.
JUDSON, William L(ees), College of Fine
Arts, 212 Thorne St.; h. 201 Avenue 66,
Los Angeles, Cal.
P., T. — Born Manchester, England, Apr.
1, 1842. Came to U. S. 1852. Pupil of
J. B. Irving in New York; Boulanger
and Lefebyre in Paris. Member:
Calif AC; Laguna Beach AA. Dean,
College of Fine Arts, Univ. of Southern
California since 1901. Author of "Kuhle-
born," "Building of a Picture," etc.
JUERGENS, Alfred, 213 South Grove
Ave., Oak Park, 111.
P. — Born Chicago, Aug. 5, 1866. Pupil
of Chicago AD; Munich Royal Academy,
under Gysis and Diez. Member:
Chicago SA; Munich Artists Assoc; Art-
ists Assoc, of Germany; Soc.Inter.des
Beaux-Arts. Awards : Silver medal,
Madrid and Munich; Cahn prize ($100),
AIC 1914; bronze medal, P. -P.Exp., San
F., 1915; William Randolph Hearst $300
prize, AIC. Work: "John the Baptist
at the River Jordan" and "Suffer Little
Children to Come Unto Me," St. Paul's
Church, Chicago; "November After-
noon," Cliff Dwellers Club, Chicago;
"Afternoon in May," Municipal Gallery,
Art Institute, Chicago, 1913; "Lilac
Time," Union League Club, Chicago;
"A Lilac Bush," Clark Gallery, Grand
Rapids, Mich.
JULIUS, Oscar H., 67 West 87th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Me m b e r : Salma. C.
JUNGE, Carl S(tephen), 143 South Harvey
Ave., Oak Park, 111.
P., L— Born Stockton, Cal., June 5,
1880. Pupil of School of Art in Lon-
don; Julian Academy in Paris.
Awards : Prizes 1916, 1917 and 1921
from American Bookplate Society.
JUSTICE, IVIartin, 33 West 67th St., New
York, N. Y.
I., P.— M ember: SI 1911.
466
JUSZKO
WHO'S WHO IN ART
KAVANAUGH
JUSZKO, J(eno), 59 East 59th St., New
York, N. Y.
■S.— Born in Hungary. Nov. 26,' 1880.
Member: NSS; Salma. C; Anr.. Nu-
mismatic Soc. Work: Monument of
Archbishop Samy. Santa Fe, N. M.
KAELIN, Charles S(alis), Atlantic Ave.,
Rockport, Mass.
P.— Born Cincinnati, Dec. 19, 1858. Pupil
of Cincinnati Art School; ASL of N. Y.
Member: Cincinnati AC; AWCS.
Award : Silver medal, P. -P.Exp., San
P., 1915. Work: "Pastel," Cincin-
nati Museum; Queen City Club; Univer-
sity Club.
KAGANN, Theo. 1497 South Blvd., New
York, N. Y. (S.)
KAHILL, Joseph B., 562 Congress St.; h.
2 Crescent St., Portland, Me.
Port.P. — Born Alexandria, Egypt, May
15. 1882. Pupil of Charles L. Fox, Rich-
ard Miller, Collin and Prinet in Paris.
Member: Paris AAA : PSA of Port-
land. Represented in Walker Art Gal-
lery of Bowdoin College.
KAHILL, Victor, 1429 Arch St., Philadel-
phia, Pa. (P.)
KAHLE, Julie, 325 West End Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: N.A. Women PS.
KAHLER, Carl 49 West 8th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
KAHLES, C. W., Queens, L. I., N. Y. (I.)
KAHN. Isaac, 2426 Reading Rd.; h. 2943
Fairfield Ave., W. H., Cincinnati, O.
P., C, W., L., T.— Born Cincinnati, O.,
Aug. 16, 1883. Pupil of Duveneck and
Lindsay. Member: Cincinnati AC.^
KAISER. August, 111 East 35th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., I., E. — Born Krumbach, Bavaria,
Germany, Oct. 2, 1889. Pupil of Sloan
in New York; Randall in St. Paul.
Member: Guild of N. Y. A. ; Attic
C. of Minneapolis.
KALDENBERG, FCrederIck) R(obert), 95
Fifth Ave.; h. 307 East 20th St., New
York, N. Y.
S., C. — Born New York, June 7, 1855.
Self-taught. Member: NSS 1893;
N. Y. Arch. Lg. 1898; N. Y. Soc. C.
A wa r d s : Bronze medal, American
Inst., New York, 1869; gold medal, Cin-
cinnati, 1884. Specialty, ivory carving.
KAMPF, Mrs. Melissa Q., 200 Rodney St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember : S.Indp.A.
KANTOR, Morris, 1947 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.; h. 230 Smith St., Brooklyn,
N. Y.
P. — Born in Russia, April 15, 1896. Pupil
of Homer Boss. Member: S.Indp. A.
27 West 8th St.. New
KARASZ, lionka
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
KARFIOL, Bernard, Ridgefleld, N. J.
P.— Born Brooklyn in 1886. Pupil of
Laurens in Paris. Member: Paris
AAA.
KARFUNKLE, David, 13 East 14th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., S., Etcher. — Born Vienna, Austria.
Pupil of NAD; Royal Academy In Mu-
nich under Herterich. Member:
Salma.C. 1907.
KASE, Pauf G(eorge), 30 North 8th St.,
Reading Pa.; h. Mount Penn, Pa.
P., C. — Born Reading, Pa., Nov. 4, 1896.
Pupil of Breckenridge and PAFA.
Member: Fellowship PAFA. Work:
"Rocks, Bluff Point," Reading Museum
of Art.
KASSEL, Morris, 220 West 42nd St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
KATO, Kentaro, 131 West 23d St., New
York, N. Y.; h. Fukuoka, Japan.
P. — Born in Japan, Nov. 15, 1889.
Pupil of Henry Read. Award : Sec-
ond Hallgarten prize, NAD, 1920.
KATOAKA, Genjiro, 57 Hayashicho, Kois-
hikawa, Tokio, Japan.
P., I. — Born Arita, Japan, 1867. Pupil
of J. H. Twachtman in New York.
Member: NYWCC; Salma.C. 1889.
Award: Morgan prize, Salma.C. 1905.
KATZENSTEIN, Elizabeth Gutman,
See Mrs. E. G. Kaye.
KATZIEFF, Julius D., 126 Dartmouth St.,
h. 46 Cortes St., Boston, Mass.; sum-
mer, Rockport, Mass.
P., E.— Born Lithuania, Oct. 16, 1892.
Pupil of Boston Museum School and
PAFA.
KAUFFMAN, G. Francis, 5005 West
Superior St., Chicago, 111. (I.)
KAUFMAN. Jean Francois, 1208 Carnegie
Hall; h. 883 Seventh Ave., New York,
N. Y.
P., S., E., A., W.— Born Uznach, Switz-
erland, Oct. 31, 1870. Pupil of Gerome,
Ecole Nationale des Beaux-Arts, Paris.
Works: "Portrait Hon. Asa Bird
Gardner," War Department, Washing-
ton, D. C. ; decorations in Monumental
Church, Richmond, Va. ; monumental
bronze bust, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
KAUFMANN, Ferdinand, 9 Wood St.; h.
908 Cherokee St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — Born Oberhausen, Germany, Oct.
17, 1864. Pupil of Laurens, Constant
and Bouguereau in Paris. Member:
Paris AAA; Pittsburgh A A.
KAULA, Lee Lufkin (Mrs. W. J. Kaula),
311 Fenway Studios, 30 Ipswich St..
Boston, Mass.
P.— Born Erie, Pa. Pupil of C. M.
Dewey in New York; Aman-Jean in
Paris. i
KAULA, William J(urlan), 311 Fenway
Studios, 30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.
Ldscp.P. — Born Boston, 1871. Pupil of
Normal Art School and Cowles Art
School in Boston; Collin in Paris.
Member: Boston AC; NYWCC; Paris
AAA; Boston WCC; Boston GA.
Award: Bronze medal, P. -P.Exp.,
San F., 1915.
KAVANAUGH, Marlon. See Mrs. Elmer
Wachtel.
467
KAVANAUGH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
KELLER
KAVANAUGH, Katharine (Mrs. William
V. Cahill), 2625 Polk St., San Francisco,
Calif.
P.— Born Falmouth, Ky., May 5, 1890.
Pupil of Wm. V. Cahill. Member:
Southern Calif. AC; Laguna Beach AA.
KAWACHI, J(oseph) B(unzo), 170 Fifth
Ave.; h. 291 East 155th St., New York,
N. Y.
P., C. — Born Toyoaka Tajima, Japan,
June 26, 1885. Studied in Japan. M e m-
b e r: S. Indp. A.
KAY, Gertrude A., 133 South Union Ave.,
Alliance, O.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
KAYE, Mrs. Elizabeth Gutman, 856 Park
Ave., Baltimore, Md.
P.— Born Baltimore, Md., Sept. 5, 1887.
Pupil of S. Edwin Whiteman, Hugh
Breckenridge and H. B. Snell.
KAYE, Joseph, 429 Fourth Ave., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
KEANE, Theodore J., 5027 Dorchester
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born in San Francisco in 1880.
Pupil of Calif. School of Design and
AIC. Member: Palette and Chisel
C; Chicago SA; Cliff Dwellers; NAC;
Attic C. of Minneapolis. Specialty ani-
mal paintings. Formerly director of
Minneapolis Society of Fine Arts and
dean of School of the Chicago Art
Institute.
KEARFOTT, Robert, care of McCann
Agency, 415 Montgomery St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif. (P., I.)
KEAST, Susette S., 655 Cypress St.,
Presser Park, Veadon, Pa. (P.)
KECK, Charles, 40 West 10th St., New
York, N. Y.
S.— Member: NSS 1906; N.Y.Arch.
Lg. 1909; Allied AA.
KEELER, Charles B., Fin del Viaje,
Glendora, Los Angeles Co., Calif.
P., E.— Born Cedar Rapids, la.. 1882.
Pupil of AI Chicago; Johansen, Stevens
and Nordfeldt. Member: Chicago
SE. Awards : Silver medal for
etchings, St. Paul Inst.. 1915; hon. men-
tion, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915.
KEELER (Louis Bertrand) Roiston, Sam-
mis Ave., Huntington, Suffolk Co., N. Y.
P.— Born New York, Nov. 9, 1882. Pupil
of NAD. Member: Lg. of N.Y.A.
KEELER, (R.) Burton, 224 West 11th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Philadelphia, April 5, 1886.
Pupil of PAFA. Member: N. Y.
Arch. Lg. ; Guild of Free Lance A.
Awards : Cresson Traveling Schol-
arship, PAFA, 1911 and 1912.
KEELEY, Mrs. Lester, 217 Dean St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
KEEP, Helen, 753 Jefferson Ave
troit, Mich. (P.)
KEEP, Virginia.
Clark.
See Mrs.
De-
Marshall
KEFFER, Frances, Hillsdale, N. J.
P., T.— Born Des Moines, la., Jan. 6,
1881. ■ Pupil of Pratt Inst., Alex. Robin-
son, Frank Brangwyn, Ossip Linde.
Member: N.A. Women PS; Nanuet
Painters; Lg. of N.Y.A. Award : $100
prize Women's Club, Des Moines, Iowa,
1912.
KEHRER, F. A., 24 W. Maynard Ave..
Columbus, O.
I. — M ember: Pen and Pencil Club,
Columbus.
KEISTER, Roy C, 1909 Republic Bldg.;
h. 805 Crescent PI., Chicago, 111.
I.— Born in Ohio in 1886. Pupil of AIC.
Me m b e r : Palette and Chisel C.
KEITH, Dora Wheeler (Mrs. B. Keith).
33 West 67th St., New York, N. Y.; and
Onteora, Catskills, N. Y.
P., I., C— Born Jamaica, L. I., N. Y.,
March 8, 1857. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.
and of Chase; studied in Paris. Mem-
ber: SAA 1886; ANA 1906. Awards:
Prang prize ($500), 1885; Prang prize
($2,000), 1886; hon. mention, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
KEITH, Warren, 132 East 29th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
KELLER, Arthur l(gnatius), 250th St.
and Goodrich Ave., New York, N. Y. ;
summer, Cragsmoor, Ulster Co.* N. Y.
I., P.— Born New York, July 4, 1866.
Pupil of NAD under Wilmarth and
Ward; Loefftz In Munich. Member:
AWCS; NYWCC; AI Graphic A.;
NAC; SI 1901 (ex-pres.); Salma. C.
1900; Guild of Free Lance Artists.
Awards : Gold medal for water
color, ACPhila. 1899; silver medal, Paris
Exp., 1900; bronze medal for drawings,
Pan -Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; Evans
prize, AWCS 1902; second prize ($300),
"Herald" Christmas competition, 1904;
gold medal for illustrations and silver
medal for paintings. St. Louis Exp,.
1904; Isidor prize, Salma.C. 1914; gold
medal for illustrations, P.-P.Exp., San
F.. 1915. Work: "At Mass," Munich
Academy. Illustrated: "The Virginian,"
"The Right of Way." Trving's "Legend
of Sleepy Hollow," "Her Letter," "The
Red City," "The World for Sale," "The
Valley of Fear," "Graustark," "The
Fortunate Youth."
KELLER, Clyde Leon, 450 Wabash Ave.,
Portland, Ore. (P.)
KELLER, Edgar, 77 "West 50th St., New
York, N. Y.; 6523 Hollywood Blvd., Los
Angeles, Cal.
P.— M ember: Phila. AC.
KELLER, George, 24 Park Terrace, Hart-
ford, Conn.
P. — M ember: Conn, AFA.
KELLER, Henry George, 1381 Addison
Road. Cleveland. O.
P.— Born Cleveland. Apr. 3. 1870. Pupil
of Bergman at Diisseldorf; Balsche at
Karlsruhe; Zijgel at Munich. Award:
Silver medal, Munich. 1902. Specialty,
animals. Work: "In the Sand Pit,"
Cleveland Museum. Instructor of com-
position and design, Cleveland School
of Art.
468
KELLER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
KENNEDY
KELLER, Marie De Ford, St. James
Apartment, Charles and Center St.,
Baltimore, Md. (P., I., T.)
KELLOGG, Edmund P(hilo), 30 North
Michigan Ave.; h. 3546 Ellis Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.
P., 1., T. — Born Chicago, 1879. Pupil of
Freer, Duveneck, Chase and Albert
Herter. Member: JO^sierners Alumni
of AIC; Chicago AC. Represented in
St. Paul Institute; "Ready for Flight,"
Chicago Athletic Asso. Instructor at
The Academy of Fine Arts, Chicago,
111.
KELLY, Annie D., 1919 N St.. N. W..
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC. ; S.
Wash. A.
KELLY, James E(dward), 318 West 57th
St., New York. N. Y.
S., I.— Born New York, July 30, 1855.
Pupil of NAD and ASL of N. Y.; Theo-
dore Robinson and Carl Hlrschberg.^ Il-
lustrated for "Harper's," etc., until
1881; since exclusively sculptor.
Work: "Monmouth Battle Monu-
ment"; equestrian Gen. Sherman; "Col.
Roosevelt at San Juan Hill," etc.
KELLY, Juiia, 15 North Hempstead Turn-
pike, Great Neck, Long Island, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
KELLY, J. Redding, 55 West 95th St.,
New York, N. Y.; h. Yorktown, N. Y.
Port. P., T.— Born New York, Aug. 5,
1873. Pupil of NAD. Member:
Salma.C. 1898. Professor in Art Dept.,
College of the City of New York.
KELIVIAN, Ben(jamin), 1692 Park Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I., T. — Born Roumania, April 5,
1890. Pupil of Pennsylvania Academy
of Fine Arts, NAD. Member: Lg.
of N.Y.A.; Graphic Sketch Club. Rep-
resented in Graphic Sketch Club of
Philadelphia.
KEMBLE E(dward) W(indsor), care Les-
lie's Weekly, New York, N. Y.
I. — Born Sacramento. Cal., Jan. 18. 1861.
Self-taught. Specialty, negro subjects.
Illustrated: "Uncle Tom's Cabin,"
"Huckleberry Finn"; author "Kemble's
Coons."
KEMP, Oliver, Knickerbocker Bldg., 116
West 39th St.; h. 1046 Am.sterdam Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; suriimer, Bowerbank,
Piscataquis Co., Maine.
P., I., W.— Born Trenton. N. J., May
13, 1882. Pupil of Howard Pyle. Chase,
Gerome. Illustrations for "Scribner's,"
"Harper's," "Century," "Saturday Eve-
ning Post."
KEMPER, Ruby Webb, Milford, Ohio.
P., C. — Born Cincinnati, Ohio, Dec. 8,
1883. Pupil of T. E. Noble, L. H. Mea-
kin, W. H. Fry, Frank Duveneck, Anna
Riis. Member: Cincinnati Ceramic
Club; Cincinnati Woman's AC; The
Crafters Soc.
KEMPTON, Elmira. 916 Main St.; h. 75
South 17th St.. Richmond, Ind.
P., C. — Born Richmond, Ind., Aug. 9.
1892. Pupil of James R. Hopkins, H. H.
Wessel; C. J. Barnhorn. Member:
Indiana Artists' Club.
KENDAL, Minerva, 1738 N St., Washing-
ton, D. C.
P.— M ember: S. Wash. A.
KENDALL, Beatrice, 58 Trumbull St.,
New Haven, Conn.
P.— Born New York City, Jan. 14, 1902.
Pupil of Yale School of the Fine Arts.
KENDALL, Elisabetli, 58 Trumbull St.,
New Haven, Conn.
P., S., I. — Born Gerrish Island, Maine,
Sept. 22, 1896. Pupil of Yale School of
the Fine Arts.
KENDALL, Margaret (Stickney) (Mrs.
Sergeant Kendall), 58 Trumbull St., New
Haven, Conn.
Min.P.— Born Staten Island, N. Y., Nov.
29, 1871. Pupil of J. Alden Weir,
Rolshoven and Sergeant Kendall.
Member: Am. S. Min.P.; New Haven
PCC. Award : Bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904.
KENDALL, Mrs. Marie B(oening), 2122
Perkins Ave., Long Beach, Calif.; sum-
mer, Laguna Beach, Cal.
P., T.— Born Mt. Morris, N. Y., Aug.
16, 1885. Pupil of William M. Chase
and Jean Mannheim. Los Angeles College
of Fine Arts. Member: Calif. AC;
West Coast Arts; S. Indp. A. W^ o r k :
Three paintings in the Virginia Hotel,
Long Beach, Calif.
KENDALL (William) Sergeant, School
of Fine Arts, Yale University; h. 58
Trumbull St., New Haven, Conn.
P., S. — Born Spuyten Duyvil, N. Y., Jan.
20, 1869. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Eakins
in Philadelphia; Ecole des Beaux-Arts
and Merson in Paris. Member: SAA
1898: ANA 1901, NA 1905; Nat.Inst.AL;
NYWCC; Conn.AFA; Century Assoc;
New Haven PCC. Dean School of
Fine Arts of Yale Univ. since 1913.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1891; medal, Columbian Exp., Chi-
cago, 1893; Lippincott prize, PAFA
1894; hon. mention, Tennessee Cen-
tennial Exp., Nashville, 1897; second
prize, Worcester Museum, 1900; bronze
medal, Paris Exp., 1900; bronze
medal, C.I. Pittsburgh, 1900; second
prize. Worcester Museum, 1901; silver
medal for painting, bronze medal for
drawing and hon. mention for sculpture,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; Shaw prize,
SAA 1901; Shaw Fund Purchase, §AA
1903; gold medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
Isidor medal, NAD 1908; Harris prize,
AIC 1908; Palmer gold medal. AIC 1910;
gold medal for painting and silver medal
for sculpture, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915;
Butler prize, AIC, 1918. Work: "Be-
atrice." Pennsvlvania Academy, Phila-
delphia; "The 'Seer" and "Psyche," Met-
ropolitan Museum, New York; "An In-
terlude," National Gallery, Washington;
"Narcissa." Corcoran Gallery, Wash-
ington; "Crosslights," Detroit Institute
of Arts; "Intermezzo," R. I. School o'
Design, Providence,
KENNEDY, Lawrence, 30 North Michi-
gan Blvd.. Chicago, 111.; h. 29 N. Oak
St., Hinsdale. 111.
P.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., Oct. 31, 1880.
Pupil AIC. Member: Chicago SA. ;
Cliff Dwellers.
469
KENNEDY
WHO'S WHO IN ART
KIER
KENNEDY, Sam(uel) J(ames), 4 East
Ohio St., Chicago, 111.; summer, Lag-una
Beach, Calif.
P. — Born Mt. Pleasant, Mich., June 7,
1877. Pupil of Henri Martin. Mem- ,,
b e r : Chicago SA. Work: "Young "^
Genius," Mt. Pleasant Public Gallery;
"The Marshes," Library of Michigan
Agricultural College. K
KENNEL, Louis, 741 Monroe St., New
Durham. N. J.; h. 212 Palisade Ave.,
Union Hill, N. J.; summer, Middlebury, k
Conn.
P. — Born North Bergen, N. J., May 7,
1886. Pupil of George Bridgman, Wm.
H. Lippincot, Charles Graham, Ernest
Gros. Member: S.Indp.A. Designs ^
stage scenery. ^
KENT, Ada Howe, 29 Atkinson St.,
Rochester, N. Y.
P. — Born Rochester. Pupil of Brush,
Abbott Thayer and Whistler. Mem-
ber: NYWCC.
KENT, Dorothy, Tarrytown, N. Y. (P.)
KENT, Rockwell, care of M. Knoedler &
Co., 556 Fifth Ave., 101 Park Ave., New k-
York, 2T. Y. *^
P. — Born Tarrytown Heights, N. Y.,
June 21, 1882. Pupil of Chase, Henri,
Hayes Miller, Thayer. Work: "Ma-
rine," in Metropolitan Museum, New K
York.
KENYON, Henry R., Ipswich, Mass.
P. — Member: Providence AC. Work:
"Landscape. Holland," "November Twi-
light" and "Venice," Rhode Island
School of Design, Providence.
KEPLINGER, Lena Miller, Bethesda. Md.
P.— M ember: Wash.WCC.
KER, Marie SIgsbee. See Mrs. A. O.
Fischer.
KERIGAN, Mrs. Ambrose, Jr. See Mil-
dred Post.
KERN, Josephine M., 5718 Kenwood Ave.,
Chicago, 111. (S.) j.
KERNS, Fannie M., 916 Grattan St., Los
Angeles, Calif.
P., I., C, T. — Born Los Angeles, Calif.
Pupil of Arthur Dow, Frank Ingerson,
Ralph Johonnot. Member: Chicago
Fine Arts Soc. ; Boston SAC.
KERR, Mrs. Chester, 55 East 76th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
KERR, George, Art Department, "N. Y.
Journal," New York. N. Y. K
I.— M ember: SI 1913.
KERR, Irene Waite, 144 East 14th St., K
Oklahoma Citv, Okla.
P., L.. T. — Born Pauls Valley, Okla., ^
Jan. 11, 1873. Pupil of Walcott, Clark- "^
son, William M. Chase, James Eraser
DuMond and P. L. Mora. Member:
Okla. AA. Award : First and second
prizes, Okla. State Fair.
KETCHAM. Susan M., 1010 Carnegie Hall, ^
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Ogunquit,
Me.
P. — Born Indianapolis, Ind. Pupil of
ASL of N. Y., under Chase and Bell. K
Member: ASL of N. Y.; N. A.
Women PS. Award : Filing prize,
470
N.Y. Woman's AC 1908. Work: "A
Young Student"; "Beatrix," "The Rest,
less Sea, Ogunquit, Me.," Herron Art
Inst., Indianapolis.
ETTEN, Maurice, 50 West 67th St.,
New York. N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI 1913.
ETTERER, Gustav, 1502 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Phila.AC.
EUHNE, Max, 18 Bank St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born in New York, Nov. 7, 1880.
Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller, Chase
and Henri.
EY, Mabel, 610 Fullerton Parkway,
Chicago, 111.
P., T. — Born Paris, France, 1874, of
American parents. Member: Wis.
PS. Awards: Hon. mention for
water color, St. Paul Inst., 1915; silver
medal, St. Paul Inst., 1916; hon. men-
tion, Milwaukee Art Inst., 1917; silver
medal. Wis. PS, 1919. Instructor, Mil-
waukee Art Institute.
EYS, Harry J., "Columbus Citizen," Co-
lumbus, O.
I. — M ember: Pen and Pencil C, Co-
lumbus.
EYSER, Ephraim, 2408 Linden Ave.,
Baltimore, Md.
S., T.— Born Baltimore, Oct. 6, 1850.
Pupil of Royal Academies in Munich
and Berlin. Member: NSS 1907;
Charcoal C. of Baltimore. Awards :
Silver medal, Munich Academy; first
class medal. New Orleans Exp., 1885.
Work : Maj. Gen. Baron de Kalb, An-
napolis. Md.; memorial to Pres. Chester
A. Arthur, Rural Cemetery, Albany,
N. Y. ; "Psyche," life size marble. Cin-
cinnati Art Museum: "Bust of Sidney
Lanier," Johns Hopkins University. In-
structor Rinehart School ibr Sculpture,
Maryland Inst.
EYSER, Ernest Wise, 249 West 74th St.,
New York, N. Y.
S., P.— Born Baltimore, Md., 1874. Pu-
pil of Maryland Inst. Art School in Bal-
timore: ASL of N. Y. ; .Tnllan Academy
In Paris; Augustus S'aint Gaudens,
Member: NSS 1902; Paris AAA; N.Y.
Arch.Lg. 1908. Work: "Enoch Pratt
Memorial." Baltimore: A dm. Schley
statue, Annapolis: "Sir Galahad" for
Harper memorial, Ottawa, Canada.
IBBEY, liah Marion. 4001 Genesee St.,
Kansas City, Mo. (P.)
IDDER, Ben L., 57 West 57th St., New
York, N. Y. (L)
IDDER, Frank Howard, 210 South Main
St., New Canaan. Conn.
P.— Born Litchfield, Conn., Sept. 16,
1886. Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller
and Denys Wortman.
lEFER, Sam P., 147 West Maynard Ave.,
Columbus, O.
P. — M ember: Pen and Pencil C, Co-
lumbus.
lER, Sadie, Geneva College, Beaver
Falls. Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
KILENYI
WHO'S WHO IN ART
KING
KILENYI, Julio, 20 East 90th St., New
York. N. Y.
S., Medalist — Born in Hungary, 1885.
Member: N.Y. Arch. Lg. ; Lg. of
N.Y.A.; NSS; Am. Numismatic Soc;
Allied AA. Designer of distinguished
service medal of the U. S. Navy Dept.
Represented in the Metropolitan Mu-
seum of Art and Numismatic Museum,
New York; Cleveland Museum of Art;
Boston Museum of Fine Arts; Massa-
chusetts Historical Museum.
KILROY, J. C, 3rd and Liberty Sts.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
KIMBALL, Alonzo M(yron), 2248 Euclid
Ave., Cleveland, Ohio.
P., I. — Born Green Bay, Wis., Aug. 14,
1874. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Julian
Academy in Paris, under Lefebvre,
also Whistler and Courtois. Member:
SI 1911.
KIMBALL, H. M., 285 Ridgewood Ave.,
Glen Ridge, N. J. (P.)
KIMBALL, Isabel Moore, 290 Adelphi St.,
h. 65 Quincy St., Brooklyn, New York,
N. Y. ; summer, Riceville, la.
S. — Born Wentworth, Mitchell Co., la.
Pupil of Herbert Adams. Member:
N. A. Women PS.; Brooklyn SA.
Work: "Wenonah" Fountain in Cen-
tral Park, Winona, Minn. ; gold medal,
Y. M. C. A. swimming and life saving;
Richards memorial tablet, Vassar Col-
lege; Barrett memorial. Historical Soc,
Des Moines, Iowa; War Memorial Tab-
let for Essex County.
KIMBALL, Katharine, care of Brown,
Shipley & Co., 123 Pall Mall. London,
S. W., England.
E., I. — Born in New Hampshire. Pupil
of NAD in New York; Royal College of
Art, London. Member : Asso. Royal
Soc. of Painter-Etchers and Engravers,
London; Section de Gravure, Salon
d'Automne, Paris; Chicago SE.
Award: Bronze medal, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915. Illustrated: Okey's
"Story of Paris;" Gialliat- Smith's
"Brussels;" Stirling Taylor's "Canter-
bury" and "Rochester," etc. Work:
Complete set in Bibliotheque d'Art et
d'Archeologie, Paris. Work in Vic-
toria and Albert Museum, London;
New York Public Library; Boston Mu-
seum of Fine Arts; Library of Congress,
Washington, D. C. ; Oakland (Calif.)
Public Museum.
KIMBEL, Richard, care of Salmagundi
Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
KIMBEL, Richard M., 13 West 30th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Allied AA.
KIMBERLY, Cara Draper (Mrs. Samuel
A. Kimberly), 2112 O St., N. W., Wash-
ington, D. C.
P.— Born St. Louis, Mo. Pupil of Haw-
thorne, Vanderpoel, Messer. Member:
S. Wash. A.; Wash. WCC.
KINDLER, Alice Riddle (Mrs. Hans Kin-
dler), 1701 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Germantown. Pa., Oct. 3, 1892,
Studied PAFA. Works: "The Yellow
Still Life," Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; Mural,
"The Canterbury Pilgrimage," West
Philadelphia High School.
KINDLUND, Anna Belle Wing (Mrs. Alois
Trnka), 27 Westchester Ave., White
Plains, N. Y.
P.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Feb. 18, 1876.
Pupil of Lucius W. Hitchcock in Buf-
falo; George Bridgman in New York.
Member: Buffalo Soc. of Artists;
N.Y.Soc.C. Awards : Hon. mention,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; silver medal
for miniatures, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915.
KING, Albert F., 605 McCance Bldg.; h.
815 South Braddock Ave., Pittsburgh,
Pa.
P.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., Dec. 6, 1854.
Self-taught. Member: Pittsburgh
AA; S.Indp.A. Work: Portrait in
Homeopathic Hospital and in Duquesne
Club, Pittsburgh, Pa.
KING, Charles B., 814 Jefferson Ave., De-
troit. Mich.
P., E.— Born Angel Island, Cal., Feb. 2,
1869. Pupil of Laurens in Paris; Bran-
gwyn in London. Member: Soc.de la
Gravure Originale en Couleur, Paris;
Chicago SE. Work in: New York
Public Library; Library of Congress,
Washington, D. C.
KING, Clement, Walkerville, Ont., Can-
ada.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
KING, Edward, Prospect Ave., Pelham
Manor, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
KING, Emma B., 2118 North Talbott St.,
Indianapolis, Ind.
P. — Born Indianapolis. Pupil of Cox,
Beckwith, Chase and ASL in New York;
Boulanger, Lefebvre, Carolus-Duran
and Frank E. Scott in Paris. Mem-
ber: ASL of N. Y.
KING, Gertrude, 32 Miller St., Newark,
N. J.
P. — M ember: N.A. Women PS.
KING, Hamilton, 200 West 57th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Lewiston, Me., Dec. 21,
1871. Pupil of Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: SI 1915.
KING, James S., 798 Valley Road, Upper
Montclair, N. J.
Etcher, P.— Born New York, Dec. 26,
1852. Pupil of Ecole des Beaux-Arts
under Gerome. Member: Salma.C.
1884; Allied AA.
KING, Louise H. See Mrs. Kenyon Cox.
KING, Paul, 10 South 18th St., Philadel-
phia; h. 279 West Tulpehocken St., Ger-
mantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Feb. 9, 1867.
Pupil of ASL of Buffalo; ASL of N. Y.
under Mowbray. Member: ANA;
Salma.C; AC Phila.; A. Fund S.; A.Aid
S.; Allied AA. Awards: Shaw prize,
Salma C. 1906; Inness prize, Salma.C.
1906; hon,. mention. AC Phila. 1911; gold
471
KING
WHO'S WHO IN ART
KITSON
medal, Phila.AC 1913; silver medal,
P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915; Philadelphia
prize, PAFA, 1918. Work: "A Cool
Retreat," Engineers' Club, New York;
"Boulder Pass," Art Club of Philadel-
phia; "Sailing- Boats," Reading Museum.
KING, W. B., 118 East 28th St., New
York, N. Y.
L— M ember: SI 1910.
KINGSBURY, Edward R(eynolds), 24 St.
Botolph St., Boston, Mass.; summer,
Ogunquit, Me.
P., T. — Born Boston. Pupil of Mass.
Normal Art School and Boston Museum
School; studied in Paris. Member:
Boston AC; Salma.C. Work: "Time
and the World," mural painting in
Charlestown (Mass.) High School.
KINKEAD, Charles Edwin, 253 Lawrence
St., New Haven, Conn.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
KINNEY, Margaret West (Mrs. Troy
Kinney), 154 East 38th 'St., New York,
N. Y.
I.— Born Peoria, 111., June 11, 1872.
PuDil of ASL of N. Y.; Julian Academy
in 'Paris under Robert-Fleury, Collin,
Merson and Lefebvre. Member: As-
soc. SI 1912.
KINNEY. Troy, 154 East 38th St., New
York, N. Y.
I.,E. — Born Kansas City, Mo., Dec. 1,
1871. Pupil of AIC; N. Y. School of
Art. Member: Chicago SE; Brook-
lyn SE; New York SE.; N. Y. Arch.
Lg. Work in Chicago Art Institute.
Specialty, decorations and etchings.
KINSELLA, James, 438 West 20th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Marblehead,
Mass.
P._Born New York, Dec. 14, 1857. Pu-
pil of NAD; Ecole des Beaux- Arts In
Paris. Member: A. Aid S.; NAG
(life). Award: Silver medal, AAS
1903. Work: "Seven O'Clock from
Manasquan," Museum of Newark
(N. J.) Technical School.
KINSEY, Alberta, ^Vilmington, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's AC.
KINSMAN-WATERS, R., 1143 Lincoln
Road, Columbus, O.
P.— M ember: NYWCC.
KIRALFY, Verona A(rnold), Corner 3rd
and Wood Sts., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Port. P.— Born New York City in 1893.
Pupil of Chase and ASL of N. Y.
Member: Pittsburgh AA.
KIRBY, C. Valentine, 219 State St., Har-
risburg, Pa.
C, W., L., T.— Born Canajoharie, N. Y.,
July 19, 1875. Pupil ASL. of N.Y.
Member: Pittsburgh AA. ; Phila.
Sketch C. State director of Art Educa-
tion, Harrisburg, Pa.
KIRKHUM, Mrs. R. N., 3615 Macomb St.,
Washington, D. C.
P. — M ember: S. Wash. A.
KIRKPATRICK, Marion Powers (Mrs. W.
A. Kirkpatrick). See Powers.
KIRKPATRICK, W(i I I i a m) A(rber-
Brown), 30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.;
h. Waldoboro, Me.; summer, Friendship,
Me.
I., P. — Born in England. Studied in
Paris and London. Member: Bos-
ton AC; St. Botolph C.
KIRPAL, Elsa. See Mrs. Tower Peterson.
KIRSCH, Agatiia, care of Bon Marche,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
KIRTLAND, Elizabeth Scribner, 40 Bene-
dict Ave., Tarrytown, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
KISSACK, R. A., 411 Algonquin PI., Web-
ster Grove, Mo.
P.— Born St. Louis. March 4, 1876. Pu-
pil of St. Louis School of Fine Arts and
studied in Paris. Member: St.
Louis AG. Award : Gold medal, St.
Louis School of Fine Arts.
KITSON, H(enry) H(udson), St. Botolph
Studios, 4 Harcourt St., Boston, Mass.
S. — Born Huddersfield, England, Apr. 9,
1865. Pupil of Ecole des Beaux-Arts in
Paris under Bonnaissieux. Member:
Copley S. 1899; Boston SAC; Bos-
ton AC; Eclectics. Awards: Three
gold medals, Mass. Charitable Me-
chanics' Association; gold medal,
American Art Association, New York,
1886; bronze medal, Paris Exp.,
1889; medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago,
1893; decoration from King of Rouma-
nia; medal Paris Exp., 1900. Work:
"The Minute Man," Lexington, Mass.;
Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Dyer Memorial
Fountain, Providence; W. M. Hunt
Memorial, Boston; "Music of the Sea,"
Boston Museum; "Viscount James
Bryce," bronze bust. National Gallery,
Washington, D. C. ; National Gallery,
London, England; Newark Museum;
"Admiral Self ridge," Vicksburg, Miss.;
"Roger Conant statute," Salem, Mass.;
Patrick A. Collins Monument," "Robert
Burns Monument," Henry B. Endicott
Memorial," "Gov. Banks' Monument,"
Boston, Mass.; "Farragut Statute";
"Lt. Gen. Stephen D. Lee,' ' "Gen,
Martin L. Smith," "Iowa State Memo-
rial," Vicksburg, Miss.; "Thomas A.
Doyle statute," Providence, R. I.; "Walt
Whitman," bust, London, England;
"Elizabeth, Queen of Roumania (Car-
men Sylva)',, "Carol, King of Rou-
mania," Bucharest, Roumania; "Christ,"
Drexel Memorial Chapel, Philadelphia,
Pa.; "Haynes Memorial," Newark, N. J.
KITSON, Theo Alice Ruggies (Mrs. H. H.
Kitson), Framingham, Mass.
S. — Born Brookline, Mass., 1876. Pupil of
H. H. Kitson in Boston; Dagnan-Bou-
veret in Paris. Me m b e r : Copley S. ;
NSS. Award : Hon. mention, Paris
Salon, 1890; two medals, Mass. Chari-
table Mechanics' Assoc; bronze medal,
■St. Louis Exp., 1904. Work:
"Minute Man of '76," Framing-
ham. Mass.; "Mother Bickerdvke" group
for Illinois, "Volunteer of '61," New-
buryport, Mass.; soldier monuments at
Goshen, N. Y. ; Walden. N. Y.; Vicks-
burg, Miss.; Minneapolis, Minn.; Pasa-
dena, Calif.; Providence, R. I.; Little
Falls, R. I.; Ashburnham, Mass.; North
Andover, Mass.; North Attleboro, Mass.;
Sharon, Mass.; Topfield, Mass.
472
KITT
WHO'S WHO IN ART
KNIGHT
KITT, Mrs. Katherine, 319 South Fourth
Ave., Tucson, Ariz.
P._Born in California, Oct. 9, 1876.
Pupil of Richard Miller. Member:
Cincinnati Woman's AC.
KLAGES, Frank H(enry), 2027 North
31st St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I., T. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., July
24, 1892. Pupil of Emil Carlsen, Cecilia
Beaux, Philip Hale. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA. Award : Cresson
traveling scholarship, PAFA, 1914.
KLAGSTAD, August, 305 West Broadway;
h. 1715 Girard Ave., N., Minneapolis,
Minn.
P. — Born Bingen, Norway, Aug. 14, 1866.
Pupil of Feudell, W. J. Reynolds, AIC,
and Chicago Academy of Fine Arts.
Member: Scandinavian Art Soc. of
America. Aw a r d : Hon. mention,
Minneapolis Inst., 1915.
KLAR, Walter H., University of Pitts-
burgh, Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — Pupil of NAD; Mass. Normal Art
S. Member: Pittsburgh AA.
Award : First honorable mention,
Pittsburgh AA, 1919. Professor of Fine
and Industrial Arts, University of
Pittsburgh.
KLAUDER, Mary, Bala, Pa.
S. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
KLAW, Alonzo, Carmel, N. Y.
P.— Born Louisville, Ky., Apr. 15, 1885.
Pupil of New York School of Art, ASL
of N. Y. Member: Salma. C; AWCS;
NYWCC.
KLEIMINGER, A. F., 4164 Lake Park
Ave., Chicago, 111.; summer, Nonquitt,
Mass.
P.— Born Chicago, 111., Dec. 4, 1865. Pu-
pil of Henri Martin. Member: Chi-
cago SA; S. Indp. A.; New Bedford SA.
KLEIN, Isidore, 123 East 22nd St., New
York, N. Y.
P., E.— Born in Russia, Oct. 12, 1897.
Pupil of NAD; Fawcett Art School,
Newark. Member: S. Indp. A. ; Lg.
of N.Y.A.
KLEPPER, Frank X. E, L., 405 West
Davis St., McKinney, Texas.
P., E., T. — Born Piano, Texas, May 3,
1890. Pupil of AIC; Harry Lachman in
Paris. Award : Hon. mention, Texas
State Artists, 1916; Everts gold medal,
Texas State Artists, 1920.
KLINE, George T., 407 Mathews St.,
Columbia, Mo.
P., I., T. — Born Baltimore, Md., Aug.
22, 1874. Pupil of S. E. Whiteman.
Member: Art Lovers' Guild of Co-
lumbia. Illustrates scientific articles.
KLINE, Hibbard Van Buren, Leonia,
N. J.; summer. Fort Hunter, N. Y.
P.. I. — Born Auriesville, N. Y., Nov. 8,
1895. Pupil of College of Fine Arts,
Syracuse University; and ASL. of N.Y.
under Chase and Mora. Member:
SL
KLINE, William F(alr), 244 West 14th
St., New York, N. Y.
Mural P., I., C— Born Columbia, S. C,
May 3, 1870. Pupil of NAD under Low
and Ward, and of John La Farge in New
York; Julian Academy, tmder Bougue-
reau and Constant, and Colarossi Acad-
emy in Paris. Member: ANA 1901;
Mural P.; NYWCC, 1918; AWCS, 1919.
Awards : Lazarus traveling scholar-
ship 1894; silver medal, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; Clarke prize, NAD
1901; second Hallgarten prize, NAD
1903; bronze medal for painting and gold
for window, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
Work: Crerar Memorial Window, Sec-
ond Presbyterian Church, Chicago, 111.
KLINK, Ethel H. See Mrs. Jerome Myers.
KLOPPER, Zan(will) D(avld), 1642 West
Division St., Chicago, 111.
P., I.— Born in Russia, Oct. 20, 1870.
Pupil of Julian Academy in Paris under
Repin and Laurens. Is physician and
makes specialty of anatomical drawings.
Work: "Immaculate Conception,"
mural decoration in St. Mary's of the
Woods.
KLOTZ, L. Edmund, East Gloucester,
Mass.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
KLUMPKE, Anna Elisabeth, Chateau-de-
By, 12 Rue Rosa Bonheur, Thomery,
Seine-et-Marne, France.
P. — Born San Francisco, Cal. Pupil of.
Rosa Bonheur, Robert-Fleury, Lefebvre
and Julian Academy in Paris. Mem-
ber: Copley S. 1893. Awards: Hon.
mention, Paris Salon, 1885; silver medal,
Versailfes, 1886; Temple gold medal,
PAFA 1889; bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904. Author of "Rosa Bonheur,
sa vie son oeuvre." Work: "In the
Wash House," Pennsylvania Academy,
Philadelphia.
KNATHS, Otto Carl, Provincetown, Mass.
P.— Born Eau Claire, Wis., Oct. 21,
1892. Pupil of Chicago Art Institute.
Member: S. Indp. A.
KNAUBER, Alma, Hayes Hall, Ohio State
University, Columbus, Ohio; h. 3331
Arrow Ave., Pleasant Ridge, Cincin-
nati, Ohio.
P., T.^Born Cincinnati, Ohio, Aug. 24,
1893. Pupil of F. Duveneck, L. H. Mea-
kin, C. J. Bornhorn. Member: Cin-
cinnati AL; College AA.
KNECHT, Fern Edie, 4142A Lafayette
St., St. Louis, Mo. (P.)
KNECHT, K(arl) K(ae), Courier Bldg.;
Ill Adams Ave., "The Jae-Kae," Evans-
ville, Ind.
Cartoonist, I. — Born Iroquois, S. Dak.,
Dec. 4, 1883. Pupil of AIC. Member:
American Press Humorists. On staff of
"Evansville Courier."
KNIFFIN, Herbert R., University of
Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa.
P., T. — Studied at Cooper Union; NAD;
and in Paris and Munich. Member:
Pittsburgh AA. Professor of Fine and
Applied Art, University of Pittsburgh.
KNIGHT, Augustus, 4216 Harney St.,
Omaha, Neb.
P. — A ward: Hon. mention for water
colors, St. Paul Institute, 1916.
KNIGHT, Bert, 52 East 34th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
473
KNIGHT
WHO'S WHO IN ART
KOHLMANN
KNIGHT, Charles R(obert), 27 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y.; h. Lawrence
Park, Bronxville, N. Y.
P., S., I.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 21,
1874. Pupil of Brush and Du Mend.
Member: N.Y.Arch.T^g. 1912. Spe-
cialty, animals and birds, modern and
fossil.
KNIGHT, Clayton, 36 East 29th St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Sparkhill, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Rochester, N. Y., Mar. 30,
1891. Pupil of Von der Lancken, Henri,
and Bellows. Member: Guild of
Free Lance A. Illustrates for maga-
zines.
KNIGHT, D(anlel) Ridgway, Place de
TEglise, Poissy, Selne-et-Oise; and Rol-
leboise-par-Bonnieres, France.
P.— Born Philadelphia, 1839. Pupil of
PAFA; Ecole des Beaux Arts, Gleyre
and Meissonier in Paris. Mem-
ber: Paris SAP. Officer of the Legion
of Honor, France; Knight of St. Mi-
chael of Bavaria. Awards : Hon.
mention, Paris Salon, 1884; third class
medal, Paris Salon, 1888; gold medal,
Munich, 1888; silver medal, Paris Exp.,
1889; Legion of Honor 1889; medal, Co-
lumbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; medal of
honor, PAFA 1893; medal, Antwerp
Exp., 1894. Work: "Hailing the
Ferry," Pennsylvania Academy, Phila-
delphia; "The Shepherdess," Brooklyn
Institute Museum.
KNIGHT, Frederick C, 30 East 34th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
KNIGHT, L(ouis) Aston, 147 Rue de la
Pompe, Paris, France; Beaumont le
Roger, Eure, France.
Ldscp.P. — Born Paris, France, 1873, son
of D. Ridgway Knight. Pupil of Lefebvre
Robert-Fleury and of his father, Ridg-
way Knight, in Paris. Member:
Rochester AC. Awards : Bronze
medal, Paris Exp., 1900; hon. mention,
Paris Salon, 1901; gold medal, Rheima
Exp., 1903; gold medal, Lyons EXp.,
1904; gold medal, Nantes Exhb., 1904:
gold medal, Geneva Exh., 1904; third
class medal, Paris Salon, 1905; sec-
ond class medal, Paris Salon, 1906; gold
medal, AAS 1907; Knight of the Legion
of Honor, 1920. Work: "The Tor-
rent," Toledo Museum of Art; "The
River Wharf," "Sous le Moulin,"
Luxembourg Museum, Paris. Repre-
sented in Rochester Memorial Art
Gallery.
KNOPF, Nellie Augusta, Illinois Woman's
College, Jacksonville, 111.
P., T.— Born Chicago, Sept. 19, 1875.
Pupil of AIC under Vanderpoel and
Freer; Charles H. Woodbury; John F.
Carlson. Member: Jacksonville Art
Assoc; Chicago AG; AIC Alumni; Col-
lege Art Asso. Director School of Fine
Arts, Illinois Woman's College. Repre-
sented in John H. Vanperpoel' memorial
collection.
KNOWLES, Mrs. Elizabeth A. McG(lll-
vray), care of Babcock Art Gallery, 19
East 49th St., New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Ottawa, Can., Jan. 8, 1866.
Pupil of F. M. G. Knowles. Member:
Royal Canadian Academy; N. A. Women
PS. Work: In Canadian National Gal-
lery; Ontario Government collection.
KNOWLES, F. IVlcGillvray, care of Bab-
cock Art Gallery, 19 East 49th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., I., W., L., T.— Born Syracuse, N. T.,
May 22, 1860. Studied in England,
France, Canada and the United States.
M e m b e r: R. C. A. Awards: Hon.
mention, Pan-Amer. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
medal, La. Purchase Exp., St, Louis,
1904; medal, Panama-Pacific Exp., San
Francisco, 1915. Represented in Na-
tional Galleries of Ottawa and Toronto.
KNOWLTON, Annie D., 6 Granger PL,
Rochester, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
KNOWLTON, Mrs. Daniel, 178 Summer
St., Buffalo, N. Y. (P.)
KNOX, Edward, Tom's River, N. J.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
KNOX, James, 54 Seventh Ave., Brook-
lyn, New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Glasgow, Scotland, April, 1866.
Pupil of Joseph H. Boston. Work:
"First Attack of the Tanks," U. S. Na-
tional Museum, Washington, D. C.
KNOX, Jean, 310 West Upsal St., Ger-
mantown, Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
KNOX, Susan Bicker, 119 East 19th St.,
New York, N. Y.; summer, York Har-
bor, Me.
P.— Born Portsmouth, N. H. Studied
In Philadelphia, New York and Europe.
Member: NAC; Pen and Brush;
SPNY; N.A. Women PS. Specialty,
portraits.
KNUEBEL, John, Technical High School,
Buffalo, N. Y. (P., T.)
KOBBE, Marie O(lga), 77 East 89th St.,
New York, N. Y.; h. 203 Clinton Ave.,
New Brighton, S. I., N, Y.
P.— M ember: NYWCC.
KOBMAN, Clara H., 3 Eden Park Ter-
race, Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
KOCH, Edna, 100 Garfield Place, Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
KOCH, Helen C, 253 Hearne Ave., Cin-
cinnati, O.
P. — M ember : Cincinnati Woman's
A. C.
KOCH, William, "Baltimore American,"
Baltimore, Md.
I. — M ember- Char. C.
KOECHL, Paul, 1947 Broadway; h. 15
East 40th St., New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Brooklyn, July 27, 1880.
Pupil of Homer Boss.
KOHLER, Rose, 3016 Stanton Ave., Cin-
cinnati, O.
P., S.— Born Chicago, 111. Pupil of Cin-
cinnati Academy under Duveneck and
Barnhorn. Member: Cincinnati
Woman's AC.
KOHLMANN, Rena Tucker (Mrs. A. R.
Kohlmann), 108 West 57th St., New
York. N. Y.
474
KOHLMEIER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
KRAMER
p., S., W. — Born Indianapolis, Nov. 29,
1880. Pupil of Joseph De Camp,
Charles H. Woodbury and Geo. Grey
Barnard.
KOHLMEIER, Helen M., 1054 Ingraham
St., Los Angeles, Cal.
P.— M ember: Cal. AC.
KOHN, Irma, East Gloucester, Mass.; h.
Arts Club, 6105 Michigan Ave., Chicago,
111.
Ldscp. P.— Born Rock Island, 111. Pupil
of AIC; Charles Francis Brown, H. B.
Snell, H. L. Lathrop. Member:
NYWCC; Chicago SA; Chicago AG;
N.A.Women PS. Represented in Toledo
Museum; Pennsylvania Academy of the
Fine Arts, Philadelphia.
KOHUS, Frank, 710 Clark St., Cincinnati,
O.
S.— M ember: NSS.
KOLDE, Frederick W(Illlam), 103 Juer-
gens Ave., Clifton, Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati AC.
KOLLER, E. Leonard, 540 Jefferson Ave.,
Scranton, Pa.
I., L., W., T.— Studied under Pyle,
Morse and Willett. Member: N.Y.
Soc.C. Work: "Soldiers Memorial
Monument," near Gettysburg battlefield.
KOMROFF, Mrs. See Elinor M. Barnard.
KONTI, Isidore, 314 Rlverdale Ave.,
Yonkers, N. Y.
S.— Born Vienna, Austria, July 9, 1862.
Pupil of Imperial Academy in Vienna
under Helmer and Kundmann. Came to
United States in 1890. Member:
NSS 1897; N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1901; Salma.C.
1904; ANA 1901; NA 1905; Allied AA.
Award : Gold medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904. Work: "Genius of Immor-
tality," Metropolitan Museum, New
York; groups for Bureau of Am,. Re-
publics Bldg., Washington, D. C;
medal "Landing of Jews in America,"
Minneapolis Institute; "Orpheus," Pea-
body Institute, Baltimore, Md. ; group
on Dewey Arch, New York; monument
to Kit Carson and Lt. Beal, National
Museum of Art, Washington; statues of
Justinian and Alfred the Great, Court
House, Cleveland.
KOOPMAN, John R., 1367 Plimpton Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Falmouth, Mich., June 5, 1881.
Pupil of Chase, Henri, K. H. Miller,
Wiles. Member : Salma. C.
KOPMAN, Benjamin D., 8 East 15th St.,
New York. N. Y.
P.— M ember: Allied AA. Work:
"Portrait of a Young Man," Pennsyl-
vania Academy of the Fine Arts, Phila-
delphia; "Interior," Brooklyn Museum.
KORACH, Dean, 61 Poplar Street, Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
KORBEL, Mario J., care Gorham, Fifth
Avenue and 36th St., New York, N. Y.
S. — Born Osik, Czechoslavakia, Mar. 22,
1882. Studied in Munich and Paris.
Member: Chicago SA. Award:
Shaffer prize, AIC, 1910. Work:
Dancing group, Cleveland Museum;
"Andante," Metropolitan Museum of
Art; "Minerva," University of Havana,
Cuba; marble bust in Chicago Art In-
stitute; McPhee Memorial monument,
Denver.
KORDA, Augustyn, 1214 Broadway, Den-
ver, Colo.; h. 55 Warren Ave., Buffalo,
N. Y.
P.— Born Buffalo, June 17, 1894. Pupil
of J. E. Thompson. Member: Den-
ver AA.
KORNHAUSER, David E., 3038 Chestnut
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA; Fel-
lowship PAFA; Graphic Sketch C.
Work: "Along the Schuylkill River,"
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts, Philadelphia.
KORNHAUSER, Mary Parker, 1425 Wal-
nut St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
KOST, Frederick W., 146 West 55th St.,
New York, N. Y.; h. Brookhaven, Long
Island, N. Y.
Ldscp. P.— Born New York, May 15,
1861. Pupil of NAD under Wm. Macy.
Member: SAA 1889; ANA 1900, NA
1906; A. Fund S. ; Lotos C; Century C.
Awards: Hon. mention, Paris Exp.,
1900; bronze medal, Pan. -Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; silver medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904. Work: "On the St. John River,
N. B.," Pennsylvania Academy, Phila-
delphia; "Smithfield Marshes, Staten
Island," Brooklyn Institute Museum;
"Moonrise, Fox Hills," Art Museum.
Montclair, N. J.
KOTZ, Daniel, Park Ridge, N, J.
Ldscp. P. — Born near South Bend, Ind.,
March 21, 1848. Pupil of Henry F.
Spread. Member: Salma.C.
KOULISH, Meyer, 1446 Webster Ave.,
Bronx, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
KOWNATZKI, Hans, Van Dyck Studios,
939 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y.; sum-
mer, Peconic, L. I.. N. Y.
P.,S. — Born Konigsberg, Germany, Nov.
26, 1866. Pupil of Neide and Koner;
Lefebvre in Paris. Member: S.
Indp.A.
KRAFFT, Carl R., 220 South Michigan
Ave.; h. 3552 South Seeley Ave., Chi-
cago, III.
P.— Born Reading, O., Aug. 23, 1884.
Member: Chicago SA; Palette and
Chisel C; Chicago AG; Cliff Dwellers;
Society of Ozark Painters; Chicago AC.
Austin, Oak Park and River Forest Art
Lg. Awards : Englewood Woman's
Club prize ($50)), AIC, 1915; Municipal
Art Lg. purchase prize, 1916; hon. men-
tion, Chicago AG, 1916; Fine Arts Bldg.
prize. Artists Guild, 1917; Logan Medal,
AIC, 1920; bronze medal, Illinois Artists
Exhibition, 1920; silver Medal, Chicago
SA, 1921. Represented in Municipal Art
League Collection Chicago; collection of
Peoria (111.) Soc. of Allied Arts; Engle-
wood Woman's Club; Los Angeles Mu-
seum; Art League, Aurora, 111.; "Quiet
of Evening," Arche Club, Chicago;
"Morning Fog," City of Chicago,
KRAMER, E. A., 1865 Monroe Ave., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Bloomingdale,
N. Y. 6 .
475
KRAMER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
KURTZ
Ldscp. P. — Born in New York City in
1866. Pupil of von Diez in Munich;
Laurens and Constant at Julian Acad-
emy in Paris,
KRAMER, Erwin, 500 West 24th St., Mil-
waukee, Wis.
P.— M ember: Wis. PS.
KRATZ, H(arriett) Frances, 57 West Lo-
gan St., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
P., T. — Born Germantown, Philadelphia,
Pa., Apr. 25, 1893. Pupil of Dainger-
field, Snell, Everett and 'Seyffert,
KREHBIEL, Albert H., Park Ridge, Chi-
cago, 111.
P., T.— Born Chicago, 111. Pupil of AIC
and Frederick Richardson; Laurens in
Paris. Member: Paris AAA; Chi-
cago SA; Chicago WCC; Cliff Dwellers.
Instructor AIC. Work: Mural deco-
rations for Supreme Court, Springfield,
111.
KREHBIEL, Dulah Evans (Mrs. Albert
Krehbiel), Park Ridge. Chicago, 111.
P., I.— Pupil of AIC; W. Appleton
Clark and ASL in N. Y, Member:
Chicago AC; Cordon C. Designer and
publisher of Ridge Craft cards,
KREMELBERG, Mary, 1007 No. Charles
St., Baltimore. Md.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS; Fel-
lowship PAFA.
KRETZINGER, Clara Josephine, Lyme,
Conn.: h. 917 Monadnock Bldg., Chicago,
111.
P.— Born Chicago. Pupil of AIC
and Chicago AFA; Lefebvre, Robert-
Pleury. Laurens, Congdon and Richard
Miller in Paris. Member: Chicago
SA; Chicago AC. Award : Hon.
mention, Paris Salon. Represented in
Beloit Art Museum. •
KRIEGHOFF, W. G., care of The Art
Alliance,. 1823 Walnut St.; h. 1915 Rit-
tenhouse St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Aug. 31, 1875.
Pupil of Chase. Member: Phila.
Alliance; Phila. Sketch C.
KROLL, Leon, 253 West 42d St., New
York. N. Y.
P., T.— Born New York. Dec. 6, 1884.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. and NAD;
Laurens in Paris. Instructor at NAD,
1911-18. Member: ANA.: NAC
(Hfe); S.Indp.A. ; New Soc. Etchers.
Salma. C; Phila. AC; New York Soc.
of Etchers, Boston AC. Awards :
Porter prize. Salma. C. 1914: bronze
medal, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915; Logan
prize AIC, 1919; Purchase Prize AIC,
1919; First prize, Wilmington SPA.,
1921; Clarke prize, NAD, 1921. Work:
"A Basque Landscape," Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia;
"North River Front," Art Institute of
Chicago; "In the Country," Detroit In-
stitute; "Broadway and 42nd St.," Los
Angeles Museum.
KROMER, E. A., Laclede Hotel, New
York, N. Y. (I.)
KRONBERG, Louis, care of Boston Art
Club, Newbury and Dartmouth Sts.,
Boston, Mass.
P.. T.— Born Boston. Mass.. Dec. 20,
1872. Pupil of Museum of Fine Arts.
Boston: ASL of N. Y. ; Julian Acad-
emy under Benjamin-Constant, Laurens
and Collin in Paris. Member: Bos-
ton AC; Boston GA; Copley S.; Salma.
C. Awards: Longfellow traveling
scholarship, Boston Museum, 1894 to
1897; silver medal. P.-P.Exp., San F.,
1915; Shaw prize. Salmagundi Club,
1919. Work: "Pink Sash," Metropoli-
tan Museum. New York; "Behind the
Footlights." Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; "Ballet Girl
Preparing for the Dance." Boston Mu-
seum of Fine Arts; "Oriental Dancer."
Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis; "Bal-
let Girl in White," Gardner collection,
Boston, Mass.
KRULLAARS, William J., 673 East 37th
St., Chicago. 111.
P.— Born Rotterdam, Holland, 1878.
Pupil of Rotterdam Academy of Fine
Arts, and AIC. Member: Palette
and Chisel C.
KRUSE, Alexander Z., 125 East 115th St.,
New York. N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
KUEMMEL, Cornelia A., Pritchett Col-
lege. Glasgow, Mo.
P., S., T.— Born Glasgow, Howard Co.,
Mo. Pupil of St. Louis School of Fine
Arts, under John Fry and E. Wuerpel.
Member: St. Louis AG.
KUHN, Harry P(hilip), Colt Bldg., Pater-
son, N. J.; summer, Wheelerville, Pa.
P., C. — Born Zurich, Switzerland, Nov.
27, 1862. Award: Gold medal, Lou-
isiana Purchase Exp., St. Louis, 1904.
KUHN, Walt, Fort Lee, N. J.
P.— Born New York, 1877. Pupil of
Ziigel In Munich. Member: Am.PS.
Award : Silver medal, Munich, 1905.
KUNIYOSHI, Katherine Schmidt, Ardsley
Studios, 110 Columbia Heights, Brook-
lyn, N. Y. ; summer, Ogunquit, Me.
P.— Born Xenia, Ohio, Aug. 15, 1898.
Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller.
Member: S. Indp. A.
KUNIYOSHI, Yasuo, 110 Columbia
Heights, Brooklyn, N. Y. ; summer,
Ogunquit, Me.
P.— Born Okayama, Japan, Sept. 1, 1893.
Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller.
KUNZ, J. E., 148 East 4th St., Cincin-
nati, O. (P.)
KUNZE, E(dward), 222 Bowers St., Jer-
sey City, N. J.
P., C, T. — Born Waldenburg, Germany,
Oct. 8, 1848. Pupil of Kugl, Danisch
Academi of Art, Copenhagen. Mem-
ber: S.Indp.A.; Lg. of N.Y.A.
KUPFERMAN, Murray, 239 Penn St.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y. (P.)
KURTZ, Julia Wilder, Markeen Hotel,
Buffalo, N. Y. (P.)
KURTZ, Wilbur G., 141 East North Ave.,
Atlanta, Ga.
P.. I.— Born Oakland. 111., Feb. 28. 1882.
Pupil of AIC. Member: PBC; At-
lanta AA. Represented in Atlanta
Woman's Club.
476
KVRTZWORTH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
LAMB
KURTZWORTH, H(arry) M(uir), Kansas
City Art Inst., Kansas City, Mo.; h.
2136 Stanley Ave., Detroit, Mich.
P., D., L., W., T. — Born Detroit, Mich.,
Aug-. 12, 1887. Pupil of Detroit Museum
School of Art under Paulus and Gies;
Detroit Academy of Fine Arts under
Wicker; Columbia University. New
York, under Dow; Pa. School of Indus-
trial Art; and with Julius Melchers.
Member: Fourth International Art
Congress, Dresden, 1912; Detroit Soc.
A. and C. Organizer and director
Grand Rapids School of Art and In-
dustry, 1916. Director, Michigan Art
Institute, 1918; Associate Director,
Chicago Academy of Fine Arts, 1920.
Director Kansas City Art Institute.
Author of "Industrial Art a National
Asset."
KUSCHE, Carlton J(ules), 524 Tenth St.,
Oshkosh, Wis,
P., I. — Born Oshkosh, Wis., Aug. 15,
1873. Pupil of AIC; William Wendt;
French; Dressier. Member: S.Indp.
A.
LACEY, Bertha J., 40 Irving PL, New
York, N. Y. ; and Perrysville, Ind.
P. — Born Perrysville, Ind., March 6,
1878. Pupil of Vanderpoel, Meakln and
Duveneck. Member: ASL of Chi-
cago; Indiana Artists; Cincinnati
Woman's AC.
LACEY, Jessie P., 305 Davis St., Evans-
ton, 111.
P.— ^M ember: Chicago SA.
LA CHAISE, Eugene A., 39 Rue Joubert,
Paris, France*.
P.— M ember: Paris SAP (sect.).
LACHAISE, Gaston, 77 Washington Place,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
LACHMAN, Harry B., 6 rue du Val de
Grace, Paris, France.
P.— Born La Salle, 111., June 29, 1886.
Member: Societe Inter, des Art-
istes et Sculpteurs; Societe Paris
Moderne; Chevalier of the Legion of
Honor, France. Work: "Toledo,"
Delgado Museum of Art, New Orleans,
La.; "St. Nicolas du Chardonnet."
"Uzerche," "Antibes" in Musee du
Luxembourg; "Printemps Parisien,"
Musee du Petit Palais, Paris; "Old
Tower" and "Old Church," Chicago Art
Institute; "Notre Dame Sunset," Del-
gado Museum, New Orleans.
LADD, Anna Coleman (Mrs. Maynard
Ladd), 270 Clarendon St., Boston, Mass.;
summer, Beverly Farms, Mass.
S.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., 1878.
Studied In Paris and Rome. Mem-
ber: NSS 1915 (assoc); Boston GA.
Award: Hon. mention. P,-P.Exp.,
San F., 1915. Work: Bronze medal,
"The Spirit of Serbia," R. I. School of
Design; "Bronze Lady," Gardner collec-
tion, Boston. Head of A.R.C. Studio for
Portrait Masks, France, 1917-1918;
"Wind and Spray," Borghese Collection,
Rome; "Fountain of Youth," Torresdale,
Pa.; Soldiers' Monument, Hamilton,
Mass.
LADD, Laura D. Stroud (Mrs. Westray
Ladd), 508 South 41st St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., July 1, 1863.
Pupil of Phila, School of Design for
Women and PAFA. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA;* Plastic C; Phila. WCC;
Alliance.
LAESSLE, Albert, 38 W. Washington
Lane, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
S.— Born Philadelplua, March 28, 1877.
Pupil of Spring Garden Inst., Drexel
Inst., PAFA, Charles Grafly, and studied
in Paris. Member: NSS, 1913; Fel-
lowship PAFA; Phila. Alliance; N.Y.
Soc.C; New SA of N.Y.; Societe les
Amis de la Medaille d'Art, Brussels;
Soc. of Animal P.S.; Phila. Alliance;
Fellowship PAFA. Awards : Stew-
ardson prize 1902. and Cresson traveling
scholarship PAFA, 1904; bronze medal,
Buenos Aires, 1910; PAFA Fellowship
prize ($100), 1915; gold medal, P. -P.
Exp., San Francisco, 1915; first sculp-
ture prize, Americanization through
Art. Philadelphia, 1916; Widner gold
medal, PAFA, 1918; hon. mention AIC,
1920. Work: "Turtle and Lizards."
"Blue Eyed Lizard," Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia; "Heron and
Fish," Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh; 3
small bronzes, Peabody Institute, Balti-
more; Metropolitan Museum, New York;
Philadelphia AC.
LA FARGE, Bancel, Edgehill, Mt. Car-
mel. Conn.
P.. C— M ember: Mural P.; NYWCC;
Century Assoc; Paris AAA; Nat. Inst.
AL; New Haven PCC. Mosaic, stained
glass and figure designer.
LA FARGE, 'Mabel (Mrs. Bancel La
Farge), Mt. Carmel, Conn.
P. — Born Cambridge, Mass., June 26,
1875. Pupil of John La Farge. Mem-
ber: New Haven PCC.
LA GATTA, John, 59 West 37th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
LAHEY, Richard F(rancis), 80 Tonnele
Ave., Jersey City, N. J.
P., E., T.— Born Jersey City, N. J.,
June 23, 1893. Pupil of Bridgman,
Henri, K. H. Miller. Member:
Whitney Studio Club; ASL. of N.Y.;
Guild of Free Lance Artists.
LALONDE, J(oseph) W(ilfrid), 303 Pitts-
burgh Bldg.; h. 1790 Grand Ave., St.
Paul, Minn.
P., S. — Born Minneapolis, Minn., March
19, 1897. Pupil of Gustave Goetsch,
Louis F. Mora, F. V. Du Mond. Work:
Mural of Joan d'Arc and St. Louis, St.
Louis Church, St. Paul, Minn.
LAMB, Charles R(ollinson), 23 Sixth
Ave.; h. 360 West 22d St., New York,
N. Y.
P., C, Arch.— Born New York. Pupil of
ASL of N. Y. Member: Mural P.;
NSS (lay); N. Y. Municipal AS; ASL
of N. Y.; NAC; N. Y. Arch. Lg.; AFAS.
Specialty, religious, historical and mu-
nicipal art
477
LAMB
WHO'S WHO IN ART
LANGTON
LAMB, Ella Condie (Mrs. Charles P..
Lamb), 360 West 22d St., New York,
N. Y. ; summer, Cresskill, N. J.
P., I., C— Born New York. Pupil of
Chase and C. Y. Turner In New York;
Collin and Courtois in Paris. Mem-
ber: Mural P. ; S. Indp. A. ; N. Y.
Municipal AS; NAC. Awards:
Dodge prize, NAD 1889; hon. mention,
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; medal,
Atlanta Exp., 1895; hon. mention, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901. Represented in
collection of the National Arts Club.
Specialty; Designs for stained glass and
mosaics.
LAMB, F(rederick) S(tymetz), 23 Sixth
Ave.; h. 356 West 2M St., New York,
N. Y.; summer, Cresskill, N. J.
Mural P., C, W., L,.— Born New York,
June 24, 1863. Pupil of ASL, under Wm.
Sartain and Beckwith in New York;
Lefebvre and Boulanger in Paris.
Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1887 (ex-
v.pres.); ASL of N. Y.; Mural P;
N. Y. Municipal AS (ex-sect.); NAC;
American Scenic and Historic Preser-
vation Soc; N.Y.Soc.C. (ex-sect.); AI
Graphic A.; Architectural League of
America (ex-pres.). Awards: Hon.
mention, Columbian Exp., Chicago,
1893; gold medal, Atlanta Exp., 1895;
medal, Paris Exp., 1900. Work;
Series of historic windows, Plymouth
Church, Brooklyn, and Church of the
Messiah, New York; "Conference of
Gen. Washington before the Battle of
Long Island," mural painting, Public
School No. 5, Brooklyn.
LAMB, F. Mortimer, Stoughton, Mass.
Ldscp.P. — Born Middleboro, Mass., 1861.
Pupil of Massachusetts Normal Art
School; School of Boston Museum of Fine
Arts; Julian Academy in Paris. Mem-
ber: NYWCC; AWCS; Wash. WCC;
New Haven PCC. Awards : Gold
medal, 20th Century Exp., Boston,
1900; silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F.,
1915. Work: Memorial corridor. City
Hall, Brockton, Mass.; "The Good
Samaritan," Universalist Church,
Stoughton, Mass.; "Spring," Chicatau-
but Club, Stoughton, Mass.; 2 land-
scapes in Christian Science Students'
Library, Brookline, Mass.
LAMBDEN, Herman, 250 Main St.; h.
115 Paine Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y.
P. — Born New Rochelle, N. Y., Jan. 4,
1859. Member: Salma.C.
LAMBERT, Gertrude A. 12 East 15th St.;
h. 215 So. Center St., Bethlehem, Pa.
P.— Born So. Bethlehem, Pa., Aug, 10,
1885. Pupil of Phila. School of Design
for Women and PAFA. Member:
Fellowship PAFA; Plastic C; N. A. Wo-
men PS. Awards : Cresson traveling
scholarship, PAFA, 1912-13; Mary Smith
prize, PAFA, 1915; silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F.. 1915. Work : "The Lit-
tle Market, Baveno," Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts. Instructor
in water color, Philadelphia School for
Women, 1910-11.
LAMBERT, Nora Sarony, 139 Lexington
Ave., New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
LAMEY, Richard, 1728 Ridge Ave., Phil-
adelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Phila. AA.
LANCE, Elizabeth, 44 Reynolds St..
Kingston, Pa.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
LANDEAU, Sandor L., care of Paul
Foinet, 21 Rue Brea, Paris, France.
P.— Born in Hungary, 1864. Pupil of
Laurens and Constant in Paris.
Member: Paris AAA. Awards:
Second Wanamaker prize, Paris AAA;
hon. mention, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1905;
third class medal, Paris Salon 1907.
LANDIS, Marguerite A., 2143 Fifth, West,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
LANDT, Theodora Lins, Arleigh Road,
Douglas Manor, L.I., N. Y.
P., C, Dec— Born New York, Feb. 10,
1885. Pupil of Pratt Institute and ASL
of N. Y. Member : S. Indp. A.; Lg.
of NYA.
LANE, Marian, 806 17th St., Washington
D. C.
P., C. — Born Great Gransden, Hunting-
donshire, England. Member: Wash.
WCC; Wash. Handicraft G.; N. Y.
Guild of Bookworkers.
LANG, Charles M., Miller Bldg. Studio,
1931 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
P., S., L, C, T.— Born Albany, N. Y.,
Aug. 26, 1860. Pupil of John Renzer,
Prof. Lofftz. Member: Salma. C.
Work: "Gov. David B. Hill," "Gov.
Roswell P. Flower," City of Albany;
"Hugo Flagg Cook," Capitol, Albany',
N. Y. ; Judges Parker and Henton,
Court House, Albany.
LANG, Henrietta Dean, 175 Lincoln Ave.,
Detroit, Mich. (P., T.)
LANGDON, Katharine. See Mrs. W. H.
Corson.
LANGENBACH, Clara Emma, 449 Au-
burn Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
P. T.— Born Ontario, Canada, Jan. 28,
1872. Pupil of Ernest Fosberg and
F. Carlson. Member: Rochester
AC; Buffalo SA; Buffalo GAA.
LANGHORNE, Katharine. See Mrs.
Benjamin P. Adams.
LANGLEY, Mrs. Sarah, Arts and Crafts
Guild, 11th and Locust Sts.; h. 1104
Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa.; summer.
Forest Inn, Eagles Mere Park, Pa.
P., S., I., W., T.— Born Texas, July 12,
1885. Pupil PAFA. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA. Works : "Jewels,"
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts.
LANGSDORF, Clara M., 3964 Eastern
Ave., Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
LANGTON, Berenice Frances (Mrs. Dan-
iel W. Langton), 165 West 82d St.,
New York, N. Y.
S. — Pupil of Augustus Saint Gaudens
In New York; Rodin in Paris. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS. Award:
Bronze medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
478
LANGTRY
WHO'S WHO IN ART
LAUTER
LANGTRY, Mary, 241 Ryerson St.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
P.— Member: NYWCC; N. A. Wo-
men PS.
LANGZETTEL, George H(enry). Yale
School of Fine Arts; h. 725 Whitney
Ave.. New Haven, Conn.
P., T. — Born Springfield, Mass., Apr. 3,
1864. Pupil of Yale School of the Fine
Arts. Member: New Haven PCC.
Assistant curator of Yale Art Museum.
LANSIL, Walter F(ranklin), 175 Tremont
St., Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Bangor, Me., March 30, 1846.
Pupil of J. P. Hardy at Bangor; Julian
Academv in Paris. Member: Bos-
ton AC. Work: "Dutch Fishing
Craft," Boston Art Club.
LANSING, Richard H., Elwanger and
Barry Bldg., Rochester, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
LAPPE, Alexander H., 743 South Linden
Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
LARSEN, Charles P(eter), 17 Ea.st 14th
St.; 1 Stuyvesant Alley, New York,
N. Y.; h. 662 Madison Ave., York. Pa.
P., E. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Mar. 7,
1892. Pupil of PAFA. Member:
Chicago SE. Represented in Chicago Art
Institute.
LARSEN, May Sybil, 4437 North Fran-
cisco Ave., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born Chicago, 111. Member:
S.Indp.A.
LARSH, Theodora, Netherland Hotel,
Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.; summer.
Beach Hotel, Chicago, 111.
Min. P., T.— Born Crawfordsville, Ind.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; AIC; Mme. La
Forge in Paris. Member: N. A.
Women PS; ASL of Chicago; Chicago
Soc. Min. P.; Chicago AG.
LARSON, Fred T., 2935 North Whipple
St., Chicago. 111.
P. — Born Chicago, Apr. 19, 1868. Pupil
of AIC. Member: Palette and Chisel
C.
LATHROP, Elinor (Louise), 96 Niles St.;
h. 83 Gillette St.. Hartford, Conn.; sum-
mer, Madison. Conn.
P.. S.— Born Hartford. Conn., Sept. 26,
1899. Pupil of Philip Hale, R. F. Logan
and Albertus Jones. Member: Hart-
ford Art Society.
LATHROP, Ida Pulls (Mrs. Cyrus Clark
Lathrop), 151 South Allen St., Albany,
N. Y.
P.— Born Troy, N. Y., Oct. 27, 1859.
Self-taught. Member: N.A. Women
PS; Lg. of N.Y.A. Work: "Still
Life," Prendergast Art Gallery, James-
town, N. Y. Specialty, portraits and
landscapes.
LATHROP, W(illlam) L(angson), New
Hope, Bucks Co., Pa.
P.— Born Warren, 111., March 29, 1859.
Member: ANA 1902, NA 1907;
NYWCC; Rochester AC. Awards:
Evans prize, AWCS. 1896; gold medal,
AC. Phila., 1897; Webb prize, SAA,
1899; bronze medal. Pan. -Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; third prize ($500), C. I.
Pittsburgh, 1903; second prize, Wor-
cester, 1904; bronze medal, St. Louis
:^xp., 1904; gold medal for oil painting
and silver medal for water colors, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915. Work: "The
Meadows," Metropolitan Museum, New
York; "Clouds and Hills," Minneapolla
Museum; "Three Trees," National Mu-
seum of Art, Washington; "Abandoned
Quarry," Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh;
"Old Covered Bridge," Hackley Art Gal-
lery, Muskegon, Mich.
LAUBER, Joseph, 280 East 162nd St.,
New York, N. Y.
Mural P., Etcher, C. — Born Meschede,
Westphalia, Germany, Aug. 31, 1855;
came to U. S. at age of nine. Pupil of
Karl Miiller, Shirlaw and Chase;
worked with La Farge. Member:
Mural P.; N. Y. Arch. Lg., 1889;
A. Aid S.: Salma, C, 1902. Awards:
Hon. mention for mosaics and glass,
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; gold and
bronze medals for mosaic and mural
designs Atlanta, 1895; medals, for etch-
ings and mural work. Midwinter Fair,
California. Specialty, stained glass and
mosaics. Work: Paintings: Sixteen
symbolic figures. Appellate Court, New
York; portrait of ex-Speaker Penning-
ton. House of Representatives, Wash-
ington, D. C; windows in Church of the
Ascension, New York. Instructor of art
at Columbia University, New York.
LAUDERDALE, Ursula (Mrs. Edward
Seay Lauderdale), 4005 Miramar Ave.,
p., T.'— Born Moberly, Mo., July 29,
1879. Pupil of DeVoe and Maurice
Braun. Member: Dallas AA.
LAUGHLIN, Alice D(enniston), 400 Dev-
onshire St., Pittsburgh, Pa.; summer,
Hyannisport, Mass.
P.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., Oct. 19, 1895.
Member: NAC; Pittsburgh AA; ASL
of N. Y.
LAUGH NER, L. M., Shady Park, Ligo-
nier. Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
LAURENT, Robert, 106 Columbia Hghts.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Ker Fravaal, Cape Neddick, Me.
S. — Born Concarneau. France, June 29.
1890. Pupil of Hamilton Easter Field;
Maurice Sterne; British Academy in
Rome. Instructor at Ogunquit (Me.)
School of Art. Member: Brooklyn
SA; S. Indp. A; Modern Artists of
America.
LAURIE-WALLACE, J(ohn), 4032 Izard
St., Omaha, Neb.
P., S., I., L., T. — Born Garvagh, Ire-
land, July 29, 1864. Pupil of Thomas
Eakins; PAFA. Member: Omaha
AG; Chicago SA.
LAUTER, F(lora), 12 East 9th St., New
York, N. Y.; h. 612 East 13th St., In-
dianapolis, Ind,
P.— Born New York, July 21, 1874. Pu-
pil of Henri, Chase and Mora in New
York. Member: Women's Inter.Art
Club, London; Chicago AC; Alliance; S.
Indp. A.; Lg. of N.Y.A.
479
LA VALLEY
WHO'S WHO IN ART
LEARNED
LA VALLEY, J(onas), J(oSeph), 317 Main
St.; 101 Allen St., Springfield, Mass.
P.— Born Rouse Point, N. Y., Aug., 1858.
Member: Springfield AL. Wo^k:
"Birth of Springfield," owned by City
of Springfield. Represented in Spring-
field Art Museum.
LAW, Margaret Moffet, 13 East Read St.,
Baltimore, Md. ; h. 364 Spring St.,
Spartanburg, S. C.
P., T. — Born Spax tansburg, S. C. Pu-
pil of Chase, Henri, Mora and Haw-
thorne. Member: Balto, WCC;
Balto. HS; S.Indp.A.; N. A. Women PS.
Awards : 3rd prize All Southern Ex-
hibition, Charleston, S.C, 1921. Work:
"Feeding Chickens," Kennedy Library,
Spartanburg, S. C; "Wayside Chat,"
Converse College, S. C.
LAWFORD, Charles, Los Angeles, Calif.
P. — M ember: Attic C. Minneapolis;
Minneapolis AL. Awards : First
prize ($100), Minneapolis Inst., 1915:
bronze medal, St. Paul Inst.. 1917; gold
medal, Minnesota State Art Commission,
1917.
LAWLESS, Carl, 3228 North Broad St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
LAWLOR, George W(arren), Studio
Bldg., 110 Tremont St., Boston, Mass.
P.— Born Chelsea, Mass., Oct. 21, 1848.
Pupil of Julian and Colarossi Acade-
mies and at Ecole des Beaux-Arts In
Paris. Member: Boston AC.
LAWRENCE, Sidney, Anchorage, Alaska.
(P.)
LAWRIE, Lee O., 256 West 55th St., New
York, N. Y.
S.— Born Oct. 16, 1877. Pupil of Saint
Gaudens and Martiny. Instructor in
sculpture Harvard University. 1910-12;
Yale University, 1908-18. Member:
NSS. Work: Decorations in United
States Military Academy; West Point;
Church of St. Vincent Ferrer, and
reredos of St. Thomas' Church, New
York; Harkness Memorial Tower and
Archway, Yale University.
LAWSON, Adelaide J., 209 West 97th St.,
New York. N. Y.
P.— Born New York. N. Y.. June 9. 1890.
Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller. Mem-
ber: S. Indp. A.; Alliance; People's AG.
LAWSON, Ernest, care Daniel Gallery,
2 West 47th St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born in California, 1873; Studied in
Kansas City; ASL of N. Y. ; and in
Paris. Member: ANA 1908, NA
1917; Inst A. and L.. Awards:
Silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
Sesnan medal PAPA 1907; gold medal
AAS 1907; first Hallgarten prize, NAD
1908; gold medal. P. -P. Exp., San F.,
1915; Altman prize ($500) NAD 1916;
second W. A. Clark prize ($1,500), and
Corcoran silver medal, 1916; Innes gold
medal, NAD 1917; Temple gold medal,
PAFA, 1920; Altman prize ($1,000),
NAD, 1921; first prize, Pittsburgh Intn.
Exp., 1921. Work: "An Abandoned
Farm," National Gallery, Washington;
"The Swimming Hole," Art Museum,
Montclair, N. J.; "Winter," Metropoli-
tan Museum, New York; "Landscape"
and "Winter," Brooklyn Museum; "Road
at the Palisades," City Art Museum,
St. Louis; "Boat House, Harlem River,
Winter," Corcoran Gallery, Washington,
D. C; and in museums at Worcester,
Mass. ; Chicago, 111. ; San Francisco,
Calif.; Pittsburgh, Pa.; Youngstown, O.;
Savannah, Ga.
LAWSON, H. Raymond, 1331 Grace Ave.,
Hyde Park. Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember : Cincinnati AC.
LAWSON, Jess M., 120 Lexington Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Edinburgh, Scotland, Feb. 18,
1885. Member: British Institute,
Assoc. Royal College of Art, London;
Alliance; NSS: N. A. Women PS.
Awards: Helen Foster Barnett prize,
NAD, 1918; Widener gold medal,
PAFA, 1919.
LAWSON, Katharine S(tewart), "Lone
Pine Studio," Westport, Conn.
S.— Born Indianapolis, Ind., May 9, 1885.
Pupil of Lorado Taft, Herman A. Mac-
Neil. Member: N.A. Women PS.
Award : Shaw Prize. NAD, 1921.
LAYBOURN-JENSEN (Lars Peter), 211
Locust St., Roselle Park, N. J.
P., S. — Born Copenhagen, Denmark,
July 3, 1888. Pupil of Danish Academy.
Member: S.Indp.A.
LAYMAN, Elizabeth, 1731 East McMillan
St., Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
LAYNG, George W., 220 Emerson St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
LAZARD, Mrs. Alice A., Klaubers, Louis-
ville, Ky.
P., T. — Born New Orleans, La., Nov. 1,
1893. Pupil of Charles Sneed Williams
and AIC. M e m b er : N. O. AA;
Springfield, 111., A.A; Chicago AC; AIC
Alumni Asso..
LAZZELL, Blanche, Provincetown, Mass.
P., E. — Born Maidsville, Monongalia
Co., W. Va. Pupil of Charles Guerin,
William Schumacher. Member: S.
Indp. A.; Provincetown Printers; Prov-
incetown AA. Works : Wood block-
prints, "The Violet Jug," Detroit Art
Inst.; "Tulips," "The Monongahela,"
"Trees" and "Fishing Boat," W. Va.
University Library.
LEA, Bertha. See Mrs. Low.
LEACH, Bernard (Howell), care of Dr.
W. E. Hovle, Crowland. Llandaff,
Cardiff, Wales.
P., E., C, L., W., T.— Born Hong Kong.
China, Jan. 5, 1887. Pupil of Slade J
School of London and Frank Brangwyn. M
Member: Chicago SE. "T
LEAKE. Gerald, 390 Wadsworth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: Salma. C.
LEARNED, Arthur G(arfield), 27 West
46th St.. New York. N. Y.
I., P. — Born Chelsea, Mass., Aug. 10,
1872. Studied in Munich, Vienna and
Paris, Member: Chicago SE; NAC;
480
LEARY
WHO'S WHO IN ART
LEIGHTON
MacD. C. Work in: -New York Pub-
lic Library; Brooklyn Institute Mu-
seum; Library of Congress, Washington,
D. C; University of Pa. Illustrated:
"Breviary Treasures." trans, by Nathan
Haskell Dole; drawings for "Life," etc.
LEARY, Daniel F., 1034 Pennsylvania
Ave., Monaca, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
LEAVITT, Agnes, 58 North 10th St., San
Jos^, Cal.
Ldscp.P., T.— Born Boston, 1859. Pupil
of Enneking, Hardwick and Sandham in
Boston; Spread in Chicago. Award:
Silver star for water col-or, Boston AC.
Specialty, landscapes and water colors.
LE BLANC, Emilia de Hoa, 1543 Exposi-
tion Blvd., New Orleans, La.
P. — Born New Orleans, La. Pupil of
Newcomb Normal Art School, AIC;
and studied in Europe. Award: Sil-
ver medal, N. O. AA. Represented in
Delgado Museum of Art, New Orleans,
La.
LE BLANC, Marie de Hoa, 1543 Exposi-
tion Blvd., New Orleans, La.
P., I. — Born New Orleans. Pupil of
Newcomb College Normal Art School,
and studied in Europe. Member:
La. Draw'g Teachers' Asso. Awards:
Bronze medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
gold medal, N. O. AA.
LE BOUTILLIER, George, Ridgefield,
Conn.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
LE BOUTILLIER. Isabel G. (Mrs. George
Le Boutillier). Ridgefield. Conn.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
LEDFORD, Mrs. B. F. See Wilhelmina
Hazen.
LE DUC, A(rthur Conrad), 617 Lexington
Ave., New York, N. Y. ; h. King's High-
way, Haddonfleld, N. J.
P. — Born Washington, D.C., March 23,
1892. Pupil of John Sloan, Academie
Julian, Colarossi. Member: S.
Indp. A.
LEE, Arthur, care of Jno. Williams Co.,
556 West 27th St., New York, N. Y. ;
h. Leonia, N. J.
S.. P. — A ward: Hon. mention for
sculpture, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
LEE, Bertha Stringer, 2744 Steiner St.,
San Francisco, Cal.
P. — Born San Francisco, Dec. 6, 1873.
Pupil of Wm. Keith in San Francisco;
Joseph Mathews in New York; studied
abroad. Member: San Francisco
Art Assoc; California AC; Arts and
Crafts C. Awards: Chicago Exp..
1893; Seattle Exp.; San Francisco Art
Assoc. ; Sacramento State Fair. Work:
"Monterey Coast," Del Monte Art Gal-
lery; "In the Gloaming," Golden Gate
Park Museum. San Francisco.
LEE, Cora, Oakmont, Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
LEE, Henry C, Cornwall. N. Y.
P., W.. L.— Born New York City, Mav
3, 1864. Pupil of Josef Israels and
George Holston. Member: Lotos
C. ; Salma.C. Work : "French Dunes,"
Bohemian Club, San Francisco, Cal.
LEE, Homer, 551 West End Ave., New
York. N. Y.
P., Engr.— Born Mansfield, O., May 18,
1856. Pupil of his father, John Lee; R.
C. Minor; Robert Mackintosh of Toronto,
Canada; also studied in Europe. Found-
ed the Homer Lee Banknote Co. of
New York. Member: Lotos C. 1895;
Salma.C. 1895: A. Fund S. Awards:
Hon. mention, Vienna, 1873; first class
medal, State of Ohio, 1887; hon. men-
tion, Paris Exp., 1900; bronze medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902.
LEE, Laura, 5 Cazenove St., Boston,
Mass. ; summer, R. F. D. No. 1, Fram-
ingham. Mass.
P. — Born Charlestown, Mass., Mar. 17,
1867. Pupil of School of Boston Mu-
seum of Fine Arts; Julian Academy in
Paris. Member: Copley S.; N.A.
Women PS: Boston SAC.
LEE, Selma V. P., 430 West 116th St.,
New York, N. Y. (E.)
LEE, Thomas A., Ardsley-on-Hudson,
N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
LEEDY, Mrs. Laura A., 713 Fairmount
Ave., St. Paul, Minn.
P., T. — Born Bloomington, 111., Oct. 26,
1881. Pupil of Pousset-Dart.; Minne-
sota School of Art.
LEEPER, Vera B(eatrice), 6 Morning-
side Ave., New York, N. Y.
P., C— Born Denver. Colo., March 13,
1893. Pupil of Eben S. Comins, Boston
Museum School, and studied in Paris.
LEESON, E(dith) M(argaret). See Mrs.
Everett.
LEHMER, Caroline, 332 Broadway. Cin-
cinnati, O.
P. — Member: Cincinnati Woman's A.C.
LEICH, Chester, 315 Mercantile Bldg.; h.
610 Riverside Ave., Evansville, Ind.
P., E. — Born Evansville, Ind., Jan. 31,
1889. Studied in Florence, Munich,
Berlin, and with Siebelist in Hamburg.
Member: Chicago SE; Brooklyn SE.
LEIGH, William R(obinson), 11 East 44th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Berkelev Co., W. Va., Sept.
23, 1866. Pupil of Maryland Inst., Bal-
timore under Hugh Newell; Raupp.
Gysis, Leofftz and Lindenschmid in
Munich. Member: Allied AA.
Salma. C. ; AWCS. Awards: Hon.
mention, Paris Salon, 1892; two
silver and three bronze medals, Munich
Academy; first class medal. Appalachian
Exp., Knoxville, Tenn., 1911. Work:
3 portraits, Washington and Lee Uni-
versity; "Getting Acquainted," Nayas-
set Club, Springfield, Mass.; "The Great
Spirit," "The Poisoned Pool," "The
Maya Historian," "The Stampede."
"Hunting with a Boomerang — Hopi
Reservation," Fine Arts Museum, Hunt-
ington, L. I., N. Y.
LEIGHTON, Kathryn W(oodman), 1633
West 46th St.. Los Angeles, Calif.
P.— Born Plainfield. N. H., Mar. 17,
1876. Pupil of Boston Normal Art S.
Member: Calif. AC; West Coast
Arts.
481
L
LEINDORFER-LUBZER WHO'S WHO IN ART
LEUSCH
LEINDORFER-LUBZER, Mrs. Adele,
Canoe Ave,, Livingston, N. J.
P. — Born in Austria, June 22, 1876. Pu-
pil of Robert-Fleury in Paris. Mem-
ber: S.Indp.A.
LEISENRING, L. Morris, 1320 New York
Ave.; h. 1777 Church St., Washington,
D. C.
P., Arch. — Born Lutherville, Md., Oct.
29, 1875. Pupil of Maryland Institute;
Drexel Institute; PAFA; Univ. of Penn-
sylvania; Duquesne in Paris; Ameri-
can Academy in Rome. Member:
"Wash. AC; Wash. WCC; Wash. Chap-
ter AIA.
LEISENRING, Mathifde Mueden (Mrs. L.
M. Leisenring), 1777 Church St., Wash-
ington, D. C.
Port. P. — Born Washington. Pupil of
ASL of N. Y. and of Washington; Lau-
rens, Constant and Henner in Paris.
Member: S.Wash.A; Wash. WCC.
Wash. AC. A wa r d s : Third Cor-
coran prize, S. Wash. A. 1903; second
Corcoran prize. Wash. WCC 1903; second
honor, Appalachian Exp., Knoxville,
Tenn., 1910. Instructor, Corcoran Gal-
lery, Washington.
LEITH-ROSS, Harry, Woodstock, Ulster
Co., N. Y.
P. — Born Mauritius, Jan. 27, 1886. Pu-
pil of Birge Harrison and J. F. Carlson;
Laurens in Paris Member: -Salma.
C; Conn, AFA; Allied AA. Award:
Porter Prize, Salma. C, 1915; Charles
Noel Flagg prize, Conn. AFA. 1921; 2nd
prize, Duxbury, Mass., AA, 1921.
LEITNER, L(eander), 10 Beekman PL,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Edgemoor,
Del.
P., I., C— Born Delphos, O., April 30,
1873. Pupil of J. B. Whittaker, Henry
Prelwitz, Joseph Boston and F. V. Du
Mond. Member: S. Indp. A.; Lg.
of N.Y.A.
LEMMON, G. N., 314 Maple Ave, Marietta,
Ga.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
LEMOS, Frank B., Palo Alto, Calif.
E.— M ember: Calif. PM.
LEMOS, Pedro J., Museum of Fine Arts,
Leland Stanford Junior University,
Stanford University, Calif. ; h. 460
Churchill Ave., Palo Alto, Calif.
E., P.. I., C. W., T.— Born Austin. Nev.,
May 25. 1882. Pupil of Mary Benton,
Arthur Dow, San Francisco Inst, of Art.
Member: Cal. SE; Chicago SE;
Calif. P.M.; Bohemian C. Awards:
Hon. mention for etching, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915; gold medal for prints,
California State Fair, 1916. Director
Museum of Fine Arts, Leland Stanford
University; also of Rionido, Calif., Sum-
mer School of Art; Editor, School Arts
Magazine. Illustrated: "Easy Steps in
Bible Stories"; "Elo the Eagle"; "Her-
alds of the Morning," etc. Author of
series of articles: "Pen Drawing for
Reproduction"; "Schoolroom Prints";
"Sketching from Nature"; "Easy Draw-
ing Lessons"; "Print Methods"; "Art
Simplified"; "Applied Art "
L'ENGLE, Lucy, 144 East 19th St.; h.
535 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. ; sum-
mer, Provincetown, Mass.
P.— Born New York, Sept. 28, 1899.
Member: S.Indp.A.
L'ENGLE, W(illiam) J., Jr., 144 East
19th St.; New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Jacksonville, Fla., April 22.
1884. Pupil of Richard Miller, J. P.
Laurens, Collin and Louis Biloul.
Member: S. Indp. A. ; Provincetown
A.A.
LENSKI, Lois L., 139 East 16th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
LENTELLI, Leo, 51 West 10th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., S.— Born Bologna, Italy, Oct. 29, 1879.
Member: NSS 1907; N.Y.Arch.Lg.
1909. Awards : Avery prize, N. Y.Arch.
Lg. 1911 and 1921; collaborative prize
and Avery prize, N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1913;
purchase prize, San F. AA. 1916.
Work: Figure of the Saviour and
sixteen angels for the reredos of the
Cathedral of Saint John the Divine,
New York; group over entrance of Mis-
sion Branch Library, San Francisco;
five figures for fagade of San Francisco
Public Library; decorations for St.
Louis Orpheum Theatre; Flagpole, Rice
Memorial Playfield. Pelham, N. Y. ;
panels, Straus Bank Bldg., New York.
Former instructor of sculpture, Cali-
fornia School of Fine Arts; instructor
of drawing, ASL of N.Y.
LENZ. Alfred, 71 Broadway, Flushing.
N. Y. (S.)
LEONARD, George H(enry), 71 Rue Bois-
sonade. Paris, France.
Ldscp.P. — Born Boston, May 3, 1869.
Pupil of G6r6me, Bouguereau and
Aman-Jean in Paris. Member:
Paris AAA; Boston AC.
LEONARD, William J(ackson), Norwell,
p.— Born Hinsdale, N. H.. 1869. Pupil
of Laurens and Constant in Paris.
LEPPERT, Rudolph E., 354 Fourth Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. Harrison, West-
cliGstGr Co. IN. "y.
I.— Born New York City, Dec. 20, 1872.
Pupil of G. deF. Brush, and C. deGrimm.
Member: Salma. C.
LESSHAFFT, Franz, 1020 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — Born Berlin, Germany, March 8,
1862. Pupil of Royal Academy of Fine
Arts, Berlin, under Anton V. Werner,
Thumann and Meyerheim. Member:
Phila. Sketch C; Fellowship PAFA;
S. Indp. A.; Phila. AC. Awards:
Hon. mention, Berlin; hon. mention for
water color, AAS, 1902.
LESTER, William H(arold), 121 South
Hill St., Los Angeles, Calif.; summer.
Batons Ranch, Wolf, Wyoming.
I., E., W. — Born Valparaiso, Chili, S. A.,
July 23, 1885. Pupil of AIC. Mem-
ber: Chicago SE ; Brooklyn SE.
LEUSCH, Franziska A(ugusta), 114
Wharton Ave., Glenside, Pa.
P., C, T. — Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil
of Fred Wagner. Instructor in Phila-
delphia Normal School.
482
Robert Aitken, N.A. By Sidney Dickinson
Walter McEwen
LEVER
WHO*S WHO IN ART
LEWIS
LEVER, Hayley, 253 West 42d St., New
York. N. Y.
P., E., T.— Born Adelaide. South Aus-
tralia, Sept. 28. 1876. Studied in Paris,
London, New York. Member: Royal
British Artists, London; Royal Inst. Oil
Painters. London; Royal West of Eng-
land Academy; NAC (life); Contem-
porary; New Soc. Artists; P.-G.
Awards : Hon. mention, CI Pitts-
burgh, 1913; silver medal, NAC, 1914;
Carnegie prize, NAD, 1914; gold medal,
P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915; gold medal,
NAC, 1916; Sesnan gold medal, PAFA,
1917; Phila. WCC prize, 1918. Work:
"Port of St. Ives," Sydney Art Gal-
lery, Australia; "Fishing Boats," Ade-
laide Art Gallery, Australia; "Winter,
St. Ives," Brooklyn Institute Museum;
"Sunshine, St. Ives, Cornwall," Penn-
sylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Philadelphia; "Dawn," Corcoran Gal-
lery, Washington, D. C; "'Smeaton's
Quay, St. Ives," Fort Worth (Tex.) Mu-
seum; "Boats Gloucester," and "Chang-
ing Nets, Gloucester," Detroit Insti-
tute; "Gloucester, Mass.," Los An-
geles Museum; "Fishermen's Quarters,"
Dallas Art Museum; "Hudson River,"
National Arts Club. Instructor at Art
Students' League of New York.
LEVERING, Albert, 617 West 170th St.,
New York, N. Y.
I.— Born Hope, Ind., 1869. Practiced
architecture; studied drawing in Mu-
nich. On staff of "Puck," "Life" and
"Harper's Weekly." Member: SI
1912.
LEVI, Julian Clarence, Tilden Bldg., 105
West 40th St.; h. 150 West 59th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., Arch. — Born New York City, Dec. 8,
1874. Pupil of William R. Ware at Co-
lumbia University; Scellier de Gisors in
Paris. Member: AIA; French Inst.
In Am.; S. B-A. A.; Arch. Lg. of N. Y.
Awards : French Government Di-
ploma, 1904; honorable mention, Paris
Salon, 1?04.
LEVITT, Joel J., 6 West 28th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Born in Russia, April 29, 1875.
Pupil of Repin; Imperial Academy of
Art, Petrograd. Member: Salma.
C. Represented in Wilna, Russia, Mu-
seum; Petrograd Museum; Toronto
Museum.
LEVY, Alex(ander) O(scar), 41 Berkeley
Place, Buffalo, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Bonn, Germany, May 26,
1881. Pupil of Duveneck, Chase and.
Henri. Member: Buffalo SA; Buf-
falo AC.
LEVY. Beatrice S.. 1540 East 57th St.,
h. 6040 Drexel Ave., Chicago, 111.
P.. E.— Born Chicago. April 3. 1892. Pu-
pil of ATC; Voyt Preissig and Charles
Hawthorne. Member: Chicago SE;
Chicago AC; Chicago SA; Art Service
League. Award : Hon. mention
for etching, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915.
Work in Chicago Art Institute.
483
LEVY, Herman, 209 East 56th St., Chi-
cago, 111.
P.— Born Hartford, Conn., 1868. Pupil
of Beaux-Arts and Julian in Paris.
Member: Palette and Chisel C.
LEVY, William Auerbach, 210 West 14th
St., New York, N. Y.
E., P.— Born in Russia, Feb, 14, 1889.
Pupil of NAD in New York; Julian
Academy in Paris under Laurens.
Member: Sal. SE; Chicago SE;
P-G.; Lg. of N.Y.A.; Wash. AC.
Awards: Mooney traveling scholar-
ship, NAD, 1911; first figure prize, Chi-
cago SE. 1914; bronze medal. P. -P.Exp.,
San F., 1915; Logan prize $25, Chicago
SE, 1918; third Hallgarten prize, NAD,
1921. Work in: Art Institute
of Chicago; Worcester Museum; New
York Public Library; Carnegie Institute
of Pittsburgh; "Corner of My Studio,"
Detroit Institute of Arts. Instructor of
etching at National Academy of Design
and Educational Alliance, New York.
LEWIS, Alice L., 62 Benevolent St., Prov-
idence, R. I.
P.. T.— Born Providence, R. I., 1872.
Pupil of Collin in Paris; J. L. Tadd in
Philadelphia. Member: Providence
WCC.
LEWIS, Alonzo Victor, 2611 Eastlake
Ave., Seattle, Wash. (P.)
LEWIS, (Arthur) Allen, Southlngton,
Conn.
P., Etcher, I., Engr.— Born Mobile, Ala.,
Apr. 7, 1873. Pupil of George Bridgman
in Buffalo; G6r5me in Paris. Mem-
ber: Chicago SE; N. Y. 'SE; P-G;
Brooklyn SE; Calif. P.M. Awards:
Bronze medal, St. Louis Exp.. 1904;
Logan prize, Chicago SE 1915; gold
medal P.-P Exp., San F., 1915; Barnett
prize, Brooklyn SE, 1917. Work in:
New York Public Library, Brooklyn In-
stitute Museum ; Herron Art Insti-
tute, Indianapolis; Chicago Art Insti-
tute; Oakland (Cal.) Public Museum;
Newark Public Library; Detroit Insti-
tute of Arts.
LEWIS, Bertram, 1209 Eighth Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
LEWIS, Elizabeth H., 215 East 15th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, St. Peter's
Rectory. Peekskill, N. Y.
P., C, L., T.— Born in Peekskill, N. Y.
Member: Lg. of N.Y.A. ; S.Indp.A.
LEWIS, Helen V(aughan), Irvington-on-
Hudson, N. Y.
P.— Born New York City, Mar., 1879.
Pupil of Cox, Du Mond and Beckington.
Member: Pa. S. Min. P.
LEWIS, Josepiiine M(iles), Carnegie
Studios, 154 West 57th St., New York,
N. Y.
P. — Born New Haven. Conn., March 10.
1865. Pupil of John F. Weir and John
H. Niemeyer at Yale School of Art;
Frederick MacMonnies and Aman-Jean
in Paris. Member: N. A. Women
PS: New Haven PCC. Award: Shaw
memorial prize, NAD, 1916.
LEWIS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
LINK
LEWIS, Mrs. Laura C, 2004 Ontario St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia. Pa., Aug-. 21,
1874. Pupil of Phila. School of Design
for Women; PAFA; ElHott Daingerfield;
W. L. Lathrop and William M. Chase,
Me m b e r : Plastic C.
LEWIS, Louise G., Agnes Scott College,
Atlanta, Ga. (P.)
LEWIS, Phillips F(risble), 843 Sixth Ave.,
Oakland; summer, Peter's Villa, Mon-
terey, Calif.
P.— Born Oakland, Calif., Aug-. 26, 1892.
Pupil of Calif. School of Arts and Crafts
and Armin C. Hansen. Member: San
F. AA; Oakland AA.
LEYENDECKER, Frank X., 80 West 40th
St.; h. 75 East 81st St., New York, N.Y.
I. — Born Montabour, Germany, Jan. 19,
1877. Pupil of Laurens and Constant In
Paris. Member: SI.
LEYENDECKER, G., 80 West 40th St.,
New York, N. Y. (P., I.)
LEYENDECKER, J(oseph) C(hrlstlan),
80 West 40th St., New York, N. Y.; h.
114 Pelham Road, New Rochelle, N. Y.
I. — Born Montabour, Germany, March
23, 1874. Pupil of AIC; Julian Academy
in Paris. Member: Salma.C.
LICHTENAUER, J(oseph) Mortimer, 24
West 59th St., New York, N. Y.
Port, and Mural P. — Born New York,
May 11, 1876. Pupil of Mowbray in
New York; Merson and Laurens in
Paris. Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1902;
Mural P.; ASL of N. Y.; S. Conn. A.;
Salma. C. Awards: President's
prize, N. Y. Arch. Lg. 1903 and 1907.
Work : Proscenium Arch, Frazee
Theatre, New York; 35 panels in Shu-
bert Theatre, New York; "Portrait of
Gen. Julius Stahel"; "Portrait of Gen.
Palmer Pierce"; National Museum of
Art, Washington; 24 bas-relief for Rice
Memorial Playfield, Pelham, N. Y.
LIE, Jonas, 58 West 57th St.; h. 2 East
81st St., New York, N. Y.
Ldscp.P.— Born Norway, April 29, 1880.
Pupil of NAD and ASL of N. Y. M e m -
b er : ANA, 1912; Am. PS; S. In dp. A.;
Los Angeles Modern AS; SPNY; Salma.
C. Awards: Silver medal. St. Louis
Exp., 1904; first Hallgarten prize ($300),
NAD 1914; silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San
F., 1915; Greenough memorial prize,
Newport AA 1916. Work: "Fishing
Boats at Sunrise," Carnegie Institute,
Pittsburgh; "The Conquerors," Metro-
politan Museum, New York; "Culebra
Cut," Detroit Institute; "Afterglow,"
Art Institute of Chicago; also repre-
sented in Peabody Institute, Baltimore,
Md.; Memorial Art Gallery, Rochester,
N. Y.; Museum of Art, Syracuse, N. Y.;
Art Association of Dallas, Tex.; Art
Association of Lafayette, Ind.
LIELLO, John. 6 Patchen Place, New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
LIGGET, Jane S., 157 North 21st St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
LIGGETT, John, Jr., 2ll Fourth Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
LINCOLN, Agnes Harrison, 637 Hackett
Ave., Milwaukee, Wis.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
LINCOLN, F. Foster, Union Village, RFD,
Woonsocket, R. I.
I.— Member: SI 1910.
LINDBORG, Ingeborg A. See Mrs.
Andr easen -Lindborg-.
LINDE, Ossip L., care of Guaranty Trust
Co., 1 Rue des Italiens, Paris, Prance;
Westport, Conn.
P.— Born Chicago. Pupil of AIC; Lau-
rens in Paris. Member: Allied AA;
•Salma. C. ; SPNY. Awards: Hon.
mention, Paris Salon, 1907; third class
medal, Paris Salon, 1910. Represented
In Oakland (Cal.) Museum.
LINDENMUTH, Arlington N., 26 North
Sixth St., Allentown, Pa.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
LINDENMUTH, Tod, 26 North 6th St.,
Allentown, Pa.; summer, Provlncetown,
Mass.
P., E. — Born Allentown, Pa., May 4,
1885. Pupil of Henri, Webster and
Browne. Member: Salma. C. ; Pro-
vlncetown AA; Alliance; Wash, WCC.
W o r k : "Mending Nets" and Province-
town Wharf," Toledo Museum; "Garden
Near the Dunes," "Pennsylvania State
College Museum; "The Runway," Roch-
ester Memorial Art Gallery; and repre-
sented in the New York Public Library.
LINDER, C. Bennett, Carnegie Hall, New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
LINDIN, Carl (Olof) (Eric), Woodstock,
Ulster Co., N. Y.
P.— Born Sweden, 1869. Pupil of Lau-
rens, Constant and Aman-Jean In
Paris. Award : First prize, Swed-
ish Club, Chicago. Decorations in Hull
House, Chicago, 111.
LINDING, Herman M(agnuson), 154 East
64th St., New York, N. Y.
P.. S., C. — Born in Sweden, June 1,
1880. Pupil of Callmander, Carl Wil-
helmson, Colarossi. Member: S.
Indp. A.; Whitney Studio Club; Alliance.
LINDNER, Norman, 159 Driving Park
Ave.. Rochester, N. Y.
P. — M ember : Rochester AC.
LINDNEUX, Robert O(ttakar), 2939 East
Colfax Ave., Denver, Colo.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., Dec. 11,
1871. Studied in Dusseldorf, Germany.
M e mb e r : Denver A. A. 'Specialty,
animals.
LINDSAY, Henry A., 20 Exchange PI.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
LINDSLEY, E(mily) E(arle), 23 Chats-
worth Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. ; sum-
mer, Mt. Washington, Mass.
P., I., T.— Born New Rochelle, N. Y.,
Feb. 25. 1858. Pupil of W. Chase, John
Weir, C. Ferrari. Member: N.A.
AVomen PS.
LINK. B. Lillian, 260 West 76th St.,
New York, N. Y.
S.— Born New York. Pupil of Mrs.
Charles Sprague-Smith, George Grey
Barnard and Herbert Adams. Mem-
ber: MacD.C. ; Alliance. Awards;
484
LINS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
LOCHOW
Avery prize, N.Y.Arch.Ivg-. 1907; sculp-
ture prize, N. Y, Woman's AC. 1912,
LINS, Theodora. See Mrs. Landt.
LINSON, Corwin Knapp, Atlantic High-
lands, N. J.
P., I., C. W. — Born Brooklyn, N. Y.,
Feb. 25, 1864. Pupil of Gerome and Lau-
rens in Paris. M e m b e r : NYWCC;
Salma. C. Work: "The Olympian
Columns," Westboro Library, Mass.;
illustrated: "I. N. R. I.," by Roseg-ger;
"The Lost Word," by Dr. H. Van Dyke;
"Life of the Master," by Dr. Watson;
"Modern Athens," by George Horton;
own articles in "Scribner's," "Century,"
"Cosmopolitan," "The House Beauti-
ful," etc.. including "Pont Aven Vign-
ettes," "Color at Vesuvius," "Sunset at
"Jerusalem"; five memorial windows in
Baptist Temple, Brooklyn, N. Y.
LINTON, Frank B. A., 1707 Chestnut St.;
h. 1310 North 15th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Feb. 26, 1871.
Pupil of Gerome, Benjamin-Constant,
Bouguereau, Bonnat and Laurens in
Paris. Member: Internationale
Union des Beaux-Arts et des Lettres,
Paris; Phila. AC.
LIPPERT, Leon, 621 Main St., Cincinnati,
O.; h. 658 Nelson PL, Newport, Ky.
P. — Born in Bavaria, March 15, 1863.
Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy, under
Nowottny and Duveneck, and studied
abroad. Member: Cincinnati AC.
LISLE, Mabie, care of the Seattle Fine
Arts Society, Seattle, Wash. (P.)
LITCHFIELD, J. Homer, 56 Charles St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: NYWCC.
LITLE, Arthur, care Salmagundi Club,
45 Fifth Ave; 15 West 29th St., New
York, N. Y.
I.— Member: SI 1912; Salma.C; AI
Graphic A.
LITTLE, Gertrude L., 3705 Wallingford
Ave., Seattle, Wash.
P. — Born Minneapolis, Minn. Pupil of
Seattle AS; ASL of N.Y.; School of Am.
S. Min. P. of N.Y.; William M. Chase.
Member: Seattle FAS. Award :
1st prize for miniatures, Seattle FAS,
1920.
LITTLE, J(ohn) Wesley, Picture Rocks,
Pa.
Ldscp.P. — Born Forksville, Sullivan Co.,
Pa., Aug. 24, 1867. Pupil of NAD and
of Leonard Ochtman in New York.
Member: Wash.WCC: Phila.WCC;
Phila. Sketch C; Chicago WCC. Award:
Silver medal, AAS. Phila., 1902. Work:
Mural decoration, Franklin Bldg., Wil-
liamsport. Pa.
LITTLE, Philip, Daniel's Street Court;
h. 10 Chestnut St., Salem, Mass.; sum-
mer, MacMahan Island, Me.
P.,E. — Born Swampscott, Mass., Sept. 6,
1857. Pupil of Boston Museum School.
Member: Boston GA; Chicago SE;
Boston SE; Portland (Me.) AA (life);
P-G; Brooklyn SE; NAC (life).
Awards: Hon. mention AIC, 1912,
for "The Brook"; silver medal P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915. Work: "In the
Wake of the Moon," Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia; "Where Haw-
thorne Wrote and Derby Traded,"
City Art Museum, St. Louis. Mo.; "An
Off Shore Breeze," Minneapolis Society
of Fine Arts; "Seining at Dawn," Bow-
doin College Art Gallery. Brunswick,
Me.; "Gulls in Fog," Portland (Me.)
Society of Art; "Surf at Sunset," Nash-
ville Art Association; "Awakening of
the Day." Milwaukee Art Association;
"The Old Wharf." Dubnriue Art Asso-
ciation; "A Relic of History," Essex
Inst., Salem; "Transport Going East ofC
Marblehead, 19"! 7," R. L School of De-
sign; "February Thaw," Boston Mu-
seum : etchings in Congressional Library,
Washington; Curator Art, Essex Insti-
tute, Salem, Mass.
LITTLEJOHN, C(ynthia Pugh), 1221
Leontine, New Orleans, La.
P. — Born Assumption Parish. La. Pupil
of Ellsworth Woodward and A. A. Dow.
Member: NAC ; New Orleans Arts
and Crafts Club.
LITZINGER, Dorothea M. (Mrs. John W.
Thompson), 335 East 50th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., E. — Born Cambria County, Pa., Jan.
20.1889. Pupil of NAD: SPNY. Illus-
trates for "Country Life in America."
LIVEZEY, Will(iam) E.. 538 South Dear-
born St.; h. 2320 Cleveland Ave., Chi-
cago. 111.
P., S.. I. — Born near Unionvllle. Mo..
April 12. 1876. Illustrated "The Days of
Long Ago." by W. E. Comstock. etc.
LLOYD. Lucile (Mrs. Addison Brown).
941 Mira Vista Terrace, Pasadena,
Calif.
P., L— Born Cincinnati, Aug. 20. 1894.
Pupil of Frank Fairbanks, and Eugene
Savage. Member: American Book-
plate Soc.
LLOYD, Mary Lowell, 624 South Wash-
ington Sq., Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
LLOYD, Mary Wingate (Mrs. Horatio
Gates Llovd), Haverford, Pa.
P.— Born New York, June 3, 1868. Pu-
pil of Chase, Cecilia Beaux and Mow-
bray. Member: Plastic C.
LLOYD, Sara A. Worden (Mrs. Hinton
S. Lloyd), Hamilton, N. Y.
P.— Born Xenia. O. Pupil of R. Swain
Gifford, Volk and Chase in New York.
Work: "Sunshine and Shadow," Mt.
Holyoke College: Portrait of John J.
Jones, Colgate University: Portrait of
Miss Slade. Hamilton CN. Y.) High
School: Portrait W. G. Morehead, The-
ological Seminary, XenIa, O.
LOBER, Georq John, 6 East 15th St.; h.
535 West 113th St., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Chicnero, TIL. Nov. 7. 1891.
Pupil of Calder, Borglum and Longmans,
NAD and Beaux Arts Inst. Member:
N.Y. Arch. Lg. ; NSS. Award : Avery
collaborative prize, N. Y. ; Arch. Lg.,
1911; hon. mention, AIC, 1918. Repre-
sented in Corcoran Gallery, Washington,
D. C; Memorial Museum, San Fran-
cisco.
LOCHOW, Curt F., 1421 Frink Blvd.,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
485
LOCKE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
LOOMIS
LOCKE, Alexander S., 103' Pineapple St.;
h. 87 Winthrop St., Brooklyn, New
York. N. Y.
Mural P. — Born New York, Feb. 14,
1860. Pupil of John La Farge. Mem-
ber: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1894; Mural P.;
NAC.
LOCKE, Charles W(heeler), care of
Traxel Galleries; h. 3906 Hazel Ave.,
Norwood, O.
P., I., E. — Born Cincinnati, Ohio, Aug.
31, 1899. Pupil of Art Academy of
Cincinnati.
LOCKMAN, De Witt M., 58 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Port. P.; Salma.C; ANA
1917; Allied AA. Award: Silver
medal, P.-x^, Exp., San P., 1915; Lip-
pincott prize, PAFA, 1918.
LOEB, Dorothy, 4346 North Hermitage
Ave., Chicago, 111.; summer. Province-
town, Mass.
P., E. — Born in Bavaria, July 3, 1887,
of American parents. Pupil of AIC; T.
W. Stevens; Hawthorne, and studied in
Paris and Munich. Award: Tuesday
Art and Travel Club European Scholar-
ship. Decorations in Lane Technical
High 'School and Smith Public School.
Chicago.
LOEBL, Florence Weinberg, 135 West
79th St., New York, N. Y.
P., W.— Born New York, Nov. 13, 1894.
Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller. M e m-
b e r : S.Indp.A.; Lg. of N.Y.A.
LOEWENGUTH. Frederick iVi., 401 Pow-
ers Bldg., Rochester, N. Y.
P.. C— Born Rochester, N. Y., April 18.
1887. Studied in London and Paris.
Member: Rochester Art Club.
LOGAN, IVlaurice, care of Dregge and
Farnum. 448 Fourth St., San Francisco,
Calif. (P., L)
LOGAN, Robert Fulton, Villa Adrien,
Route des Gardes, Meudon, Seine et
Oise, Prance.
P., E., T. — Born Lauder, Manitoba,
Canada. Pupil of Boston School of the
Museum of Fine Arts; AIC; Philip L.
Hale. Member: Conn. AFA.; Chi-
cago SE; Soc. Int. Gravure Originale
en Noir; Paris AAA. Work: "Span-
ish Iris," Art Society of Hartford; "Les
Molineaux-Billancourt," Luxembourg
Museum, Paris. Assistant Director,
Atelier of Painting, Bellevue Art Train-
ing Centre, A.E.F., 1919.
LOGASA. Charles, Room 405 Westory
Bldg., Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
LOHR, Alfred, care of Ralo Toy Co.,
Worcester, Mass.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
LOHMANN. F.
Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember
LOKKE, Marie.
D., 2609 Jefferson Ave.,
: Cincinnati AC.
See Mrs. Mathiesen.
LOMBARDO, Emilio Vincent, 422 Massa-
chusetts Ave., Boston. Mass.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
LONDONER, A(my), 1947 Broadway; h.
Hotel Endicott, New York, N. Y.; sum-
P.— Born Lexington, Mo., Apr. 12, 1878.
Pupil of Robert Henri and John Sloan.
Member: ASL of N. Y.; S.Indp.A.;
Lg. of N.Y.A.
LONG, Adelaide Husted (Mrs. George T.
Long), 57 North Broadway, White
Plains, N. Y.
P.. T., W.— Born New York. Pupil of
ASL of N.Y., John Twachtman, Ernest
Knaufft and George T. Collins; Anglade
in Paris. Member: NAC.
LONG, Ellis B(arcroft), 127 Richmond St.,
Baltimore, Md.
P., S.— Born Baltimore, Md., Oct. 30,
1874. Pupil of Andre Castaigne and E.
S. Whiteman in Baltimore; Cox, Mow-
bray, Saint Gaudens and D. C. French
in New York. Member: Char. C.
LONGACRE, Breta, 27 West 67th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N, A. Women PS.
LONGACRE, Lydia E(astwick), 27 West
67th St., New York, N. Y.
Min.P.— Born New York, Sept. 1, 1870.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y., under Chase and
Mowbray; Whistler in Paris. Mem-
ber: Am. S. Min. P.; Pa. Soc. Min. P.;
N. A. Women PS.
LONGFELLOW, IVIary King, 116 State
St., Portland, Me.
P.— M ember: Boston WCC.
LONGMAN (Mary) Evelyn B(eatpice)
(Mrs. N. H. Batchelder), Windsor, Conn.
S.— Born Winchester, O., Nov. 21, 1874.
Pupil of AIC under Taft; French In
New York. Member: NSS 1906; ANA
1909; NA, 1919; Am. Numismatic 'Soc;
N. Y. Municipal AS. Award: Silver
medal. St. Louis Exp., 1904: silver
medal. P. P. Exp., San F., 1915; 'Shaw
memorial prize, NAD, 1918; W.M.R.
French gold medal, AIC, 1920; Widener
gold medal, PAFA, 1921. Work:
Bronze doors of Chapel, U. S. Naval
Academy, Annapolis; bronze doors of
Library, Wellesley College, Wellesley,
Mass.; Ryle memorial. Public Library,
Paterson, N. J.; "Torso" and "Victory,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York; "Vic-
tory," and "Electricity," Toledo Museum,
Allison monument, Des Moines, la.;
"Electricity," Western Union Telegraph
Bldg., New York; centennial monum'ent,
Chicago; Naugatuck War Memorial,
Naugatuck, Conn.; also represented in
Chicago Art Institute: City Art Museum,
St. Louis; Cincinnati Museum of Art;
Cleveland Museum; Herron Art Inst.,
Indianapolis.
LOOMIS, Chester, Englewood, N. J.
P., I. — Born near Syracuse, N. Y., Oct.
18, 1852. Pupil of Harry Thompson and
Bonnat in Paris. Member: SAA
1888: ANA 1906; N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1891;
A. Fund S; Mural p. Awards:
Gold medal, Mass. Charitable Mechan-
ics' Assoc, 1890; President's prize, N.Y.
Arch.Lg. 1904. Work: "Christopher
Sly," Herron Art Institute, Indianapo-
lis; windows and mural paintings in
Cornell Univ., Ithaca.
486
LOOMIS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
LOWELL
LOOMIS, M. C, 1445 North California
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born at Fairview, Pa. Studied at
San Francisco School of Design under
Virgil Williams, and at the Chicago
Art Institute under Vanderpoel, Grover
and Boutwood.
LORD, Austin W. Died January 19,
1922.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
LORD, Caroline A., 975 East McMillan St.,
Cincinnati, O.
P.. T. — Born Cincinnati, March 10,
1860. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy;
ASLi of N. Y. ; Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: Cincinnati Woman's AC
(hon.). Instructor in Cincin. Art Acad.
Award : Bronze medal, Columbian
Exp., Chicago, 1893. Work: "First
Communion" and "Old Woman," Cin-
cinnati Museum.
LORD, Harriet, 208 East 68th St., New
York. N. Y.
P.— M ember: N, A. Women PS.
LORENZANI, Arthur E., 23 McDougal
Alley. New York, N. Y.
S.. T.— Born Carrara, Italy, Feb. 10,
1885. Pupil of Royal Academies of Arts,
Carrara and Rome. Member: Assoc.
Internationale Artistica, Rome. Award:
$200 prize at International Exp., Parma,
Italy.
LORING, William C, 62 Humboldt Ave.,
Providence, R. I.
P., T. — Born Newton Center, Mass.,
Aug. 10, 1879. Studied in New York,
Boston, London and Paris. Member:
Boston AC; Providence AC; Providence
WCC. Head of free hand department
of drawing and painting, R. I. School
of Design. Represented in Brown Uni-
versity; Rhode Island State House;
Rhode Island School of Design; Royal-
ston (Mass.) Public Library.
LORRAINE, Alma Royer, 1617 California
Ave., 'West Seattle. Wash.
P.. T. — Born Randolph, O. Pupil of
AIC, and studied in Seattle and Rome.
Award : Silver medal, Alaska-Yukon-
Pacific Exp., Seattle, 1909. Work:
"Aqueducts of Claudius," West Ches-
ter Seminary.
LORRAINE, Helen, St. Elizabeth's Hos-
pital; h. 2619a Park Ave., Richmond, Va.
Medical I. — Born Webster Grove, Mo.,
June 23, 1892. Pupil of Nora Houston.
Adele Clark and Max Brodel.
LOTHROP, iVIrs. 0. B., 50 W^est 67th St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
LOTHROP. Gertrude Fay, Lester Studios,
30 East 57th St.. New York; summer,
Shelter Island. N. Y.
P., I.. W. — Born Springfield, Mass..
Nov. 19, 1889. Pupil of Louis Gaspard
Monte.
LOUDERBACK, Waiter, The Chelsea,
West 23rd St., New York, N. Y. (L)
LOVE, C. W., 16 West 46th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
487
LOVEN. Frank W., 3435 Boulevard, Jer-
sey City, N. J.
P., L— Born Jersey City, N. J., Oct. 2,
1868. Pupil of Birge Harrison, F. V.
Du Mond and John Carlson. Mem-
ber: Salma. C.
LOVETT-LORSKI, Boris, Layton Art
School, Milwaukee, Wis.; summer, 33
Perkins St., Winthrop, Mass.
S., T.— Born in Russia, Dec. 25, 1891.
Pupil of Hugo Zaleman. Member:
S.Indp.A.; Copley S. Awards: Prix
de Rome, Imperial Academic, 1914 and
1915. Work: Portrait bust, Grayson
Stetson, Boston University.
LOW, Mary Fairchild (Mrs. Will H.
Low), Lawrence Park, Bronxville, N. Y.
P.— Born New Haven, Conn., 1866. Pu-
pil of St. Louis School of Fine Arts;
Carolus-Duran and Julian Academy in
Paris. Member: SAA 1896. ANA
1906; International Woman's AC, Lon-
don; Assoc. Soc. Nat. des Beaux Arts.
Awards : Paris, three years' scholar-
ship from St. Louis School of Fine Arts;
medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893;
bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1900; bronze
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; gold
medal, Dresden, 1902; Julia Shaw prize, ■
SAA 1902; gold medal, Rouen, 1903; gold
medal, Marseilles, 1905; gold medal,
Normandy Exp., Rouen, 1911. Repre-
sented in Museum at Rouen, France;
Union League Club, Chicago; City Art
Museum, St. Louis; Museum of Vernon,
France.
LOW, Will H(icok), Lawrence Park,
Bronxville, N. Y.
P., I.. T., W., L.— Born Albany, N. Y.,
May 31, 1853. Pupil of Ecole des Beaux-
Arts, under Gerome and of Carolus-
Duran in Paris. Member: ANA
1888. NA 1890; SAA 1878; Mural P.;
N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1889; Century Assoc;
Lotos C; Nat. Inst. A.L. Awards:
Silver medal for drawing, Paris Exp.,
1889; medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago,
1893; Lotos Club Fund, NAD 1895; sil-
ver medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
Work: "The Orange Vender," Art
Institute, Chicago; "Christmas Morn,"
National Gallery, Washington; "Auro-
ra," Metropolitan Museum, New York,
N. Y. ; mural decorations; ceiling of
reception room, Waldorf Hotel, and
ballroom Hotel Astoria, New York;
panels in Essex Co. Court House, New-
ark, N. J.; Luzerne Co. Court House,
Wilkesbarre, Pa.; Federal Bldg., Cleve-
land; St. Paul's P. E. Church, Albany,
N. Y. ; "The Sylvan Year," Art Museum,
Montclair, N. J.; 32 panels in State
Education Bldg.. Albany, N. Y. ; Frieze
in Legislative Library, N. Y. State Cap-
itol; decorative painting, "Victory 1918,"
Columbia University. Author: "A
Chronicle of Friendship," "A Painter's
Progress," Delivered Scammon course
of lectures, AIC 1910.
LOWE, Alice Leszlnska. See Mrs. H. G.
Ferguson,
LOWELL, Edith Allen, 116 Carnegie Hall.
New York. N. Y. ; summer, 66 Crescent
St., Greenfield, Mass.
P., W. — Born Greenfield, Mass. Pupil
LOWELL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
LUND
of Augustus Saint Gaudens, George
Auguste Renouard.
LOWELL, Orson, Astor Trust Bldg., 5th
Ave. and 42nd St., New York* h.
Rochelle Park, New Rochelle, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Wyoming, la., Dec. 22,
1871. Pupil of Vanderpoel and Grover
at AIC. Member: SI 1901; Guild of
Free Lance Artists; New Rochelle AA.
Work : Drawings in Cincinnati Mu-
seum; La Crosse (Wis.) AA; Maryland
Institute, Baltimore; Mechanics' Insti-
tute, Rochester.
LOWENHEIM, F(rederick), 303 Fifth
Ave., New York. N. Y. ; h. 99 Leland
Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y.
I. — Born Berlin, Germany. Pupil of
Kunst-Schule, Berlin; ATC. Mem-
ber: SI, 1911; Salma. C, 1911.
LUCAS, Albert P(ike), 1947 Broadway.
New York, N. Y.
P., S.— Born Jersey City, N. J. Pupil
of Hubert, Boulanger, Dagnan-Bouveret
and Courtois in Paris. Member:
ANA; Soc. Nat des Beaux- Arts, Paris,
NAC; Lotos C; Allied AA; Salma. C.
Awards: Hon. mention, Paris Exp.,
1900; bronze medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901. Work : "October Breezes,"
National Gallery, Washington; "Ec-
stasy," marble figure, Metropolitan
Museum, New York.
LUCAS, E. B., 204 Richmond St., Balti-
more, Md., (P.)
LUCAS, J. Carrell, 6 East Pleasant St.,
Baltimore, Md.
Min.P.— M ember : Charcoal C.
LUCAS, Jean W(illiams), 418 Potomac
Ave., Hagerstown, Md,
P., T. — Born North Hagerstown, Md.,
Aug. 5, 1873. Pupil of Henri Dainger-
field and Whittemore. Member: N.
A. Women PS; Pa. S. Min. P. Award:
Honorable mention for miniature, P. -P.
Exp., San Francisco, 1915.
LUCE, Mrs. Laura H., 120 E. Main St.,
Titusville. Pa.
Idscp.P., T., L.— Born Salem, N. Y.,
June 19, 1845. Pupil of A. H. Wyant,
C. B. Coman and H. B. Snell in New
York. Member: N. A. Women PS.
LUCE, Mrs. Marie Huxford, Skaneateles,
N. Y.
P.— Born Slcaneateles, N. Y. Pupil of
J. S. H. Keever in Holland; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles H. Woodbury In Boston.
Member: NYWCC; N. A, Women
PS.
LUCIUS, Florence G., 5 West 16th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., S.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
LUDOVICI, Alice E., 167 North Orange
Grove Ave., Pasadena, Cal.; summer,
Santa Barbara, and Carmel-by-the-Sea,
Calif.
Min. P. — Born Dresden, Germany, Nov.
7, 1872; Italian and English descent.
Pupil of Julius Ludovici in New York.
Member: Cal. S. Min. P. (pres.).
Awards: Silver medal for miniatures,
Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exp., Seattle,
1909; gold medal for miniatures, Cal. S.
Min. P., 1914; gold medal, Pan. -Cal.
Exp., San Diego, 1915, for miniatures.
LUEBKERT, Alma, 518 Kosciusko St.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y. (P.)
LUFKIN, Lee. See Mrs. Wm. J. Kaula.
LUISI, N., 93— 16th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
LUKEMAN, (Henry) Augustus, 68 West
56th St., New York, N. Y.; summer,
Stockbridge, Mass.
S.— Born Richmond, Va., Jan. 28, 1872.
Pupii of Launt Thompson and D. C.
French in New York; Ecole des Beaux-
Arts in Paris, under FalguiSre. Mem-
ber: N.Y. Arch.Lg. 1898; NSS 1898; ANA
1909. Award: Bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904. Work: "McKinley,"
Adams, Mass.; and Dayton, O., "Manu,"
Appellate Court, New York; four figures
for Royal Bank Bldg., Montreal; four
figures, Brooklyn Institute Museum;
Columbus Custom House; "Prof. Joseph
Henry," Princeton Univ.; "Kit Carson,"
Trinidad, Colo; Straus Memorial, New
York, 1915; U. S. Grant memorial,
San Diego, Cal.; Soldiers' monument,
Somerville, Mass.; statue, "Franklin
Pierce," Concord, N. H. ; "Women of
the Confederacy," monument, Ra-
leigh, N. C. ; "Gen. Wm. Shepard,"
Westfield, Mass.; "Honor Roll," Pros-
pect Park, Brooklyn, N. Y. ; "Soldiers'
Memorial," Red Hook Park, Brooklyn,
N. Y.
LUKS, George (Benjamin), 680 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Williamsport, Pa., Aug. 13,
1867. Pupil of PAFA and Diisseldorf
Academy; studied in Paris and London.
Member: Port. P.; Am. PS; NYWCC;
Boston AC. Awards : Fourth W. A.
Clark prize ($500>. and Corcoran hon.
mention, 1916; Hudnut prize, NYWCC,
1916; Temple gold medal, PAFA, 1918;
Logan Medal, AIC, 1920. War- Corre-
spondent in Cuba, 1895-96.
LUM, Mrs. Bertha, 136 St. Anne Alley,
Chinatown; h. 3665 Washington St., San
Francisco, Calif.
P., E. — Born in Iowa. Pupil of AIC;
Frank Holme and Anna Weston.
Member: Boston SAC; Cal. SE;
Asiatic Soc. of Japan; Alumni AIC.
Award : Silver medal, P. -P. Exp.,
San. F., 1915. Specialty, wood block
prints.
LUMIS, Harriet R(andall) (Mrs. Fred W.
Lumis), 28 Bedford Road, Springfield,
TV /To oc
P.— Born Salem, Conn., May 29, 1870.
Pupil of Willis S. Adams; Leonard
Ochtman: New York Summer School of
Art; Hugh Breckenridge. Member:
Conn. AFA; Springfield Art Lg.; Phila.
Alliance.
LUMSDON, Mrs. E, Christine, Carnegie
Studios, 154 West 57th St., New York,
N. Y..
P., T. — Born Brooklyn, N. Y. Pupil of
Carolus-Duran, Henry Mosler, Childe
Hassam and George de Forest Brush.
Member: N. A. Women PS; S. Indp.
A.
LUND, Harold, Leonia, N. J. (L)
LUNDBERG
WHO'S WHO IN ART
McCAN
LUNDBERG, A. F., 48 No. Grant Ave.
W., Columbus, O.
Scenic P. — M ember: Pen and Pencil
C, Columbus.
LUNDBORG, Florence, 63 Avenue de
Breteuil, Paris, France.
P., I. — Born San Francisco, Cal. Stud-
led at Mark Hopkins Inst, of Art, and
In Paris and Italy. Member: N.
A. Women PS; San F. AA; MacD. C.
Awards: Gold medal, San F., AA;
bronze medal, P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915.
Work: Mural decorations for Cali-
fornia Bldg-. at Panama-Pacific Exposi-
tion; "Queen of Hearts," at Henriettes,
Paris. Illustrated "Rubaiyat," "Yosem-
Ite Legends," "Honey Bee"; "Odes
and Sonnets," etc.
LUNGREN, Fernand (Harvey), Mission
Canyon Road, Santa Barbara, Cal.
P., I.— Born Maryland, Nov. 13, 1859.
Member: Cal. AC. Specialty, the
desert.
LUNDGREN, Martin, 5242 Bernard St.,
Chicago, 111.
Mural P. — Born in Sweden in 1871.
Pupil of AIC, and Louis Betts. Mem-
ber: Palette and Chisel C.
LUNDIN, Mrs. Emelia A., 553 Stuart
Bldg., Seattle, Wash.
P., W. — Born Stockholm, Sweden, Jan.
16, 1884. Pupil of Paul Gustin, P.
Tadema. Member: Seattle Fine
Arts Soc.
LUQUIENS, Elizabeth Koll, 189 East Rock
Road, New Haven, Conn.; summer,
Wonalancet, N. H.
P.— Born Salem. O.. Jan. 19, 1878. Pu-
pil of Albert G. Thompson; Delecluse
and Mucha in Paris. Member: New
Haven Paint and Clay C.
LUQUIENS, Hue Mazelet, 2425 Manoa
Ave., Honolulu, Hawaii.
E.,P. — Born Auburndale, Mass., June 30,
1881. Pupil of Bonnat and Merson in
Paris. Member: Chicago SE; Conn.
AFA; New Haven PCC; P-G. Award:
Winchester fellowship, Yale Art School,
1904.
LUTHER, Jessie, 2098 Pawtucket Ave..
East Providence, R. I.; h. Box 546,
Providence, R. I.
P., S., C, W., L., T.— Born Providence,
R. I., Nov. 3, 1860. Pupil of S. R. Bur-
leigh; Paul Bartlett and Ralphael Col-
lin in Paris. Member: Providence
AC and Boston SAC.
LYMAN, Mary Elizabeth, Middlefield,
Conn.
P.— Born Middlefield, Conn., Dec. 2,
1850. Pupil of Bail, Yale School of
Fine Arts, and John H. Niemeyer.
Member: New Haven PCC.
LYNCH, Anna, 9 Tree Studio Bldg., Chi-
cago, 111.; h. 54 South Crystal St., Elgin,
111.
Mln. P.— Born Elgin, 111. Pupil of AIC;
Bouguereau, Simon, Cottet and Mme.
Deblllemont in Paris. Member :
Alumni AIC; Chicago SA; Chicago
WCC; Paris A. Woman's AA; Chicago
AC; Chicago S. Min. P.; Cordon C.
Awards : Miniature prize, Chicago
AC; bronze medal, P.-P. Exp., San F.,
1915; Hon. men. AIC. Work: Por-
trait of Judge Joseph E. Gary, Chicago
Court House; portrait of Judge Arba E.
Waterman, Memorial Hall, Chicago.
LYNCH, Virginia, 270 East 142nd St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., C, W., L., T.— Born New York City,
Dec. 2, 1878. Pupil of Julius Schledorn
in Munich, ASL of N.Y., also studied
in China and Japan. Member: NAC,
N.A. Women PS; S. Indp. A.
LYND, J. Norman, "New York Herald"
New York, N. Y.; h. 300 Denton Ave.,
Lynbrook, L. L, N. Y.
■T- — Born Northwood, Logan Co., O.,
Nov. 15, 1878. Member: SI, 1913.
LYNN, Mrs. Katherine, Princeton, N. J.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
LYON, Jeannette Agnew (Mrs. William
T. Lyon), 9806 Lament Ave., Cleveland,
O.
Ldscp. P.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa. Pupil
of Robert C. Minor of New York; Mes-
dag at the Hague; Constant in Paris.
McALISTER, R, F., 230 West Eighth
Ave., Columbus, O.
I.— M ember: Pen and Pencil C, Co-
lumbus.
McAllister, Ethel Louise, 607 6th St.,
N. E., Washington, D. C.
P., I., T. — Born Providence, R. I., April
7, 1898. Pupil of Messer, Brooke, Tar-
bell, Critcher and Bertha Perrie.
McAULEY, Mary E., 230 North Craig St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
McBEY, James. 4 East 39th St., New
York, N. Y. (P., E.)
McBURNEY, James E., 609 Fine Art*
Bldg., Chicago, 111.
P., I., L., T.— Born Lore Citv, O., Nov.
22, 1868. Studied with Arthur W. Dow,
Howard Pyle, Charles H. Davis; and
in Paris: Member: Calif. AC; Cliff
Dwellers, Chicago. Award: Silver
m.edal. Pan. -Cal. Exp., San Diego, Cal.,
1915. Work: "The Mission Period"
and "The Spanish Period," Southern
California Counties' Commission, San
Diego. Instructor, College of Fine and
Applied Arts, A. E. F. University, COte
d'Or, France, 1919. Lecturer on History
of Art, AIC, 1920.
McCabe, Junius D., 1310 State St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
McCAIG, Mrs. Flora T., 5122 Kenmore
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Royalton, N. Y., Sept. 7, 1856.
Pupil of PAFA and Carroll Beckwlth.
Member: Buffalo SA. Work: "A
Mothers' Meeting," Women's Union.
Buffalo, N. Y.; "First Lessons," Kinder-
garten Training School; mural paint-
ings in Genesee Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y.
McCAN, J(ames) Ferdinand, O'Connor
Bldg., Victoria, Texas.
P. — Born Tralee, County Kerry, Ireland,
Sept. 25, 1869. Pupil of Kensington Art
School, London, Eng. Member: Soc.
Tex. A. (vice-pres.).
489
McCARTAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
McCORMACK
McCARTAN, Edward, 157 East 35th St.;
h. 148 West 126th St., New York, N. Y.
S.— Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Ecole des
Beaax Arts in Paris. Member: NSS
1912; Allied AA; N. Y. Arch. Lg.
Awards : Barnett prize for sculpture,
NAD, 1912; Widener gold medal. PAFA,
1916. Represented in Fine Arts Aca-
demy, Buffalo; Metropolitan Museum,
New York; City Art Museum, St. Louis.
McCARTER, Henry, 200 South Fifteenth
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
I., T. — Born Norristown, Pa., July 5,
1865. Pupil of Eakins in Philadelphia;
Puvis de Chavannes, Bonnat and Alex-
ander Harrison in Paris. Member:
Fellowship PAFA. Awards : Bronze
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; sil-
ver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; Beck
prize, Phila.WCC 1906; gold medal for
illustrations, P. -P.Exp., San F.. 1915.
McCarthy, C. J., 143 East 21st St.,
New York, N. Y, ; summer, Woodstock,
N. Y.
I.— Born Rochester, N. Y., May 21, 1887.
Pupil of F. Luis Mora and F. R. Gruger.
Member: Salma. C.
McCarthy, Helen K., 1716 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.; summer, Huntingdon,
Pa.
P.— Born Poland, O., Sept. 6, 1884. Pu-
pil of Phlla. School of Design. Mem-
ber: Plastic C; Alumni of Pa.School
of Design; Inter. Soc. AL; N. A. Women
PS. Award: Gold medal. Plastic C,
1914; Mary Smith prize, PAFA, 1918;
sketch prize, N. A. Women PS, 1919.
McCartney, Edith, 1143 Connecticut
Ave., Washington, D. C. (P.)
McCAY, Winsor, "New York American,"
238 William St., New York, N. Y. (Car-
toonist.)
MacCHESNEY, Clara T(aggart), 15 West
67th St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, On-
teora, Tannersville, N. Y.
P. — Born Brownsville, Cal. Pupil of San
Francisco School of Design, under
Virgil Williams; Gotham Art School In
New York, under Mowbray and Beck-
with; Girardot, Courtois and Colarossi
Academy in Paris. M em b e r : AWCS;
N. A. Women PS; NAC (life) SPNY;
Art Workers' C. ; N. Y. Municipal AS;
Barnard C; Lyceum C. of London.
Awards : Two medals, Columbian
Exp., Chicago, 1893; Dodge prize NAD
1894; gold medal for water color,
AC Phila. 1900; second Hallgarten
prize, NAD 1901; bronze medal. Pan- Am.
Exp., Buffalo. 1901; bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904. Work: "Retrospec-
tion." Boston Art Club; "Portrait of
George Pardee," State Capitol, Sacra-
mento, Cal.; still life and "Knitting,"
National Arts Club, New York; "Por-
trait of Mr. McMahon," Emigrant Sav-
ings Bank, New York; "The Discov-
ery," Union League Club, Chicago; "A
Good Story," National Gallery, Wash-
Inton; "Portrait of Dr. Dudley," Al-
toona (Pa.) Library; "The Philos-
opher," Aldine Club, New York;
"Sleep," Erie Art Club.
McCLAIN, Helen Charleton), 344 West
72nd St., New York, N-. Y.
P. — Born Toronto, Ont., Canada, May
25, 1887. Member: N. A. Women
PS. Award : National Arta Club
prize, N. A. Women PS, 1918.
McCLEARY, Mrs. Bee L., 5639 Callowhill
St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
McCLELLAN, Mary, 5531 Wayne Ave.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., July 12,
1860. Pupil of PAPA; Academic Dele-
cluse in Paris. Member: Plastic C;
Fellowship PAFA; Phila. Alliance.
Award: Plastic Club gold medal,
1919.
McClelland, Rachel p., 5th and Wil-
kins Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
McCLURE, Maud, Eagle's Nest Camp,
Oregon, 111.
S.— Born Mt. Morris, 111., Oct. 4. 1884.
Pupil of AIC and Lorado Taft. Mem-
ber: Alumni AIC; Chicago AC.
McCOMAS, Francis, Monterey. Calif.
P.— Born Fingal. Tasmania, Oct. 1. 1874.
Member of the jury, Panama-Pacific
International Exp., 1915. Member:
Phila. WCC; AWCS. Awa rd : Dana
gold medal, Phila. WCC; 1918. Two
mural decorations on the Del Monte
Lodge, Pebble Beach, Calif.; and repre-
sented in the Metropolitan Museum of
Art, New York; Park Museum of San
Francisco, Portland Art Society.
McCOMB, M(arie) L(ouise), 2009 Mt.
Vernon St., Philadelphia, Pa.
I.— Born Louisville, Ky. Pupil of PAFA.
Award : Traveling Scholarship PAFA,
1912.
McCOMMON, Mrs. Frances V., 5712
Forbes St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
McCONNELL, Emien, Haddonfield, N. J.
I.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 2,
1872. Pupil of Chase and Pyle. Mem-
ber: Fellowship PAFA.
MacCORD, Charles William, 458 John St.,
Bridgeport, Conn.; summer, Stock-
bridge, Mass.
P.— Born Allegheny City, Pa., Feb. 3,
1852. Self-taught. Member: Salma.
C. 1897; Thumb Tack C. Bridgeport
(pres. 1903-04); Lotos C. Work:
"Light on the Hills," Bridgeport Public
Library; "The Last Ray," Sea Side
Club, Bridgeport.
MacCORD, Mary N(icholena), 458 John
St., Bridgeport. Conn.
P. — Born Bridgeport, Conn. Member:
N. A. Women PS; AWCS; Conn.
AFA; NYWCC; NAC; New Haven PCC;
N. Y. Soc. Painters; Wash. WCC; Wash.
AC; Bridgeport Art Lg.
McCORMACK, Mrs. Nancy Mai Cox, 19
East Pearson St., Chicago, 111.
S. — Born Nashville, Tenn., Aug. 15,
1885. Pupil of Victor Holm, St. Louis;
Charles Mulligan, Chicago. Member:
WS Sc; Cordon C; Chicago AC; Nash-
ville Art Assoc; Alumni AIC. Work:
"Harmony," Nashville Museum; Car-
490
McCORMICK
WHO'S WHO IN ART
McEWEN
mack Memorial, Nashville, Tenn.;
Woodruff Memorial, First National
Bank, Joliet, 111.; panels in Trinity Ch.,
Chicago.
McCORMICK, Howard, Leonia, N. J.
P., I., Engr. — Born in Indiana, Aug. 19,
1875. Pupil of Forsyth and Chase;
Laurens in Paris. Member: Salma.
C, 1907; P-G. ; Guild of Free Lance A.
Work: Hopi, Apache and Navajo
habitat group, American Museum of
Natural History, New York; "Hopi
World" (gesso), John Herron .Art Inst.;
Wood engravings in numerous maga-
zines.
McCORMICK, Katharine Hood, 1716
Chestnut St.; h. 3416 Race St., Philadel-
phia, Pa. ; summer, Pocono Lake Pre-
serve, Pocono, Pa.
P., 1.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 17,
1882. Pupil of PAFA. Member:
Fellowship PAFA.
McCOUCH, Gordon (Mallet), Ascona,
Switzerland.
P.. E.— Born Philadelphia. Pa.. Sept. 24.
1885. Pupil of Howard Pyle in Wil-
mington; Frederic Bridgman in New
York; Heinrich von Ziigel in Munich.
Member: Zurcher Kunstgesellschaft.
McCOY, Julia, 512 Shaw Ave., McKees-
port, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
McCREA, S(amuel) Harkness, Scraggy-
crag, Darien, Conn.
T.dscp.P.— Born Palatine, Cook Co., 111.,
March 15. 1867. Studied in San Fran-
cisco, Chicago, New York, Paris and
Munich. Member: Salma.C.
McCREERY, Franc Root, 15 Elmview
Place, Buffalo, N. Y.
P.— Born Kansas. Pupil of Students'
School of Art, Denver, Colo.; AIC, Buf-
falo SA.
McCREERY, Frances, 1003 Allegheny
Ave., N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
McCULLOUGH, Minnie, 1219 Woodycrest
Ave., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
McCURDY, Caroline Gardiner, 99 East
81st St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Studied at Norwich Academy and
in Paris. Member: N. A. Women
PS; S. Indp. A.
McCUTCHEON, Jolin T(inney), care The
Chicago Tribune, 1018 Fine Arts Bldg.;
h. 37 East Schiller St., Chicago. 111.
Caricaturist. — Born near South Raub,
Tippecanoe Co., Ind., May 6. 1870. Pu-
pil of Ernest Knaufft in New York.
Member: SI 1911. On staff Chicago
"Tribune" since 1903; correspondent
during Spanish War. Author: "Stories
of Filipino Warfare," "Bird Center Car-
toons," etc.
McDADE, Ira, 118 South Graham St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
McDERMiTT, William T., State College,
Pullman. Wash. (P.)
McDonald, Mrs. Ann Heebner, 10
South 18th St.; summer, 8305 Seminole
Ave., Chestnut Hill. Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia. Pupil of PAFA;
Hugh H. Breckenridge; Whistler School
in Paris. Member: Fellowship
PAFA; Plastic C; NAC; N. A. Women
PS.
MacDONALD, Donald, 1040 Boylston St.,
Boston, Mass.
P. — M ember: Boston AC.
MacDONALD, Frank E., 4420 Norledge
PL, Kansas City, Mo. (P.)
MacDONALD. Harold L., Purcellville. Va.
P., S., I., T.— Born Manitowoc, Wis.,
May 13, 1861. Pupil of Boulanger and
Lefebvre in Ptiris. Member: S.Wash.
A.
Mcdonald, Wllliam P(urcell), Rook-
wood Pottery, Cincinnati, O.
P.— Born Cincinnati, Sept. 18, 1863. Pu-
pil of Cincinnati Art Academy under
Duveneck. Member: Cincinnati AC;
Duveneck Soc. PS. On Rookwood Pot-
tery staff since 1882.
MacDONALL, Angus (Peter), Westport,
Conn.
P.. I.— Born St. Louis, Mo., Apr. 7.
1876. Illustrates for "Life." "Scribner's,"
"Judge," "American." "Saturday Even-
ing Post," "Country Gentleman." etc.
MacDOUGALL, Joiin A., 46 Clifford Rd.,
Nantucket, Mass.
Min.P., T.— Born New York, 1843. Pu-
pil of NAD in New York; Cormon
in Paris. Member: Am.S.Min.P.
Award : Silver medal, Charleston
Exp., 1902.
MacDOUGAL, R(obert) B(ruce), 137
West 12th St., New York, N. Y. ; sum-
mer, Nantucket. Mass.
P., T.— Born Newark, N. J., Dec. 25,
1872. Pupil of Joseph DeCamp, Frank
DuMbnd. Member: Salma, C.
McEWEN, Alexandrine, Society of Arts
and Crafts, 47 Watson St., Detroit,
Mich.
I.. C, W., D. — Born in England. Mem-
ber: Detroit SAC; Boston SAC.
McEWEN, Katharine, Society of Arts and
Crafts. 47 Watson St.. Detroit, Mich.
P., C, D.— Born in England. Pupil of
Chase and Woodbury. Member: De-
troit SAC; N. A. Women PS.
McEWEN, Walter, 11 Rue Legendre: h.
59 Rue Galilee, Paris, France; Cen-
tury Assoc, 7 West 43d St.. New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born Chicago. Feb. 13. 1860. Pupil of
Cormon and Robert-Fleury In Paris.
Member: ANA 1903; Paris SAP (first
vice-pres.); Nat. Inst. A. L. Counselor
Cresson Scholarship, PAFA Students.
Awards : Hon. mention. Paris Salon,
1886; silver medal, Paris Exp.. 1889; first
class gold medal, Berlin. 1891; medal.
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; medal
of honor, Antwerp, 1894; second class
medal, Munich. 1897; silver medal,
Paris Exp., 1900; first gold medal,
Munich, 1901; first class medal. Vienna,
1902; Lippincott prize, PAFA 1902; Har-
ris prize. AIC 1902; gold medal. St,
Louis Exp., 1904; first medal, Li&ge,
1905; hors concours (jurv of awards).
P.-P.Exp.. San F., 1915. Chevalier
Legion of Honor 1896, Officer 1908;
491
McFADDEN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
McKENZIE
Order of St. Michael, Bavaria; Or-
der of Leopold II Belgium, 1909;
Proctor prize, NAD, 1919. Work:
"Sunday in Holland," Luxembourg
Museum, Paris; decorations in Library
of Congress, Washington; "An Ances-
tor," Corcoran Gallery, Washington;
"The Letter," Art Association, In-
dianapolis; "Lady in White Satin
Gown" and "The Judgment of Paris,"
Art Institute of Chicago; "Phyllis,"
Pennsylvania Academy, Philadelphia.
McFADDEN, Sarah Yocum. See Mrs.
Frederick A, Boyle.
McFEE, Henry Lee, Woodstock, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
McGILLIVRAY, F(iorence) H(elena), 292
Frank St., Ottawa, Can.; summer,
Whitby, Ontario, Can.
P.— Born Whitby, Ontario, Can., 1864.
Pupil of Simon and Menard in Paris.
Member: Inter. Art Union, Paris;
N. A. Women PS; Ontario SA. Work:
"Afterglow," and "Stack in Winter,"
owned by the Canadian Government.
MacGILVARY, Norwood Hodge, 61 Poplar
St., Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
P. — Born in Bangkok, Siam, Nov. 14,
1874. Pupil of Davidson College; Mark
Hopkins Inst, San Francisco; Myron
Barlow; Laurens in Paris. Member:
NYWCC; AWCS; Allied AA; Providence
WCC; Providence AC; N.Y. Arch. Lg.;
Brooklyn SE. Award : Silver medal,
P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915. Work:
"Twilight After Rain," National Gallery,
Washington. D. C.
MacGINNIS, H(enry) R., School of In-
dustrial Arts, State and Willow Sts.,
Trenton, N. J.; h. 38 West State St.,
Trenton, N. J.; summer, Wentworth, N.
H.
P., T. — Born Martinsville, Ind., Sept.
25, 1875. Pupil of J. O. Adams and
T. C. Steele, Indiana; Collin and Cour-
tois in Paris; Royal Academy, Munich.
Member: S, Indiana A. Award:
Hon. mention. Royal Academy, Munich.
Work: Mural painting, Memorial
Room, Gregory School, Trenton, N. J.
McGRAW, Mrs. T. A., Jr., 1710 Jefferson
Ave., Detroit, Mich. (P.)
MacGREGOR, Donald, 1523 Chestnut St.;
h. 2048 North 29th St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia. Pupil of PAFA
under Chase. Member: Phila.Sketch
C; Fellowship PAFA. Award: Silver
medal, AAS 1902.
MacGREGOR, Sara Newlin (Mrs. Donald
MacGregor), 1523 Chestnut St.; h. 2048
North 29lh St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Mln.P., I. — Born in Pennsylvania. Pu-
pil of Wm. M. Chase, Ben Gilman, Ce-
cilia Beaux and Henry Thouron. M e m-
ber: Fellowship PAFA; Plastic C;
Award: Bronze medal. AAS 1902.
McGUIRE, William J., 174 Marshall St.,
Paterson, N. .7.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
MclLRATH, Vira, Lambertville. N. J.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA; N.
A. Women PS.
MclNTIRE, Katharine Angela, 160 Wav-
erly PL, New York, N. Y.; summer,
Ogunquit, Me.
P., E. — Born Richmond, Va., Nov. 20,
1880. Pupil of Chase, Alice Beckington,
George Bridgman in New York; Mme.
La Forge in Paris.
MaclNTOSH, Marian T., 291 Nassau St.,
Princeton, N. J.
P.— Born Belfast, Ireland. Pupil of
Heinrich Knirr and Henry B. 'Snell.
Member: Phila. Alliance; Plastic C.
MacKAY, Edwin Murray, 241 East Euclid
Ave., Detroit, Mich.; summer. Silver-
mine, Norwalk Conn.
P.— Born Detroit, Mich. Pupil of Lau-
rens, Blanche and Kenyon Cox. M e m-
b e r : Scarab C. ; Conn. Soc. A.
Work: Portraits of "Ex-Gov..
Sleeper," Mich. State Capitol Bldg. ;
"Justice McAlvey," "Chief Justice
Steere," "Justice Ostrander," Mich.
Supreme Court, Lansing, Mich. Draw-
ings in N. Y. Public Library.
McKAY, Helen C, 1015 North Euclid St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
McKELL, James C, 524 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (I.)
McKENZIE, R(obert) Talt, University of
Pennsylvania; h. 2014 Pine St., Phil-
adelphia, Pa.
S., W., L.— Born Almonte, Ont., Canada,
May 26, 1867. Member: Phila.Sketch
C; Fellowship PAFA (assoc); Century
Assoc. Awards : Silver medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; King's medal, Swe-
den, 1912; hon. mention, P.-P.Exp.,
San F., 1915. Work: "Sprinter," Fitz
William Museum, Cambridge, England;
"College Athlete," Ashmolean Museum,
Oxford, England; "Juggler" and "Com-
petitor," Metropolitan Museum, New
York; "Competitor," Canadian National
Gallery, Ottawa, Canada; "Onslaught " a
group, and "Relay," statuette. Art Gal-
lery, Montreal, Canada; statuettes "Boy
Scout" and "Blightv" and "Capt. Guv
Drummond," memorial statue, Canadian
War Museum, Ottawa, Canada; portraits
in low relief of Samuel Jackson and
Nathaniel Chapman, F. K. Huger and
Crawford W. Long, Univ. of Pa.; D. W.
W. Keen, Brown Univ., Providence; Dr.
A. A. Browne, McGill Univ., Montreal,
Canada; "The Youthful Benjamin
Franklin," bronze statue, Univ. of Pa.
Campus; "Portrait of Weir Mitchell,"
and medals for Franklin Inst., Philadel-
phia; "Portrait of Thomas Buchanan,"
National Gallery, Edinburgh; "Sir George
Drummond," St. Margaret's Home. Mon-
treal, Canada; "Baron Tweedmouth"
and "Lady Tweedmouth," Guisachan,
Scotland; fountain with panel in high re-
lief "Laughing Children," Athletic Park
Playground, Philadelphia; "Rev. George
Whitfield," bronze statue. Triangle of
the University of Pa. dormitories, 1919;
"Norton Davis Aviator," St. Paul's
School; Victory Memorial, Cambridge,
Eng. Professor and director of depart-
ment in physical education, Univ. of Pa.
492
McKERNAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MacMONNIES
McKERNAN, Frank, 524 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.; h. Ridley Park, Pa.
P.. I.— Born Philadelphia, Sept. 19, 1861.
Pupil of PAFA and of Howard Pyle.
Member: Phila. Sketch C; Fellow-
ship PAFA.
MacKILLOP, William, Van Dyck Studios.
939 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil of
St, Louis School of Fine Arts; Jean
Paul Laurens and Ernest Laurent In
Paris. Member: Allied AA; Salma.
C. Award : Silver medal, P.-P. Exp.,
•San F., 1915.
MacKINNON, Mrs. Mary, 12 Gramercy
Park, New York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI.
McKINSTRY, Elizabeth, 1046 Elmwood
Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. (S.)
McKINSTRY, Grace E., 228 West 72nd
St., New York, N. Y. ; Faribault, Minn.
Port. P., S., T.— Born Fredonia. N. Y.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; AIC; Julian and
Colarossi academies and Collin in Paris.
Member: Minneapolis Artists'
League: S. Wash. A; Lg. of American
Pen Women (hon.) ; Awards: first
prize Minn. State Art Soc, 1905;
Hon. mention, Minn. State AA 1914.
Work: Portraits in the Capitol, St.
Paul, Minn.; Univ. of Minn., Minneap-
olis; Lake Erie College, Palnesville, O.;
Charleton College, Northfield, Minn.;
Shattuck School, Faribault, Minn.;
Army and Navy Club, Washington.
D. C, etc.
McLAIN. Mary, 16 East 60th St., New
York, N. Y. (MIn. P.)
McLANE, Jean (Mrs. John C. Johansen),
]2 West 9th St., New York, N. Y.
Port. P.— Born Chicago, 111., Sept. 14,
1878. Pupil of AIC, and Duveneck.
Member: ANA, 1912; Port. P.
Awards : Bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; first prize. Inter. Lg., Paris,
1907 and 1908; EUing prize, N.Y. Wo-
man's AC 1907; Burgess prize, N.Y. Wo-
man's AC 1908; Julia A. Shaw prize,
NAD 1912; third Hallgarten prize, NAD
1913; LIppIncott prize, PAFA 1914; sil-
ver medal, P. -P.Exp., San F.. 1915.
Work: "Girl In Gray," Museum of
Art. Toledo, O.; "Virginia and Stanton."
Art Institute of Chicago; "Girl in
Green," Syracuse Art Museum; "Por-
trait of a Boy," San Antonio (Tex.)
Museum.
Mclaughlin, Charles J., Rookwood
Pottery, Cincinnati, O.; 321 Front St.,
Covington, Ky.
P., D., Dec. — Born Covington, Ky., June
6, 1888. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Acad-
emy and Duveneck. Member : Cin-
cinnati AC; MacD. C. of Cincinnati;
Cincinnati Arch. Lg. Designer at Rook-
wood Potteries, 1913-1920.
MacLAUGHLIN, Donald Shaw, 569 Fifth
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Etcher. P. — Born Boston, Mass., Nov. 9,
1876. Pupil of W. D. Hamilton. M e m-
ber: Paris AAA; Salon Champs de
Mars. Awards : Silver medal for
etching. Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
medal of honor, Limoges 1903; bronze
medal. St. Louis Exp., 1904; gold medal.
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915. Work:
"Lauterbrunnen," Carnegie Institute,
Pittsburgh.
MacLELLAN, Charles A., 1305 Franklin
St., Wilmington, Del.; summer, Tren-
ton, Ontario, Can.
P.. I. — Born Trenton, Ontario, Can.,
June 22. 1885. Pupil of AIC; Howard
Pyle. Member: Wilmington SFA.
McLELLAN, Ralph, Pennsylvania Mu-
seum and Industrial Art School, Pine
and Broad Sts.. Philadelphia, Pa.
P., E., T. — Born San Marcos, Tex., Aug.
27, 1884. Pupil of Philip Hale, Edmund
Tarbell and Frank Benson in Boston.
Member: Copley S.; Concord AA.
A w a r d s : Dunham prize, Conn. AFA,
1917; Isador medal, NAD, 1919. Instruc-
tor In Pennsylvania Industrial Art
School.
MacLEOD, A(lexander) S., 628 Montgom-
ery St., San Francisco, Calif.; h. 5974
Vine St., Kerrisdale P. O., B. C, Can-
ada.
P., E. — Born Orwell, Prince Edward
Island. Canada, April 12, 1888. Pupil of
Van Sloun. Member: Calif. SE.
MacLEOD, John, West Fort Lee, N. J.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
McMANUS, Blanche. See Mrs. F. M.
Mansfield,
McMANUS, George, International Fea-
tures Service, 246 AVest 59th St., New
York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI.
McMANUS, James Goodwin, Sage Bldg.),
86 Pratt St., P. O. Box 298; h. 18 Lenox
St., Hartford, Conn.
P.. T.— Born Hartford, Conn., Feb. 5,
1882. Pupil of C. N. Flagg, Robert B.
Brandegee, W. G. Bunco, Montague
Flagg and Walter Grifhn. Member:
Conn. AFA; Hartford Municipal Art
Soc. Work: "Portrait of Alfred E.
Burr," Burr Grammar School, Hartford;
"Dr. George C. Bailey," Brown School,
and St. Francis' Hospital, Hartford. In-
structor at Harlford Public High School
and the Conn. League of Art Students.
McMEIN, Miss Neysa Moran, 226 Fifth
Ave.; h. 57 West 57th 'St., New York,
N. Y.
P., I.— Born Quincy, 111., Jan. 25, 1889.
Pupil AIC. M e m b e r : SI. Work:
Covers for "McClure's," "American
Magazine," etc.
McMILLEN, Mildred, 3 Central St.,
Provincetown, Mass.
Wood Engr. — Born Chicago, 111., June
8, 1884. Studied In Chicago, New York,
Paris. Work: "A Merry-Go-Round,"
National Museum of Canada, Ottawa;
"Low Tide, Etaples" and "The Ship
Yard," New York Public Library,
MacMONNIES, Frederick W(illiam), 20
West 10th St., New York, N. Y., and
Givernv-par-Vernon, Eure, France.
S., P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 28,
18G3. Pupil of NAD. ASL and Augustus
Saint Gaudens in New York; of Fal-
guiere, Ecole des Beaux-Arts and Mer-
cie In Paris. Member: SAA 1891;
ANA 1901. NA 1906; N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1892;
493
MacMONNIES
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MACDONALD
NSS1893;Nat.Inst.AL;NAC. Awards:
Hon, mention, Paris Salon, 1889; second
class medal, Paris Salon, 1891; medal,
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; first
class gold medal, Antwerp, 1894; medal,
ACPhila.1895; medal, Atlanta Exp., 1895;
grand prize of honor, Paris Exp., 1900;
medal, Munich; first prize, Boston AC;
hon. mention for painting, Paris Salon,
1901; gold medal for sculpture, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; hon. mention for
painting, Paris Salon, 1902; third medal
for painting, Paris Salon, 1904. Cheva-
lier of the Legion of Honor 1896; Cheva-
lier Order of St. Michael of Bavaria.
Work: "Nathan Hale," City Hall Pk.,
New York; "Army" and "Navy" and
"Horse Tamers," Brooklyn, New York;
"Bacchante," Metropolitan Museum,
New York, and Luxembourg, Paris;
"Victory," West Point, N. Y.; "Sir
Henry Vane," Boston Public Library;
central bronze door and statue of
"Shakespeare," Library of Congress,
Washington; "Pioneer Monument,"
Denver; "Pan of Rohallion," Fine Arts
Academy, Buffalo, N. Y.
MacMONNIES, Mary Fairchild. See Mrs.
Will H. Low.
McMULLENj Mrs. Elizabeth M., 6 Forbes
Terrace, Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
McMUNIGLE, Mary G., 4502 Fifth Ave,,
Pittsburgh, Pa,
P, — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
McMURTRIE, Edith, 1430 South Penn
Sq.; h. Pelham Court, Philadelphia;
summer, Orr's Island, Me.
P., T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil
of PAFA. Member: Fellowship PA
FA; S. Indp. A.; Phila. Alliance.
Award : Cresson traveling scholarship,
PAFA. Work: "The Circus," Penn-
sylvania Academy of Fine Arts. In-
structor, Wilmington High School.
McNAMEE, Dorothy Swinburne (Mrs.
Luke McNamee), 1723 Corcoran Street,
Washington, D. C. (P.)
MacNEIL, Carol Brooks (Mrs. H. A, Mac-
Neil), care of The American Academy
in Rome, Rome, Italy,
S.— Born Chicago, 111,, Jan, 15, 1871. Pu-
pil of AIC under Lorado Taft; Mac-
Monnies and Injalbert in Paris. M e m-
ber: NSS, 1907; N, A, Women PS.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Exp,,
1900; bronze medal, St, Louis Exp., 1904,
MacNEIL, H(erman) A(tkins), care of The
American Academy in Rome, Rome,
Italy.
S.— Born Everett, Mass., Feb, 27, 1866.
Pupil of Mass. Normal Art School in
Boston; Chapu at Julian Academy and
Falguiere at Ecole des Beaux-Arts In
Paris. Member: NSS 1897 (ex-
pres.); ANA 1905, NA 1906; SAA 1901;
N.Y.Arch.Lg, 1902; Century Assoc;
N. Y. Municipal AS; Nat. Inst. AL.
Awards: Rinehart Roman scholarship,
1896-1900; designer's medal, Columbian
Exp., Chicago, 1893; silver medal, At-
lanta Exp., 1895; silver medal, Paris
Exp., 1900; gold medal. Pan- Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; gold medal, Charleston
Exp., 1902; commemorative gold medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904; commemorative
medal, Jewish Settlement in America;
gold medal, Buenos Ayres Exp., 1910;
gold medal for medals, P. -P.Exp., San
F., 1915; medal of honor for sculpture,
N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1917. Work: "Sun Vow"
and "Primitive Chant," Metropolitan
Museum, New York; "Sun Vow," Cor-
coran Gallery, Washington; "Coming of
the White Man," City Park, Portland,
Ore.; "McKinley Memorial," Columbus,
O.; "Soldiers and Sailors Monument,"
Whitinsville, Mass.; "Soldiers and Sail-
ors Memorial," Albany, N. Y.; Senator
Orville Hitchcock Piatt Memorial, State
Capitol, Hartford, Conn.; "The Moqui
Prayer for Rain," Art Institute, Chi-
cago; "The Sun Vow," Art Museum,
Montclair, N. J.; groups "Physical and
Intellectual Development," Northwest-
ern Univ., Evanston, 111.; Ezra Cornell
monument, Cornell University, Ithaca,
N, Y.; "D. L, Moody," Northfield
Univ., Northfield, Mass., "Gen. Wash-
ington," Washington Arch, New York.
Designer of Pan-American medal of
award. N. Y. Arch. Lg. medal of honor;
United States Government quarter dol-
lar.
Mcpherson, J. C, 68 Perry St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A,
McQUAIDE, Lee F., 223 Atwood St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P, — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
MacRAE, Elmer L(Ivingston), care Mon-
tross Gallery, 550 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.; Cos Cob, Conn.
P.— Born New York, July 16, 1875. Pu-
pil of ASL of N. Y. under Twachtman,
Beckwith, Blum and Mowbray, M e m-
ber: NYWCC; Am. PS; Pastellsts;
Greenwich SA,
MacRAE, Emma Fordyce, 12 West 69th
St,; h, 8 West 77th St„ New York,
N. Y, ; summer,- Atlantic Highlands,
Gloucester, Mass,
P, — Born Vienna, Austria, Apr. 27, 1887.
Pupil of Luis Mora, Robert Reid, Ken-
neth Hayes Miller. Member: MacD,
C.
McRICKARD, James P., Third St., Bay-
side, L. I., N. Y.
P.— Born Nov. 7, 1872. Pupil of ASL
of N. Y. ; Douglas Volk, and George de
Forest Brush. Member: Salma. C. ;
S.Indp.A.; Lg. of N.Y.A.
McTIGHE, Anne, 140 West 57th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — Member: N. 'A. Women PS.
MACDONALD, Arthur N., 54 North 17th
St., East Orange, N. J.
Engr. — ^Born Attleboro, Mass., Mar. 31,
1866. Member: American Book-
plate Soc. 1919. Awards: Two first
prizes. Am. Bookplate Soc, 1919.
MACDONALD, F(rank) E., 4420 Norledge
Place, Kansas City, Mo.
P.. I.— Born Kansas City. Mo., Feb, 8,
1896. Pupil of Roland Thomas. G, V.
Millett, and J. D. Patrick. Mem-
ber: Kansas City AG.
494
MACFARLAN
WHO*S WHO IN ART
MAHONEY
MACFARLAN, Christina, 1805 Chestnut
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia. Pupil of Chase,
Breckenridge and Cecilia Beaux. M e m-
b e r : Fellowship PAFA.
MACKALL, R. IVlcGIII, The Charcoal Club,
1230 St. Paul St.. Baltimore, Md.
P.. E., C— Born Baltimore, Md., Apr. 15,
1889. Pupil of Laurens and Richard
Miller in Paris. Member: Salon
d'Automne, Paris; Mural decorations in
First English Lutheran Church; Church
of the Fourteen Holy Martyrs; St.
Luke's Church; Lobby of the Century
Theatre, Baltimore Md.
IVIACKAY, William A(ndrew), 345 East
33d St.; and "The Players," 16 Gramercy
Park, New York, N. Y.; summer,
Coytesville, Fort Lee, N. J.
Mural P., I.— Born Philadelphia, July 10.
1878. Pupil of Constant and Laurens
in Paris; Academy in Rome; Robert
Reid in New York. Member: SI 1910;
Mural P.; N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1911; Players
C. ; Paris AAA. W o r k : Mural paint-
ings in: Senate Reading Room, Con-
gressional Library, Washington; House
of Representatives, St. Paul, Minn.; Su-
preme Court Room, Essex County Court
House. Newark, N. J.; Castlegould,
Port Washington, L. I.; fagade of 19
East 57th St., New York; decoration
and painting Knickerbocker 42nd St.
Bldg. ; Robbins Corporation; Vincent
Bldg. ; Cambridge Bldg.; Astor Court,
New York, N. Y. Murals in Freer Gal-
lery, Washington, D. C.
MACKENZIE, J. B., 1906 Sansom St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Phila. AA.
MACKENZIE, Janet, 166 Van Dyke Ave.,
Detroit, Mich. (P. T.)
MACKENZIE, Roderick D., The Art
Studio, School of Art, 223 Dauphin St..
Mobile, Ala.
P., S., I., E., W., L., T.— Born London,
England, April 30, 1865. Pupil of Con-
stant. Laurens, Jules Lefebvre, Chapu,
and the Ecole National des Beaux-Arts.
Member : Royal Society of Arts,
London. Award : Curzon Gold
Medal, India. Works: "State Entry
Delhi, Durbar, 1903," Museum at Cal-
cuta: "The Chitor Elephants," gate to
Fort, Delhi, India.
MACKNiGHT, Dodge, East Sandwich.
Mass.
P.— Born Providence. R. I., Oct. 1. 1860.
Pupil of Cormon in Paris. Member:
Phila. WCC; Boston WCC. Work:
Fifteen water colors. Museum of Fine
Arts. Boston; "The Almond Tree." In-
stitute of Arts, Detroit; "The Bed of the
Brook," R. I. School of Design, Prov-
idence; 10 water colors, Fogg Museum.
Cambridge; 260 water colors in Fitz-
Gerald Gallery. Brookline; represented
in Gardner collection, Boston.
MACKY. Constance L.. 178 Park Hill
Ave., San Francisco, Calif. (P.)
MACRUM, George H., care of American
Express. Paris. France.
P.. T.— Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: Allied AA; Salma. C; Phila. AC.
Awards: Gold medal, Appalachian
Exp., Knoxville, Tenn., 1911; Turnbull
P'-ize, Salma. C, 1914; silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F.. 1915. Work : "The Pile
Driver." Pennsylvania Academy of the
Fine Arts; "The Pardon on the Moun-
tain," Canadian National Gallery, To-
ronto, Canada.
MACSOUD. Nicolas S., 191 Clinton St.;
h. 212 Chnton St., Brooklyn, New York,
N. Y.
P. — Born Zahle, Mt. Lebanon, Syria,
March 7, 1884. Pupil of NAD. Mem-
ber: Brooklyn S. Min. P. ; Brooklyn
SA; Salma. C; Wash. WCC.
MACY, Harriet, 1321 2Sth St., Des Moines,
la.
P.— Born Des Moines. la. Pupil of Cum-
rr.ing School of Art, Des Moines; ASL
of N. Y. Member: Iowa AG.
Award : Des Moines Women's C. 1915.
MADEIRA, Mrs. Clara N., 2300 Pine St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil of
PAFA; Simon and Cottet in Paris.
Member: Phila. WCC; Fellowship
PAFA; Phila. Alliance; N. A. Women
PS; Wash. WCC.
MAESCH, F(erdinand), 303 Fifth Ave.;
h. 1350 Ogden Ave., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Muhlhausen, Germany. June
21. 1865. Studied in Germany and
France. Work: Portrait of Hon.
Herbert T. Ketcham. Surrogate Court.
Kings Co., N. Y.
MAGEE, James C. 718 Walnut St., h.
4156 Leidy Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Brooklyn. N. Y. Pupil of
PAFA; Chase in N. Y.; Robert Henri
in Paris. Member: S. Indp. A. ;
AAS; Lg. of N.Y.A.; Fellowship PAFA;
Concord AA. Awards : Silver medal.
AAS. 1902; gold medal, AAS. 1907.
Represented in Johnson collection.
Philadelphia; Lord Richmond collection,
London.
MAGER, (Charles) Gus, Sand Brook,
N. J.; h. 80 Glen Ave., Wyoming. N. J.
P.— Born Newark, N. J., Oct. 21, 1878.
Member: Newark AL; Peoples' Art
Guild. N. Y.; S.Indp.A.
MAGONIGLE, Edith M. (Mrs. H. Van
Buren Magonigle). 829 Park Ave.. New
York. N. Y.
Mural P.— Born Brooklyn. N. Y., May
11. 1877. Member: N. A. Women
PS. Work: Frieze on Administra-
tion Bldg., Essex County Park Commis-
sion. Newark, N. J.
MAGONIGLE, H. Van Buren, 101 Park
Ave.; h. 829 Park Ave., New York, N. Y
P., A., W.— Born Bergen Heights, N. J.,
Oct. 17. 1867. Pupil of Vaux, Radford.
Charles C. Haight. McKim. Mead, and
White. Member: AIA; Architectu-
ral League of Kentucky; Society of
Beaux-Arts Architects; Alumni Ameri-
can Academy in Rome. Works :
McKinley National Memorial, Canton,
Ohio; National Maine Monument, New
York; Firemen's Memorial, New York.
MAHONEY. John H., 909 Lexington Ave..
Indianapolis, Ind.
S.— Member: Ind. SS.
495
MAHONY
WHO'S WHO IIS ART
MANSHIP
MAHONY, Felix, Conn. Ave. and M St.;
h. The Champlain, 1424 K St., Wash-
ington, D. C.
P., I., L., T.— Born New York, N. T.
Pupil of Steinlen in Paris. Member:
"Wash. AC; Beachcombers; Province-
town A. A. Director, National School
of Fine and Applied Art, Washington,
D. C.
MAINE, Henry C, 210 Oxford St., Roches-
ter, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
MAJOR, Ernest L., Fenway Studios, Bos-
ton, Mass.
P., T.— Born Washington, D. C, 1864.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y., and Boulanger
and Lefebvre in Paris. Member:
Boston AC; Boston GA. Instructor in
Mass. Normal Art School, Boston.
Awards : Silver medal, P. -P. Exp.,
■San F., 1915; Bok prize, PAFA, 1917.
MAKIELSKI, Leon A., R. F. D. 5, Geddes
Ave., Ann Arbor, Mich.
P.— Born Morris Run, Pa. Pupil of AIC;
Julian Academy and Grande Chau-
miere Academy in Paris. Awards :
Traveling John Quincy Adams Scholar-
ship, AIC, 1908; 2nd prize, 1918; 1st
prize, 1920, Detroit Inst, of Arts. In-
structor in Arch., U. of Mich.
MALCOM, Thalia W. (Mrs. Donald C.
Malcom), 114 East 66th St., New York,
N. Y. ; summer, care of Morgan Harjes,
14 Place Vendome, Paris, France.
P.— Born New York City, Sept. 10,
1883. Pupil of Randall Davey and Albert
Andr6.
MALLISON, Euphame C(Iason), 30 West
54th St., New York. N. Y.
P., C. — Born Baltimore, Md., Apr. 30,
1895.
MALLONEE, Miss Jo, 39 West 39th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Stratton,
Me.
P., C— Born Stockton, N. Y.; Sept. 4,
1892. Pupil of G. Bridgman. Mem-
ber: ASL of N.Y.; Lg. of N.Y.A.
MALM, Gustav N., Malm Studio, Linds-
borg, Kan.
P., I., C, W. — Born Svarttorp, Sweden,
Jan. 20, 1869. Studied in Sweden.
Member: Smoky Hill Art Club. Au-
thor and illustrator of "Charlie John-
son," a study of the Swedish emigrant.
MALONE, Laetitia Herr (Mrs, John E.
Malone, Lancaster, Pa.
P., I. — Born Lancaster, T's,., May 30,
1881. Pupil of Chase, Mora, Beaux, An-
shutz and McCarter at PAFA. M e m-
ber: Fellowship PAFA; Phila. Alli-
ance.
MANDL. A(doiph), 2336 Columbia Ave.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Munich, July 13, 1894. Pupil
of Daniel Garber and LeRoy Ireland.
Member: Fellowship PAFA.
MANGRAVITE, Joseph G., 9 East 59th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
MANIGAULT, E(dward> Middieton, 130
West 57th St., New York, N. Y.; sum-
mer, Colebrook, N. H.
P. — Born London, Ontario, Can., June
14, 1S87. Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller.
MANLEY, Thomas P., 38 St. Luke's PI.,
Montclair, N. J.
P., E.— Born Buffalo. N. Y., Nov. 29,
1853. Pupil of PAFA. Member:
NAC; NYWCC. Award: Bronze
medal for etchings, St. Louis Exp.. 1904.
Work in: Montclair Art Association,
and the Yale Club, New York.
MANN, Edith Marian, "ill Winona Ave.,
Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA,
1916.
MANNHEIM. Jean, 500 Arroyo Drive.
Pasadena, Cal.
P. — Born Kreuznach, Germany. Nov.. 18.
1862. Pupil of Ecole Delecluse, Cola-
rossi, London School of Art. Mem-
ber: Cal. A.C. Awards: Gold
medal, Seattle, Exp., 1909; gold and
silver medals, San Diego Exp., 1915.
Represented in Denver (Colo.) Museum.
MANOIR, Irving K., 4 East Ohio St.;
821 North Trumbull Ave., Chicago, 111.
P., I.— Born Chicago, 111., Apr. 28, 1891.
Pupil of Wellington Reynolds, H. M.
Walcott, and AIC. Member: Chi-
cagro SA; Chicago AC. Work : "Blue
Hills," in Joliet (111.) Public Library;
mural decoration in Vincennes (Ind.)
High School. Teacher at Chicago Art
Institute.
MANON, Estelle Ream, 716i^ Tely St.;
h. 2405 Patee St., St. Joseph, Mo.
P., T.— Born Lincoln, 111., May 11, 1884.
Pupil of William M. Chase and Charles
W. Hawthorne. Member: St. Jo-
seph AL and Oklahoma AL. Head of
art department, Oklahoma City High
School.
MANSFIELD. Blanche McManus (Mrs.
Francis Miltoun Mansfield), 9 Rue Fal-
guiere, Paris, France.
I., P. — Born East Felicinna, La., Feb.
2. 1870. Studied in Paris. Specialty,
• book and periodical illustration. Au-
thor "The American Woman Abroad,"
"Our French Cousins," etc.
MANSFIELD, Louise B(uckingham), 368
Hancock St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
P.. L— Born Le Roy, N. Y., Jan. 16,
1876. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; Brooklyn SA;
Brooklyn WCC; ASL of N. Y.
MANSHIP, Paul, 42 Washington Mews,
New York, N. Y.
S.— Born St. Paul, Minn., Dec. 25. 1885.
Member: NSS 1912: N.Y.Arch.Lg.
1913; ANA 1914, NA 1916. Awards:
American Academy In Rome schol-
arship, 1909-12; Barnett prize, NAD,
1913; Widener gold medal, PAFA,
1914; gold medal, P.-P.Exp., San
F., 1915; Helen Foster Barnett prize,
NAD, 1917, Work: "Centaur and
Nymph." Metropolitan Museum, New
York; "The Duck Girl." bronze foun-
tain. Fairmount Park, Philadelphia:
"Centaur and Dryad" and "Flight of
Night," Detroit Institute of Arts; "In-
496
MANSON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MARSCHALL
dian and Pronghorn Antelope" and
"Dancing Girl and Fawns," Art In-
stitute of Chicago; City Art Museum,
St. Louis; Pratt Institute, Brooklyn;
"Playfulness," Minneapolis Institute of
Art; "Dancer and Gazelles," Cleveland
Museum; Luxembourg, Paris, also Cor-
coran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.
C; designer of Civic Forum medal;
J. P. Morgan Memorial, Metropolitan
Museum of Art. Portrait of John D.
Rockefeller.
MANSON, Harold, Calverton, L. I., N. Y.
P. — M e m b e r : S.Indp.A.
MANUEL, Margaret, 64 East 90th St.,
New York, N. Y. (E.)
MANY, Alexis B., 826 Connecticut Ave.,
Washington, D. C.
P. — Born Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 10,
1879. Member: Salma.C; Wash.
SA; Wash. AC. Awards: Bronze
medal, S. Wash. A., 1921; Corcoran
prize, S. Wash. A., 1921.
MANYARD, Adolph Best, 725 Seventh
Ave.. New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
MAQUARRE, D., 224a Sixth Avenue,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
MARAFFI, Lulgl, 1311 Christian St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
S., C— Born Aversa, Italy, Dec. 4, 1891.
Pupil of Grafly. Member: Graphic
Sketch C, Phila. Award : Steward-
son prize and two Cresson Scholar.ships
PAFA. Work: Bronze portrait of
Edward T. Stotesbury, Drexel Bank,
Philadelphia.
MARCUS (Edwin). 1604 University Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, South Bay
House, Blue Point, L. I., N. Y.
Cartoonist — Born New York, N. Y.,
March 16, 1885. Pupil of Twachtman.
MARCUS, Peter, 30 West 59th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., E.. W.— Born in New York City,
Dec. 23, 1889. Pupil of Ecole des Beaux
Arts, Ecole des Beaux Arts Decoratifs
In Paris; Charles H. Davis; Henry W.
Ranger. Member: N.Y. Arch. Lg. ;
Conn. AFA.; Lotos C; Salma. C; New
Haven PCC. Award : Hon. men-
tion. Conn. AFA, 1918. Author and
illustrator of "New York, the Nation's
Metropolis."
MARGULIES, Joseph, 974 East 178th
St., New York, N. Y. (E.)
MARGULIES, Pauline, Cooper Hall, 20
East Seventh St., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born New York, N. Y., Sept. 1,
1895. Pupil of Abastenia Eberle, G. W.
Brewster and Fraser.
MARIE-TERESA (Sister), The College of
St. Catherine, St. Paul, Minn.
P., T.— Born Stillwater, Minn., Apr. 27,
1877. Pupil of New York School of Art;
ASL of N. Y.; PAFA; Robert Henri;
studied in Florence and Munich.
Awards : Hon. mention for painting,
St. Paul Inst., 1916; bronze medal for
oil, St. Paul Inst., 1918; hon. mention,
Minn. State Art, 1919; silver medal and
prize, Minnesota AA, 1920. Mem-
ber: St. Paul AS; College AA.
MARIN, John, 291 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.; h. 4 Sixth St., Weehawken, N. J.
P., E.— Born Rutherford, N. J., 1875.
Pupil of PAFA; ASL of N. Y.; Dele-
cluse in Paris. Member: P-G; Paris
Salon d'Automne, 1908. Award :
Prize, Fellowship, PAFA 1900. Work:
"Mills of Meaux," owned by French
Government; "Falling Leaves, Au-'
tumn," San Francisco Art Museum;
Art Institute of Chicago.
MARK, Louis, 130 West 57th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., L. — Born In Hungary, Aug. 25, 1867.
Pupil of Bouguereau and Robert-Fleury
In Paris. Member: NAC. Awards:
Silver medal and hon. mention, Paris;
diploma d'honneur, Torino; gold medals
at Munich. Budapest, San Francisco.
Work: "Trinkets" and "Fever," Roy-
al Museum, Hungary; "Idyll," Buffalo
Academy of Fine Arts; "Col. Henry Wa-
terson," New York Manhattan Club.
MARKHAM, Charlotte (Hobbs), 704 Mar-
shall St., Milwaukee; summer, 521
North 5th St., Manitowoc, Wis.
P., T. — Born Manitowoc, Wis., Jan. 22,
1892. Pupil of AIC. Member: Wis.
PS.
MARKHAM, Marion E(sther), 430 La Fay-
ette St., New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Syracuse, N. Y., Oct. 15,
1875. Pupil of Chase; Syracuse Univ.
Member: S. Indp. A. Work:
"Girl in Red" and "Portrait of a Child,"
Syracuse Mus3um of Fine Arts.
MARKS, Stella Lewis (Mrs. Montague
Marks), Bryant Park Studios, 80 West
40th St., New York, N. Y.; h. Brighton,
Melbourne, Australia.
P. — Born Melbourne, Australia, Nov. 27,
1892. Member: R. M. S.. London ; N. A.
Women PS. Work: "H. R. H. The
Princess Patricia of Connaught," owned
by H. R. H. The Duke of Connaught.
MARR, Carl, Royal Academy of Fine
Arts, Munich, Bavaria.
P., I., T.— Born Milwaukee, Wis., Feb.
14, 1858. Pupil of Weimar Academy
under Schaus; Berlin Academy under
Gussow; Munich under Seitz and Llnden-
schmit. Member: Academies of
Munich, Berlin, Athens, etc.: Nat. Inst. A.
Jj. Awards: Gold medal, Prize Fund
Exhibition, New York, 1886; medals,
Vienna, Berlin, Munich, Dresden, Ma-
drid, Salzburg, Barcelona, Antwerp,
Budapest; first medal, IJ&ge 1905.
Work : "Dusk," Museum of Art, To-
ledo; "Gossip" and "The Mystery of
Life," Metropolitan Museum, New York.
Asst. Director, Academy of Fine Arts,
Munich.
MARS, Ethel, 34 Rue St. Louis, Vernon,
Eure, France.
P., Eng., C— Born Springfield, 111.
M ember: P-G; Societe des Dessina-
teurs Humoristes, and Salon d'Automne,
Paris. Represented in collection of the
French Government. Specialty, colored
woodblock prints.
MARSCHALL, Frederick, Great Kills,
S. I., N. Y.
Mural P.— M ember: A.Aid S.
497
MARSCHENER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MASON
MARSCHENER, Arthur A., 1720 Field
Field Ave., Detroit, Mich.
P., E.— Born Detroit, Mich., Apr. 11,
1884. Pupil of J. P. Wicker. Mem-
ber: Chicago SE.
MARSH, Mrs. Alice Randall, Nutley, N.
Rochelle, N. Y. ; Sakonnet Point, R. I.
Min.P.— Born Coldwater, Mich. Pupil
of AIC; Merson, Collin, Whistler and
MacMonnies in Paris. M e n\ b e r : Am.
S.Min.P.
MARSH, Charles H(oward), care of the
College of Fine Arts, University of
Redlands, Redlands, Calif.; summer,
Laguna Beach, Calif.
P., E., T.— Born Magnolia, la., Apr. 8,
1885. Pupil of W. V. Cahill, Guy Rose,
Clarence Hinckle, andStickney Memo-
rial School of Pasadena. Member:
Calif. AC; Laguna Beach AA.
Award : First prize. Southern Cali-
fornia Fair Exhibition, Riverside, Calif,,
1920.
MARSH, Fred Dana, Wykagyl Park. New
Rochelle, N. Y.; Sakonnet Point. R. I.
P.— Born Chicago, 111., April 6, 1872.
Pupil of AIC. Member: SAA 1902;
ANA 1906; N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1902; Mural P.
1904. Awards : Bronze medal, Paris
Exp., 1900; silver medal. Pan- Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; bronze medal. St. Louis
Exp., 1904. Work: "Berkshire,"
Rochester Art Gallery; decorations in
Hotel McAlin, New York; United
Engineering Societies Bldg. ; Museum of
Safety, New York, N. Y.
MARSH, Mary E., 10891/2 W. 35th Place,
Los Angeles, Calif.
P. — Born Cincinnati, Ohio. Pupil of
Birger Sandzen, Chicago AFA, Cincin-
nati Art Academy. Member: Calif.
AC; Laguna Beach Art Asso. Assist-
ant Art Curator, Los Angeles Museum.
MARSHALL, Frank H(oward), P. O. Box
418, Jamestown, N. Y.
P.— Born in England, 1866. Pupil of
ASL of N. Y.; Chase School, New York;
Julian Academy in Paris under Lau-
rens; studied in Madrid and London.
Member: Salma.C. 1910.
MARSHALL, Frank W(arren), 652 An-
gell St.. Providence, R. I.
P., I.— Born Providence, R. I., Sept. 24,
1866. Pupil of R. I. School of Design;
Julian Academy, Paris. Member:
Providence AC; Providence WCC. In-
structor of drawing at Rhode Island
School of Design; art editor. Providence
"Journal."
MARSHALL, May C, 1921 K St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: S. Wash. A.
MARSHALL, Rachel. See Mrs. Arthur
L, Hawks.
MARTIN, Easoin J., 340 East 61st St.,
New York. N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
MARTIN, Edna M., 227 Fall River Ave.,
Seekonk, Mass.
P. — M ember: Providence, WCC.
MARTIN, Paul, 141 East 27th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
MARTINEZ, Xavler (Timoteo Martinez
y Orozco), 816 Scenic Ave., Piedmont,
Cal.
P., Etcher, T.— Born Guadalajara, Mex-
ico, Feb. 7, 1874. Pupil of Mark Hop-
kms Inst., San Francisco; Ecole des
Beaux-Arts under GerOme and Carri^re.
Member: San F. Sketch C; Bohe-
mian C. Awards: Gold medal, San
F.Art Assoc. 1895; hon. mention, Paris
Exp., 1900; hon. mention for etching,
P.-P.Exp., San F.. 1915.
MARTI NO, Michel, 1931 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.; h. 62 Lyons St., New
Haven, Conn.
S. — Born Alvignano, Casserta, Italy,
Feb. 22, 1889. Pupil of Lee Lawrie and
H. Kitson. Award : English Fellow-
ship prize to Yale University. Work:
"Landing of Pilgrims," "Battle of Lex-
ington," Strong School, New Haven;
White Plains High School Memorial
Tablet; commemorative medal, Ameri-
can Public Health Society; Memorial
Flag Staff, Brooklyn, N. Y.
MARTI NY, Philip, 400 West 23rd St.. New
York, N. Y.
S. — Born Alsace, then France, May 19,
1858; came to America in the early
eighties. Pupil of Eug&ne Dock in
France; Augustus Saint Gaudens in
United States. Member: ANA
1902; SAA 1891; N.Y.Arch.Lg. Work :
Doors for St. Bartholomew's Church,
New York; McKinley Monument,
Springfield, Mass.; Soldiers and Sailors
Monument, Jersey City, N. J.; portrait
statue of ex-Vice-President G. A. Ho-
bart, Paterson, N. J.; sculpture in Hall.
of Records. New York; two groups in
Chamber of Commerce, New York.
MARULIS, Athan, 211 Fourth Ave.,
North, Seattle, Wash.
P. — Born Athens, Greece, Dec. 25, 1889.
Pupil of Manos, Paul M. Gustin, Yasu-
shi Tanaka. Member: Seattle Fine
Arts Soc.
MARVIN, F. H., Provincetown, Mass.
P.— Born in New York City. Work In:
Toledo Museum.
MARWEDE, Richard L., 976 Anderson
Ave., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., Feb.
5, 1884. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: ASL of N. Y.; Alliance.
MASE, C(arolyn) C(ampbe!i), 396 Gene-
see St., Utica, N. Y.
Landscp. P. — Born Matteawan, N. Y.
Pupil of J. H. Twachtmaa. Member:
Conn. AFA; N. A. Women PS.
MASON, John, 1502 North 17th St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P., D.— Born New York, N. Y., 1868.
Pupil of Julian Academy in Paris under
Laurens and Constant. Member:
Alliance. Award : Bronze medal,
Paris Exp., 1889. Work: Decoration
of dining room of Harmonic Club, New
York; "Portrait of Admiral Dewey" and
"Portrait of Major S. Ellis Briggs,"
in Armory, New York City.
498
MASON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MATTHEWS
MASON, Mary (Stuard) Townsend, 8233
Seminole Ave., Chestnut Hill, Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P.— Born Zanesville, O., Mar. 21, 1886.
Pupil of Chase and Breckenrictfee at
PAFA; Maryland Inst., Baltimore.
Member: Fellowship PAFA; Phila.
Alliance; Plastic C, 1917. Awards:
Cresson traveling scholarship, PAFA,
1909; Gold medal, Plastic C, 1921.
"Work: "Blue and Gold," Fellowship
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts.
MASON, Maud M., 18 East 9th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., C, T.— Born Russellville, Ky.,
Mar. 18, 1867. Pupil of Chase, Dow and
Snell in New York; Brangwyn in Lon-
don. Member: MacD.C.; Boston
SAC; N.Y. Soc. C; N. A. Women PS;
NAC; Pen and Brush C. A wa r d s :
Gold medal, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915;
bronze medal, NAC, 1920.
MASON, Robert Lindsay, 230 East Church
Ave., Knoxville, Tenn.
I.. P.. W.— Born Knoxville. Tenn.. June
5, 1874. Pupil of Howard Pyle. Mem-
ber: Nicholson Art Lg-. ; Wilmington
FAS. Award : Rush Strong medal,
Southern Appalachian Exposition. Il-
lustrations for books and magazines,
"Harper's." etc.; author of short stories
and articles on out-of-door life, with il-
lustrations.
MASON. William Albert, 212 West Chel-
ten Ave.. Germantown. Philadelphia, Pa.
P., T.— Born Dec. 25, 1855. Member:
ACPhila.; Fellowship PAFA (assoc).
Director of drawing, public schools of
Philadelphia.
MASSIE, Julia M., 5919 Ichoripitoulas
St., New Orleans, La.
P. — Born in Mississippi, Nov. 27, 1875.
Member: N. O. AA. Award :
N. O. AA gold medal.
MASTERS. Frank B., 38 East 22nd St.,
New York. N. Y. ; summer, 10 Fenwick
Road, Winchester, Mass.
I. — Born Watertown. Mass., Sept. 25.
1873. Pupil of C. H. Woodburv and
Howard Pyle. Member: SI 1907;
Salma.C.
MASTON, R. Thomas, 246 Conkey Ave.,
Rochester, N. Y.
P.^ — Born Greenfield, Ind. Pupil of
E. E. Siebert. Member : Rochester
AC.
MATCHEREK, Karl A., 204 South Re-
becca St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember : Pitts. AA.
MATHESON, Johanna, 2021 East Mercer
St., Seattle, Wash. (P.)
MATHEWS. Arthur F(rank), 670 Fell
St., San Francisco, Cal.
P., T.— Born Wisconsin, Oct. 1, 1860.
Pupil of Boulanger in Paris; also stud-
ied architecture. Work : Mural deco-
ration (15 panels), Oakland (Cal.)
Library: mural paintings. California
State Capitol Bldg. :4 triptych panels.
University of Calif. Libr. ; in The Me-
chanics' Inst., Rochester; Library of
Stanford University; decorations wall
and dome of Commanding Hall, Ma-
sonic Temple, San Francisco; "Cali-
fornia Landscape," Metropolitan Muse-
um, New York. Director California
School of Design 1890-1906; managing
editor "Philopolis Magazine."
MATHEWS, F(erdinand) Schuyler, 17
Frost St., Cambridge, Mass.
P., C. I.. W.— Born New Brighton, S. I.,
N. Y., May 30, 1854. Pupil of Cooper
Union in New York; traveled in Italy.
Author and illustrator: "The Golden
Flower," "Familiar Trees," "Fieldbook
of American Wild Flowers," "Fieldbook
of Wild Birds and Their Music,"
"Fieldbook of American Shrubs and
Trees." Botanical artist on stafC of
■ Gray Herbarium, Harvard University
Specialty, landscape in water color and
illumination.
MATHEWS, Lucia Klelnhans (Mrs. Ar-
thur F. Mathews), 670 Fell St., San
Francisco, Cal.
P., I., C. — Born San Francisco, Aug. 29,
1872. Pupil of A. F. Mathews, Whistler.
Award: Silver medal, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915.
MATHEWSON, Frank C(onvers), 29 Wa-
terman St., Providence, R. I.; summer,
Matunuck, South Kingston, R. I.
P. — Born Barrington, R. I., May 12,
1862. Pupil of Laurens and National
School of Decorative Art in Paris.
Member: NYWCC; Pi'ovidence, AC;
Providence WCC; Chicago WCC; Alli-
ance. Award : Sullivan prize, Provi-
dence, 1903. Work: "Ogunquit Pas-
ture," Rhode Island School of Design,
Providence; "The Weisser Thurm,"
Boston Art Club.
MATHEWSON, Lucy Stickney, 1755 N
St., Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
MATHIEU, Hubert, South Dakota State
College, Brookings, South Dakota. (I.)
MATHUS, Henry, 39 Henry St., Edge-
wood, Providence, R. I.
Lith.— M ember: Providence WCC.
MATSEN, Ida M., 4910 Burk Ave., Seat-
tle, Wash. (P.)
MATTEL Virgilio P., 19 Mayor St., Ponce,
Porto Rico.
P.— Born Porto Rico, June 30, 1898.
M e m b e r. S.Indp.A. Award : First
prize Exhibition, Ponce, 1919.
MATTHeNa/S, Anna Lou, 6016 EUis Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
S., P.. I.— Born Chicago, 111. Pupil of
Taft and Vanderpoel at AIC; Ecole des
Beaux-Arts and under Collin,, Simon
and Garrido in Paris. Member: Chi-
cago SA; SW Sc. Awards: Hon.
mention, Minn. State Art Com., 1913;
second sculpture prize, Minn. State Art.
Com. 1914. Represented in St. Paul
Institute of Art.
MATTHEWS, William P., 643 West 215th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born St.. Louis. Mo.. 1878.. Pupil
of St. Louis School of Fine Arts. Mem-
ber: St. Louis AG; 2x4 Soc; Soc.
of Ancients. Awards: Ives landscape
prize, St. Louis AG, 1914 and 1915.
499
MATTOCKS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MAYER
MATTOCKS, Muriel, 4106 Lark St., San
Diego, Calif.
P., I. — Born Hastings, Neb. Pupil of
M. C. Carr, John S. Ankeney, Birger
Sandzen, AIC.
MATZEN, Herman N., Cleveland School
of Art, Cleveland, O.
S., T.— Born m i^enrnark, July 15, 1861.
Pupil of Munich and Berlin Academies
of Fine Art. Member: NSS; NAC;
Cleveland SA. Awards : Second
medal, Berlin, 1895; first medal,
Berlin Exp., 1896. Work: "War"
and "Peace," Indianapolis Soldiers
and Sailors Monument; "Schiller
Monument," Detroit; "Law" and "Jus-
tice," Akron (O.) County Court House;
"Wagner Monument," Cleveland; Burke
Mausoleum; "Moses" and "Gregory,"
Cleveland Court House; "Cain and
Abel," Lake County Court House; Tom
L. Johnson monument, Cleveland Pub-
lic Square; Holden Mausoleum; Thomas
White Memorial, Cleveland.
MATZKE, Albert, 244 West 14th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 8,
1882. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under Du
Mond and George Bridgman.
MATZKES, F. W., 115 Natchez St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember : Pittsburgh AA.
MATZKIN, Meyer, 110 Tremont St., Bos-
ton, Mass.; 29 Homestead St., Roxbury,
Mass.
S.— Born in Russia, Nov. 25, 1880.
MAUCH, F. A., 422 Kingsboro St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
MAUNSBACH, Olin C, 104 West 40th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
MAURER. Alfred H(enry), 9 rue Falguiere
Paris, France; 404 West 43rd 'St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York Apr. 21, 1868. Pu-
pil of NAD under Ward; studied In
Paris. Member: Salma.C. 1901;
Paris AAA; Paris SAP. Awards:
Inness prize, Salma. C, 1900; first prize
($1,500). C. L Pittsburgh, 1901; first
prize, Worcester, 1901; bronze medal,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver
medal, St. Louis, 1904; third medal,
Ll&ge Exp., 1905; R-old medal, Int. Exp.,
Munich, 1905. Represented in Memorial
Hall Museum, Philadelphia, Pa.
MAURY, Cornelia Field, 5815 Pennsyl-
vania Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
P. — Born New Orleans, La. Pupil of
St. Louis School of Pine Arts; Julian
Academy in Paris. Member: St.
Louis AG. Represented in City Art
Museum, and Public Library, St. Louis.
MAXWELL, Guida B., 180 Manheim St.,
Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Oct. 1, 1896.
Pupil of Fred Wagner. Member:
Plastic C. ; Phila. Alliance.
MAY, Beulah, Fruit and Mabury Sts.;
h. R. F. D. No. 1, Santa Ana, Calif.
S. — Born Hiawatha, Kansas, June 26,
1883. Pupil of Lorado Taft, Wm. Chase,
Charles Grafly. Member: Calif.
AC; West Coast Arts.
MAY, Charles C, 15 East 40th St., New
Yorti', N. Y.; h. Pleasantville, N. Y.
P., A.— Born Lee, Mass., July, 1887.
Member: N.Y. Arch. Lg.
MAY, Thomas, care of "Detroit Journal,"
Detroit, Mich.
Cartoonist. — Born Detroit, June 30, 1860.
On staff "Detroit Journal" since 1892.
MAYER, A. E., 21 West 58th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
MAYER, Beia, 366 Fifth Ave.; h. 33 Ver-
milyea Ave., New York, N. Y.; sum-
mer. Beacon Hill, Port Washington,
L. I., N. Y.
P.— Born Hungary, Aug. 5, 1887. Pu-
pil of C. Y. Turner, Olinsky and Ward.
Member : Salma. C.
MAYER, Casper, American Museum of
Natural History, 1931 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.; h. 24 Carver St., Astoria,
L. I., N. Y.
S.— Born in Bavaria, Dec. 24, 1871.
Pupil of J. Q. A. Ward, schools of
Cooper Union, and NAD In New York.
Award : Silver medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904. Makes anthropological groups for
American Museum of Natural History.
MAYER, Edward A(lbert), 2242 North
Tripp Ave., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born Columbus, O., Jan. 8, 1889.
MAYER. H(enr)y, 15 West 67th St., New
York, N. Y.
Caricaturist. — Born Worms-on -Rhine,
Germany, July 18, 1868; son of London
merchant; came to United States in
1886. Member: Salma. C. 1898.
Work: "Impressions of the Passing
Show," New York "Times," 1904-14;
editor-in-chief "Puck." Author: "A
Trip to Toyland," "The Autobiography of
a Monkey," "Adventures of a Japanese
Doll," etc. Contributor to many week-
lies in the United States and Europe.
Originator of "Travelaughs" for mov-
ing pictures. Creator of "Tiss me"
Doll.
MAYER, Louis, 253 West 42d St.. New
York, N. Y.; summer, R. F. D. No. 2,
Hopewell Jet., N. Y.
P., S.— Born Milwaukee, Nov. 26, 1868.
Pupil of Max Thedy in Weimar; Paul
Hoecker in Munich; Constant and
Laurens in Paris. Member: Inter-
national Society AL; Wisconsin PS;
Awards : Bronze medal for sculpture,
St. Paul AI 1915; silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F.. 1915.. Work in: State
Historical collections at Des Moines,
Iowa and Madison. Wis.; Public Li-
brary, Burlington, Iowa; Springer Col-
lection, National Museum. Washington.
D. C; Milwaukee Art Institute.
MAYER, Milton, 220 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
MAYER, William G., 6481 Frankstown
Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
500
MAY FIELD
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MEIERHANS
MAYFIELD, R(obert) B(ledsoe), 1638
Dublin St., New Orleans, La,
P., Etcher. — Born Carlinville, 111., Jan.
1, 1869. Pupil of St. Louis School of
Fine Arts; Julian Academy in Paris
under Lefebvre and Constant. Aw a r d:
First gold medal of New Orleans Art
Assoc. Work : "In the Studio," "The
Giant Oak," Delgado Museum of Art,
New Orleans, La. Literary editor of the
"New Orleans Times-Picayune."
MAYHEW, Nell Brooker, 5016 Aldama
St., Los Angeles, Cal.
P.. E.— Born Astoria. 111., April 17, 1875.
Pupil of University of Illinois under
Newton A. Wells; AI Chicago under
Johansen. Member: Calif. AC; Chi-
cago SE; Calif. P.M. Award : Medal
for color etching, Alaska-Yukon Exp.,
Seattle, 1909.
MAYNARD, George W(illoughby), 3321
Giles Place, Kingsbridge, New York,
N. Y.
P. — Born Washington, D. C, March 5,
1843. Pupil of NAD in New York; Royal
Acad. In Antwerp. Member: ANA
1881, NA 1885; SAA 1880; AWCS; A.
Aid S. ; Salma.C. (hon.); Century As-
soc. Awards : Temple gold medal,
PAFA 1884; medal, American Art As-
soc, New York, 1888; Evans prize,
AWCS 1889; designer's medal, Co-
lumbian Exp.. Chicago, 1893; Shaw
prize, SAA 1897; silver medal, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901. Work: Decora-
tions: "Moses and King David," St.
John's Church, Jamaica Plain, Mass.;
"Music and Dance," Bijou Theatre,
Boston; ceiling Metropolitan Opera
House. New York; frieze. Appellate
Court House, New York; "Adventure,"
"Discovery." "Conquest," "Civilization"
and "The Virtues," panels in Library
of Congress, Washington; frieze. Essex
Co. Court House, Newark, N. J. ; brass
Inlay in floor, Entrance Hall. Boston
Public Library; brass inlay in floor. En-
trance Hall. Library of Columbia Uni-
versity, New York. Pictures: "In
Strange Seas," Metropolitan Museum.
New York; "Sappho." Pennsylvania
Academy. Philadelphia; represented in
National Gallery. Washington; numer-
ous portraits in public buildings. Li-
brarian of National Academy of Design.
MAYNARD, R(ichard) F(leld), 33 West
67th St., New York, N. Y.; summer, 284
Genesee St., Utica, N. Y.
Port.P.— Born Chicago, 111., Apr. 23, 1875.
Pupil of Chase, Irving R. Wiles and
Blum in New York. Member:
NYWCC; MacD. C; Allied AA; SPNY;
NAC.
MAYOR, Mrs. Harriet Hyatt, Annisquam,
Mass.; winter, Princeton, N. J.
S.— Born Salem, Mass., Apr, 25. 1868.
Pupil of Henry H. Kitson and Dennis
Bunker In Boston. Award : Silver
medal. Atlanta Exp., 1S95. Specialty,
portraits.
MAZIERES, Marquise de Traysseix, 22
East 89th St., New York, N. Y,
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A,
MAZUR, Wladysiaw, 1070 Central Ave.,
Cincinnati, O,
S.— Born Jaslo, Poland. May 3. 1874.
Pupil of Academy of Fine Arts ftt
Vienna. Member: Salon d'Automne
1904. Award: Bronze medal, P.-P.
PJxp., San F., 1915,
MAZZANOVICH, L(awrence), Westport,
Conn,
P.— Born California. Dec. 19, 1872. Pu-
pil of AIC and ASL of N. Y. Me m-
ber: Salma. C. 1905; NAC. 1913. Rep-
resented in Hackley Gallery, Muskegon,
Mich., and Chicago Art Institute.
MEADOWS, Mrs. Dell, 1133 West 86th
PL, Los Angeles, Cal,
P.— M ember: Cal. AC,
MEAGHER, M(arion) T., 939 Eiffhth
Ave.. New York. N, Y.; summer, Fish-
ers' Island, N, Y.
P.. S.. T.— Born New York City. Pupil
of NAD, Chase, Beckwith, R. Swain
Gifford in New York, and studied in
Paris and Antwerp. Artist to the Dept.
of Anthropology, American Museum of
Natural History and New York Oph-
thalmic College,
MEARS, Henrietta Dunn, 16 Park Drive,
Brookline, Mass.; summer. Province-
town, Mass.
P., E.— Born Milwaukee, Wis., Feb, 28,
1877. Pupil of Hawthorne and Pape.
Member: Copley S.; Provincetown
AA,
MEESER, Lillian B. (Mrs. Spenser B.
Meeser), Crozer Campus, Chester, Pa.
P.— Born Ridley Park. Pa., July 8. 1864.
Pupil of PAFA; ASL of N. Y,;
Worcester Art Museum. Member:
Fellowship PAFA; Plastic C; Phlla.
Alliance,
MEGE, Violette (Clarisse), 119 West 87th
St., New York, N. Y,
P., S. — Born in arrondisement de Tizio-
zon, Alger, French Algiers. March 19,
1889. Pupil of Georges Rochegrosse,
Ecole Nationale des Beaux Arts, Acade-
mie Julian, J. P. Laurens, Humbert, In
Paris. Member: Societe des Ar-
tistes Francais; S.Indp.A. Award:
Fellowship of French Government,
MEINSHAUSEN, George F. E., 4617 Sta-
tion Ave,, Norwood, O.
P,, I,, Wood Engr, — Born Achim, Han-
over, Germany. Jan. 6, 1855. Pupil of
Cincinnati Art Academy. Award :
Silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
Work : Water colors, "The Phan-
tom Ship" and "The Life Boat," and
wood-engravings of same. Art Muse-
um, Cincinnati; prints in Carnegie In-
stitute, Pittsburgh; Library of Con-
gress, Washington, D, C; New York
Public Library.
MEIERHANS, Joseph, 4924 Eleventh
Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — Born in Ober-Lunkhofen-Oargan,
Switzerland. Feb. 22. 1890. Pupil of
A, N, Lindenmuth, John Sloan. Mem-
ber: Lg. of N.Y.A,; S.Indp.A.; A.S.L,
of N.Y,
501
MEISSNER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MERO
MEISSNER, Alfred, 3057 North Christi-
ana Ave., Chicago, 111.
Port. P., I.— Born in Chicago in 1877.
Pupil of AIC. Member: Palette and
Chisel C.
MELCHER, Mrs. Bertha Corbett, To-
panga, Cal.
I., P.— Born Denver, Colo., Feb. 8, 1872.
Pupil of Volk in Minneapolis; Pyle at
Drexel Institute, Philadelphia. Spe-
cialty, miniatures and illustration of
children's books.
MELCHERS (J.) Gar!, 80 West 40th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; and Fredericksburg,
Va.
P.— Born Detroit, Mich., Aug. 11, 1860.
Pupil of Diisseldorf Academy, 1877-80;
Lefebvre and Boulanger in Paris.
Member: ANA 1904, NA 1906; Paris
SAP; Soc.Nat.des Beaux-Arts, Paris;
Inter.Society of Artists, London; Munich
Secession (cor.); Berlin R.Acad.; Nat.
Inst.A.L. Awards : Hon. mention,
Paris Salon, 1886; first class medal,
Amsterdam, 1887; third class medal,
Paris Salon, 1888; first class medal,
Munich, 1888; grand prize, Paris Exp..
1889; first prize, AIC 1891; medal of
honor, Berlin, 1891; gold medal, ACPhila.
1892; medal of honor, Antwerp, 1894;
Temple gold medal, PAFA 1896; first
class medal, Vienna, 1898; gold medal,
Pan-Am.Exp., Buffalo, 1901; gold medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904; second W. A. Clark
prize, Corcoran Gal. 1910. Knight of the
Order of St. Michael of Bavaria; Cheva-
lier of the Legion of Honor of France
1895, Officer 1904; officer R. Prussian
Order of Red Eagle 1907. Work: "Ma-
ternity" and "Peasant Nurse and Two
Children," Luxembourg Museum, Paris.
France; "Penelope," and "Maternity,"
Corcoran Gallery, Washington; "Mother
and Child." Carnegie Institute. Pitts-
burgh; "Skaters," Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia; "Portrait of
ex-President Roosevelt," National Gal-
lery, Washington; "The Vespers," "The
Wedding," "Portrait of Mrs. Melchers,"
"Ik Marvel," "The Fencing Master,"
Institute of Arts, Detroit; "Portrait of
Charles L. Hutchinson." Art Institute,
Chicago; "Madonna." Metropolitan Mu-
seum, New York; "Marriage," Minne-
apolis Institute of Arts; "Vespers/' City
Art Museum, St. Louis; "Still Life,"
School of Design. Providence; "Drum-
mer, Royal Scots," Toronto (Can.) Mu-
seum.
MELIODON, Jules Andre, Lincoln Park,
N. J.
S., T. — Born Paris, France, June 1, 1867.
Pupil of Falgui^re, Fremiet, Barrau and
Message in Paris. Member: N. Y.
Arch. Lg. ; Soc. des Artistes Frangais;
Soc. des Professeurs Francais en Amev-
ique. Awards: Hon. mention, Paris
Salon, 1902; Diploma of Officer of
Academy 189S; Diploma of Officer of
Public Instruction. 1004. Work: "The
Explorer Lesueur," Museum of Natural
History. Paris; decorative sculpture on
the reconstructed Sorbonne, Paris;
Bahai's Vase (with Tiffany and L. Bour-
geois, architect). Instructor at Y. M.
C. A.
MELLON, Eleanor M., 157 East 35th St.,
New York, N. Y. (S.)
MELVILL, Mrs. Antonia, 424 Music-Art
Studio Bldg., Room 424, Los Angeles,
Calif.
Port. P. — Born Berlin, Germany, Nov.
28, 1875, came to America in 1894.
Studied in London under ^Y. P. Frith
at the Heatherley School of Art.
W o r k : "Portrait of Bishop J. H.
Johnson," Good Samaritan Hospital, Los
Angeles; "Portrait of Mrs. Dollard,"
Capitol at Pierre, S. D. ; in Public
Library, Sacramento, Calif.
MELZER, William, 810 Park Ave., Wee-
hawken, N. J.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
MENDENHALL, Emma, 2629 Moorman
Ave., Cincinnati, O.
Ldscp. P. — Born Cincinnati. Pupil of
Cincinnati Art Acad, under Nowottny
and Duveneck; Julian Academy in
Paris; summer school under Mrs.
Rhoda Holmes Nicholls, Woodbury and
Snell. Member: Cincinnati Wo-
man's AC; AWCS; N. A. Women PS;
Cincinnati MacDowell C. ; NYWCC.
MENTE, Charles, Congers, N. Y.
P., I. — Born New York. Pupil of Gabl
and Loefftz in Munich. Member:
AWCS; Chicago WCC. Awards:
First prize, Chicago SA 1893; gold
meda), AC Phila. 1895; silver medal and
hon. mention, Atlanta Exp,., 1895; Evans
prize, AWCS 1904.
MENTEL, Lillian, 2893 Romana Place,
Oakley. Cincinnati, O.
P., I., T.— Born Cincinnati, O., Nov. 2.
1882. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy
and Pratt Inst. Member: Cincinnati
Woman's AC.
MENZLER-PEYTON, Bertha S. (Mrs. Al-
fred Conway Peyton). 33 West 67th St.,
New York. N. Y.
Ldscp. P. — Born Chicago, 111. Pu-
pil of AI Chicago; Merson, Collin and
Aman-Jean in Paris. Member: Chi-
cago SA; Chicago WCC; N. A. Women
PS; NYWCC; AWCS; Allied AA.
Awards: Special prize, AIC, 1903;
Young Fortnightly prize, AIC, 1909;
Grower prize, AIC, 1910. Work in:
Union League Club, Chicago; Nike and
Klio Clubs and West End Woman's
Club, Chicago; Evanston (111.) Woman's
Club; Mural decorations in Fine Arts
Bldg., Chicago. Specialty, Western
scenery.
MERCER, Geneva, 4029 Bigelow Blvd.,
Pittsburgh. Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
MERINGTON, Ruth, 1 Wallace St., New-
ark. N. J.
P., T. — Born London, England. Pupil of
NAD and ASL in New York, under
Edgar M. Ward, Bruce Crane and
Birge Harrison; Julian Academy in
Paris under Constant.
MERO, Lee, care of Charles Daniel Frey,
104 Michigan Ave., South, Chicago. 111.
I.— Born Ortonville, Minn., May 30, 1885.
Pupil of Robert Koehler in Minneapo-
lis; Robert Henri in New York. Spe-
cialty, advertising art and decorative
illustration.
502
MERRELS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
M EVEN BERG
MERRELS, Mrs. Gray Price, 248 Oxford
Street, Hartford, Conn.
Min. P.— Born Topeka, Kan., 1884. Pu-
pil of ASL of N. y. under Shirley
Turner. Member: Brooklyn Soc.
Min. P.
MERRIAM, Irma S., 1531 Madrona Drive,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
MERRICK, Arthur T., 32 Union Square,
New York, N. Y. (I.)
MERRILL, Hiram C(ampbell), 522 West
134th St., New York, N. Y.
P., Wood Engr. — Born Boston, Mass.,
Oct. 25, 1866. Pupil of Douglas Volk;
ASL of N. Y. Member: NYWCC,
1914. Awards: Bronze medal. Pan.-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901, and at St. Louis
Exp., 1904, for wood engraving. Work
in: Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh.
MERRILL, Katharine, 415 West 23rd St.;
42 Washington Sq. South, New York,
N. Y. ; summer, Woodstock, N. Y.
E.— Born Milwaukee, Wis., 1876. Pupil
AI Chicago; Brangwyn in London.
Member: Chicago SE; NYWCC.
Work in: Library of Congress, Wash-
ington, D. C.
MERRIMAN, Helen Bigelow (Mrs. Dan-
iel Merriman), 73 Bay State Road, Bos-
ton, Mass.; summer. Intervale, N. H.
P., W.— Born Boston, July 14, 1844,
Pupil of Wm. Hunt. Member: Bos-
ton WCC.
MERRITT, Anna Lea (Mrs. Henry Mer-
ritt). The Limes, Hurstbourne-Tarrant,
Andover, Hampshire, England.
P., Etcher. — Born Philadelphia, Pa.,
Sept. 13, 1844. Pupil of Henry Merritt in
London. Awards : Centennial Exp.,
Philadelphia, 1876; hon. mention, Paris
Exp., 1889; two medals (oil painting and
mural decoration), Columbian Exp.,
Chicago, 1893; medal, Atlanta Exp.,
1895; medal, Pan. -Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901. Work: "Love Locked Out,"
National Gallery of British Art, Lon-
don; "Piping Shepherd," Pennsylvania
Academy, Philadelphia; numerous por-
traits, including "James Russell Low-
ell," Memorial Hall, Harvard University,
Cambridge, and "Mrs. Arnold Tojmbee,"
Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford; eight
mural paintings in St. Martin's Church,
Wanersh, Guildford. England. Author
"Memoir of Henry Merritt," "A Hamlet
in Old Hampshire," "An Artist's Gar-
den."
MERTON, Owen, 57 Hillside Ave., Flush-
ing, Long Island. N. Y.
P.— Born Christchurch, N. Z., May 14,
1887. Pupil of Tudor-Hart in Paris.
Represented in the National Gallery of
New Zealand. Designs and color
schemes for flower gardens.
MERYMAN, Richard S(umner), Corcoran
Gallery of Art; h. 813 Eighteenth St.,
Wa.shington, D. C; summer, Dublin,
N. H.
P.. T. — Born Boston, Mass., April 4,
1882. Pupil of Thayer, Tarbell, Ben-
son. Member: Boston GA.
Award: Silver medal, P.-P. Exp.,
San F., 1915.
MESSERSCHMITT, Charles, 367 Orchard
St., Rochester, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
METCALF, Marie S., 54 Stockton PL,
East Orange. N. J.
P. — M ember: Providence WCC.
METCALF, Willard L(eroy), 140 West
79th St.; and The Century Club, 7 West
43rd St.; 27 West 67th 'St., New York,
N. Y.
Ldscp.P., T. — Born Lowell, Mass., July
1, 1858. Pupil of Museum of Fine Arts
and George L. Brown in Boston; Bou-
langer and Lefebvre in Paris. Mem-
ber: AWCS; Ten Am. P.; Nat.Inst.AL.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Salon
1888; medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago,
1893; Webb prize, SAA 1896; hon. men-
tion. Paris Exp., 1900; silver medal, Pan-
Am. Exp.. Buffalo, 1901; silver medal, St.
Louis Exp.. 1904; Temple gold medal,
PAFA 1907; Clark gold medal and first
prize, Corcoran AG 1907; Harris medal
and prize, AIC 1910; gold medal, Buenos
Aires Exp., 1910; medal of honor,
PAFA 1911; Sesnan medal, PAFA 1912;
medal of honor, P.-P. Exp., San F,, 1915.
Work: "May Night," Corcoran Gal-
lery, Washington; "On the River," Cin-
cinnati Museum; "May Pastoral." Mu-
seum of Fine Arts. Boston; "The Pre-
lude." Worcester (Mass.) Art Mu.seum;
"The Family of Birches," "Blossom
Time," "The White Pasture"; "Old
Church, Deerfield, Mass."; "The White
Lilac," National Gallery, Washington;
"Twin Birches," Pennsylvania Academy,
Philadelphia; "Unfolding Buds," "The
White Veil." Institute of Arts, Detroit;
"Ice-Bound," Art Institute, Chicago;
"The First Snow" and "The Partridge
Woods." Boston Museum of Fine Arts;
"Le Sillon." Hackley Art Gallery, Mus-
kegon, Mich.; "Dogwood Blossoms,"
Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh; "Sum-
mer Night," St. Louis Museum; "The
Golden Hour," Rochester Memorial
Museum; "Pelago. Tuscany," Albright
Gallery, Buffalo; "Little White House,"
New Orleans Museum.
METEYARD, Thomas B(uford), Moses
Hill Farm, Fernhurst, Sussex, England.
I., P.— Born Rock Island, 111., Nov. 12,
1865. Studied in Europe. Member:
St. John's Wood AC, London. Spe-
cialty, decorative illustrations.
METZKES, F. W., 435 Natchez St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
MEURER, Charles A., Terrace Park, O.
P. — Born Germany, March 15, 1865.
Pupil of Julian Academv, Bouguereau,
Doucet and Ferrier in Paris. Mem-
ber: Cincinnati AC. Specialty, still
life; also sheep and cattle.
MEYENBERG, John C. 127 East 3d St.,
Cincinnati. O.; h. Covington, Ky. ; sum-
mer. Tell Citv. Ind.
S., C— Born Tell City. Ind.. Feb. 4. 1860.
Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy under
Thomas S. Noble; Beaux- Arts in Paris
under Jules Thomas. Member : Cin-
cinnati AC. Work: "Egbert Memo-
503
MEYER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MIKKELSON
rial," Fort Thomas, Ky.; "Pediment,"
Covington (Ky.) Carnegie Library;
"Aunt Lou Memorial," Linden Grove
Cemetery; Theodore F. Hallam, bust,
Court House, Covington, Ky. ; "Nancy
Hanks," Lincoln Park entrance. State
of Indiana; "Benn Pitman Memorial,
Cincinnati Public Library.
MEYER, Alvin (William), 1606 Cherry
St., Philadelphia, Pa.; h. Cambridge,
Md.
S.— Born Bartlett, 111., Dec. 31, 1892.
Pupil of Charles Gratiy. Member:
Char. C. Award: Cresson Traveling
Scholarship of the PAFA.
MEYER, Enno, 972 McMillan St.; h. 3240
Red Bank Ave., Cincinnati, O.
P., S., 1. — Born Cincinnati, Aug. 16,
1874. Pupil of Duveneck. Member:
Cincinnati AC (ex-sec. and v,.-pre3.).
Specialty, animals.
MEYER, Ernest, Tylerville, Conn.
P. — Born at Rothenburg, Germany, Dec.
24, 1863. Pupil of Chase, Twachtman,
Ward, DuMond, Turner. Member:
Conn. AFA; Salma. C.
MEYER, George Bernhard, 6 East Pleas-
ant St.. Baltimore, Md.
Min.P. — M ember: Charcoal C.
MEYER, Herbert, 867 West 181st St., New
York, N. Y.
P., I.— Born New York, N. Y., March 6,
1882. Pupil of ASL of N. Y., Twacht-
man and Du Mond. Member: SI;
Salma. C; Guild of Free Lance Artists.
MEYEROWITZ, William, 39 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, FoUey
Cove, Gloucester, Mass.
P., E.— Born in Russia, July 15, 1887.
Pupil of NAD. Member: S. Indp.
A.; P.-G.; Lg. of N. Y. A.; Brooklyn
SE. Etchings in Public Library, Con-
cord, Mass., and Ralph Cross Johnson
Collection, Washington, D. C.
MEYERS, Harry Morse, 7 West 42nd St.,
New York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
MEYERS, O. Erwln, 4 East Ohio St..
Chicago, 111.
P. — M ember: Chicago SA.
MEYLAN, Paul J(ulien), 140 Wadsworth
Ave., New York, N. Y.
I., P. — Born Canton of Vaud, Switzer-
land, May 17, 1882. Pupil of NAD in
New York. Member: SI 1907; AAS.
Illustrated: "Two Faces," by Marie Van
Vorst; "The Poor Lady," by Mary E.
Wilkins Freeman; "Sarolta," by Agnes
and Egerton Castle; "Come Out of the
Kitchen" and "Ladies Must Live," by
Alice Duer Miller; "The Unexpected,"
by Elizabeth Jordan, etc.
MEYNER, Walter, 150 Nassau St.; h. 200
West 101st St., New York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Feb.
12, 1867. Pupil of PAFA. Member:
Salma.C; Fellowship PAFA; S.Ind.A.
MEYROWITZ, Jenney Delony Rice (Mrs.
Paul A. Meyrowitz), 140 West 57th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Port.P., Min.P., T. — Born Washington,
Hempstead Co., Ark., May 13, 1866.
Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy; St.
Louis Art School; Julian, Delance and
D61ecluse academies in Paris. Mem-
ber: NAC; N. A. Women PS. W o r k:
"Jefferson Davis," Arkansas Capitol;
"George G. Williams," N. Y. Clearing
House and Chemical National Bank,
New York City; and other public por-
traits.
MEYVIS, Aime Leon, 22 Centennial Bldg.;
h. 360 Main St., East Rochester, N. Y.
P. — Born St. Gilles- Waes, Belgium, May
17, 1877. Pupil of Mechanics' Inst.,
Rochester; Royal Academy, The Hague.
Member: Rochester AC; Arti et
Amici, Amsterdam. Awards : Hon.
mention. Buffalo Soc. of Artists, 1903;
silver medal, Ville de Paris, 1904; silver
medal, Enghien-les-Bains, 1904; bronze
medal, Inter.Exp., Utrecht, Holland,
1909. Work in: Modern Museum, The
Hague, Holland; Sibley Hall Library,
Rochester.
MICKS, J (ay) Rumsey, 57 West 10th St.,
h. 10 Last 16th St., New York, N. Y. ;
summer, 66 Cayuga St., Seneca Falls,
N. Y.
I.— Born Baltimore, Md., Feb. 22, 1886.
Pupil of Henry McCarter. Illustrations
for "Everybodys," "Scribner's," "Har-
per's," "Red Book."
MIDDLETON, Stanley (Grant), 1 West
67th St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., June 8, 1852.
Pupil of Jacquesson de la Chevreuse,
Harpignies, Constant and Dagnan-
Bouveret at Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: A.Fund S.; Lotos C.
Awards: Hon. mention, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; hon. mention,
Charleston Exp., 1902. Work: Por-
trait of Hon. Lynn Boyd, the Capitol,
Washington; "Normandy Fish Wife,"
Hamilton Club, Brooklyn; "Portrait of
George H. Daniels, en Costume de
Bal," Lotos Club, New York; portraits
of Dr. Weisse, Dr. Starr and Dr. Sat-
terlee. New York College of Dentistry;
portrait of Gen. Austin, Bronx Armory;
Col. William S. Gordon, West Point;
Tneo. B. Connoly, City Hall, N. Y.;
portrait of Charles Ai Moore, Montauk
Club, Brooklyn, N. Y.; portrait of Al-
bert S. Bickmore, Museum of Natural
History, New York; portrait of Hon.
Andrew D. White, Smithsonian Inst.,
Washington, D. C; portraits of Gens.
Anthony Wayne and Nathaniel Greene,
Frances' Tavern, Sons of the Revolu-
tion, New York.
MIELZINER, Joseph, 79 West 12th St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
MIELZINER, Leo., 79 West 12th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., S., I.— Born New York. Pupil of
Cincinnati Art Academy; G^rOme, Bou-
guereau and Ecole des Beaux-Arts,
under Collin and Courtois in Paris;
Kroyer in Copenhagen. Member:
Paris AAA; Boston AC; Cincinnati AC;
Alhed AA; Salma.C; P-G.
MIKKELSON, Gwendolen Hathorne,
Route 2, Danbury, Conn.
S. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
504
MILAM
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MILLER
MILAM, Mrs. Annie Nelson, 2724 Grant
Ave., El Paso, Texas.
p., T.— Born Homer, La., Nov. 20, 18^0.
Pupil of John Carlson.
MILBANK, Mrs. Alberta, 123 East 37th
St., New York, N. Y.
P._M ember: S.Indp.A.
MILES, Harold W., 544 North Hill St.;
342 North Main St., Los Angeles, Calif.
p T. — Born Des Moines, la., Sept. 2,
1887. Pupil of C. S. Cumming and J. F.
Smith. Memb er: Calif. AC. Work:
Mural decorations in West Des Momes
High School.
MILHAU, Zella de, 1022 Park Aye.,
New York, N. Y.; summer, Larialot,
Southampton, L. I., N. Y.
Etcher, I.— Born New York. Pupil of
Arthur Dow and E. Nimmo Moran;
ASL of N. Y. Member: NAC.
MILIONE, Louis, 121 South 24th St.;
h. 1426 South 9th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
S., T.— Born Padua, Italy, Feb. 22, 1884.
Pupil of Charles Grafly; Herman Deig-
endesch; Porter. Member: Fellow-
ship PAFA. Awards: Cresson schol-
arship PAFA, 1907. Work: "Brig.
Gen. Kirby Smith," Vicksburg, Miss.;
and in Church of the Redeemer, Bryn
Mawr; German town High School, Phil-
adelphia.
MILLER, Anna Hazzard (Mrs. Edward
J. Miller), 1515 West 16th St., Okla-
homa City, Okla.
P.— Born Minnesota, June 4, 1863. Pu-
pil of Maurice Braun. Member:
Oklahoma Art League; Oklahoma State
Artists Assoc.
MILLER, Benjamin, 131 East 3rd St., Cin-
cinnati, O.
P._Pupil of Duveneck. Member:
Cincinnati AC.
MILLER, Charles H(enry). Died January
23 1922.
Ldscp.P., W., L.— Born New York,
March 20, 1842. Pupil of NAD In New
York; Adolph Lier and Bavarian Acad-
emy in Munich. Member: ANA
1873; NA 1875; Century Assoc; Lotos
C; Queensborough Soc.of Applied Arts
and Crafts (pres.). Awards: Gold
medal, Phila.Centennial, 1876; gold
medal, Boston; gold medal. New Or-
leans. Work: "The Bouquet of
Oaks," Metropolitan Museum, New
York; "Sunset at East Hampton,
L. I.," Brooklyn Institute Museum;
"New York City from Long Island,"
Republican Club; "Highbridge from
Harlem Lane," Democratic Club, New
York; "Landscape," R. I. School of De-
sign, Providence.
MILLER, (Miss) Delle, 3448 East 62nd
St., Kansas City, Mo.; summer, Rocky
Neck, East Gloucester, Mass.
P., C, T. — Born Independence, Kan.
Pupil of H. H. Breckenridge.
MILLER, Emma D., 1952 North Broad St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
MILLER, Hester, 18 West 8th St., New
York, N. Y., and Woodstock, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
MILLER, J(oseph) Maxwell, 1335 Green-
mount Ave.; h. 1508 Madison Ave.,
Baltimore, Md.
S.— Born Baltimore, Dec. 23, 1877. Pupil
of Maryland Inst. School of Art and De-
sign, Rinehart School of Sculpture and
Charcoal C. in Baltimore; Julian Acad-
emy in Paris under Verlet. Member:
NSS 1908; Charcoal C. Awards: Gold
medal of honor, Maryland Inst. School of
Art and Design, 1897; Rinehart scholar-
ship to Paris 1900-05; hon. mention,
Paris Salon, 1902; silver medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; Ofllcier d'Academie
1912; hon. mention for medals, P.-P.
Exp., San. F., 1915. Work: "Cardinal
Gibbons," Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts and Metropolitan Mu-
seum, New York; "Ishmael," St. Louis
Museum; "Separation of Orpheus and
Eurydice," Peabody Institute, Balti-
more; "Bust of Lady," Walters Gallery,
Baltimore; monuments to French sol-
diers, Annapolis, Md.; "School Chil-
dren," Baltimore, Md. ; monument to
the Confederate women of Maryland,
Baltimore.
MILLER, Kate Reno, Art Academy; h.
4919 Ash St., East Norwood, Cincin-
nati, O.
P. — Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy;
Hawthorne. Member: Cincinnati
Woman's AC. Instructor Cincinnati
Art Academy.
MILLER, Kenneth Hayes. 408 West 23d
St., New York, N. Y.
P., T., W.— Born Kenwood, N. Y., March
11, 1876. Pupil of ASL of N. Y,. under
Mowbray and Cox; New York School of
Art under Chase. Instructor of paint-
ing and composition. Art Students'
League of New York.
MILLER, Leslie W(illiam), Oak Bluffs,
Mass.
P., T., W., L.— Born Brattleboro, Vt.,
Aug. 5, 1848. Pupil of Mass. Normal
Art School and School of Boston Mu-
seum. Member: ACPhila. ; Eastern
Art Teachers' Assoc; T Sq. C. (hon.);
Boston AC; Fairmount Park AA (sec);
AIA. (hon.). Principal Emeritus School
of Industrial Art of the Pennsylvania
Museum since 1880.
MILLER, Mrs. Mildred Bunting, Penn-
sylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Chester Springs, Chester Co., Pa.
P., T. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., June
21, 1892. Pupil of Anshutz, Vonnoh,
Breckenridge and Violet Oakley. M e m-
ber: Fellowship PAFA; Phila. Al-
liance. Awards : Two Cresson
Scholarship PAFA; Mary Smith prize,
PAFA, 1920. Work: "Reflections,"
Fellowship Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; "Belgian
Refugees," Mississippi Art Assoc,
Jackson, Miss.
MILLER, Minnie M., 1521 West Lehigh
Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Member: Plastic C; Phila. AC.
MILLER, Oscar, Bristol Ferry, R. I.
P.— Born New York, 1867. Pupil of
Constant and Laurens in Paris. Mem-
ber: Salma. C; NYWCC.
SOS
MILLER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MINOR
MILLER, Richard E., 16 Rue Boissonade,
Paris, France; 3806 Arsenal St., St.
l^ouis, Mo.; care of Macbeth Gallery, 450
Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y,.
P., I. — Born St. Louis, Mo., March 22,
1875. Pupil of St. Louis School of Fine
Arts; Constant and Laurens in Paris.
Member: ANA 1913, NA 1915; Port
P.; St. L. AG; Salma. C; Inter. Soc. of
Painters, Sculptors and Gravers; Paris
AAA; Paris SAP. Awards: Third
medal, Paris Salon, 1900; bronze medal,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver
medal, St.LouisExp., 1904; second medal
Paris Salon, 1904; second medal, Li6ge
Exp., 1905; Knight of the Legion of
Honor, France, 1908; Temple gold
medal, PAFA 1911; Palmer gold medal,
AIC 1914; Clarke prize, NAD 1915; medal
of honor, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915.
Work : "The Old Maidens" and "Por-
trait of an Old Woman," Luxembourg
Gallery, Paris; "The Chinese Statuette."
Metropolitan Museum, New York; "Lady
with Fan," Gallery of Modern Art,
Rome, Italy; "The Boudoir," Corcoran
Gallery of Art, Washington; "Reverie,"
City Art Museum. St. Louis; "The Toi-
let," Albright Gallery, Buffalo; "B.
Frost," Pennsylvania Academy of the
Fine Arts, Philadelphia; "Sunlight,"
Art Institute, Chicago; "Summer Rev-
eries," Detroit Institute; "Japanese
Kimono," Cincinnati Museum; repre-
sented in Royal Museum of Christiania;
King of Italy's private collection; Mu-
seum of Fine Arts, Antwerp; Modern
Gallery of the City of Venice; Mus6e du
Petit Palais, Paris.
MILLER, Roy, Wildnei Rd., R. F. D.,
Chila. N. Y.
P. — Member: Rochester AC.
MILLER, William, 1037 Jackson Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Wood Engr. — Born New York, Dec. 3,
1850. Studied engraving on wood at
Frank Leslie's publishing house; also in
Germany. Awards: Medal, 1887;
medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893;
bronze medal, Pan-Am.Exp., Buffalo,
1901. Represented in United States Na-
tional Museum, Washington, D. C; Bos-
ton Museum of Art, New York Public
Library; Springfield (Mass.) Museum;
Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh.
MILLER, William Henry, 102 West Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore, Pa.
Port.P., T. — Born Philadelphia, Pa.,
Nov. 25, 1854. Pupil of PAFA under
Eakins. Member: Fellowship PAPA;
Phila. Sketch C. Instructor of draw-
ing. Episcopal Academy, Philadelphia.
MILLESON, Royal Hill, 2336 Osgood St.,
Chicago, 111.
Ldscp.P. — Born Batavia, C Nov. 23.
1849. Member: Chicago SA; Boston
AC. Work: "Mt. Hood, Oregon,"
Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis. Au-
thor, "The Artist's Point of View."
MILLET, Geraldine B. (Mme. Frangois
Millet), Barbizon, S. et M., France.
P. — Born in America. Pupil of Wyatt
Eaton in New York; Carolus-Duran,
Merson, and Alfred Stevens in Paris.
MILLET, Louis J., 649 Wrightwood Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
Mural P., C, T.— Born New York. Pu-
pil of Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris.
Member: Chicago SA; Chicago Arch.
C; Municipal A.Lg. of Chicago.
Awards : Medals, Paris, 1889; Chica-
go, 1893; Paris, 19a0. Specialty, design-
ing interior decorations.
MILLETT, G. Van, 520 Studio Bldg.; h.
720 Indiana Ave., Kansas City, Mo.
P. — Born Kansas City, Mo., Apr. 5,
1864. Pupil of Royal Academy of Fine
Arts in Munich, under Gysis and
Loefftz. Award : Silver medal,
Munich Academy. Represented in
Kansas City Public Gallery and City
Hall, Kansas City.
MILLET, Thalia W. See Malcom.
MILLS, Thomas Henry, Bass Rocks, Glou-
cester, Mass.
P., I., E., W.— Born Hartford, Conn.,
Oct. 19, 1877. Pupil of Kenyon Cox and
W. M. Chase.
MILNE, David B., Boston Corners, Col-
umbia County, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Paisley, Ontario, Canada,
Jan. 8, 1882. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.,
under Du Mond, Reuterdahl and Bridg-
man. Member: NYWCC; Phila.
WCC. Award: Silver medal, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915. Represented in
Canadian War Memorials Collection,
Ottawa.
MILNE, May Frances, Boston Corners,
Columbia Co., N. Y.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., May 1, 1894.
MILROY, Harry C, Delphi, Ind.
S.—M ember: Ind. SS.
MILSOM, E(va) Grace, 60 Ashland Ave.,
Buffalo, N. Y.
P., C, W., T.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Deo.
8, 1868. Studied with Bischoff and In
Europe. Member: Buffalo SA; Buf-
falo GA. Represented in Albright Art
Gallery, Buffalo.
MINARD, Florence H., 42 College St.,
Providence, R. I.
P., I. — M ember: Providence AC.
MINER, Fred R., 2202 West 25th St.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
P., W. — Born New London, Conn., Oct.
28, 1876. Pupil of ASL of N.Y.; Wil-
liam Wendt. Member: Calif. AC;
Laguna Beach AA; S. Indp. A.
Award : Bronze medal, Panama-
Calif. Exp., San Diego, 1915.
MINER, Georgia Watson (Mrs. Lewis H.
Miner), 1717 South 6th St., Springfield,
111.; summer. Old Mission, Mich.
P., C, W.. L., T.— Born Springfield, 111.,
April 4, 1876. Pupil of C. A. Herbert
and Dawson-Watson. Member: Chi-
cago AG; Springfield AA. Awards":
111. State Centennial medals, 1918, for
best painting and work in ceramics.
MINOR, Anne (B.) Rogers, Waterfor(\
Conn.
P. — Born East Lyme, Conn., Apr. 7,
1865. Pupil of Robert C. Minor. Mem-
ber: New Haven PCC.
506
MISERENDINO
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MOLARSKY
MISERENDINO V(incenzo), 1947 Broad-
way; h. 620 Van Nest Ave., Bronx, New
York. N. Y.
S.— Born Italy, Jan. 29, 1876. Pupil of
Loiacolo.
MISH, Charlotte (Roberta), 962 Mount
Adams Dr., Portland, Ore.; summer,
Seaside, Ore.
P., S., I. — Born Lebanon, Pa., Aug. 17,
1900. Pupil of W. L. Judson.
MITCHELL, (Al)fred, 1527 Granada Ave.,
San Diego, Calif.
P., T.— Born York, Pa., June 18, 1888.
Pupil of Daniel Garber, Joseph T. Pear-
son, and Maurice Braun. Member:
Fellowship PAFA. Awards : Silver
Medal, Panama-California Exp., San
Diego, 1915; Cresson Traveling Scholar-
ship, PAPA, 1920. Work: "Mission
Valley, San Diego," Reading Museum,
Reading, Pa.
MITCHELL, Arthur, 4211 Castleman Ave.,
St. Louis, Mo.
P.— Born Gillespie, 111., Feb. 5, 1864.
Pupil of St. Louis School of Fine Arts.
Member: 2x4 Soc; St. Louis AG.
MITCHELL, Mrs. Eleanor B., San An-
selmo, Marin Co., Cal.
P., T.— Born Pittsburgh. Pa. 'Sept. 19,
1872. Pupil of Arthur Mathews in San
Francisco; Vitti Academy under Collin
and Merson and of Garrido in Paris.
Member : San Francisco SA.
MITCHELL, Eva B(lanche), Harlan Rd.,
Riverside, 111.
S. — Born Williamsport, Pa., April 1,
1872. Pupil of Lorado Taft.
MITCHELL, G. Bertrand, Rutherford,
N. J.
I. — M ember: Salma. C.
MITCHELL, Mrs. Gladys Vinson, 139
South Elmwood Ave., Oak Park, 111.
P., S. — Born Albuquerque, N. M., March
1. 1894. Pupil of Boyer Gonzales and
E. G. Eisenlohr. Member: Chicago
AG. Award: Silver medal. Woman's
Forum, Dallas AA. 1916. Work: "Snow
Composition." Museum of Santa Fe;
represented in collection of Houston AL.
MITCHELL, Harry C, 318 South Broad-
way, Yonkers, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
MITCHELL, Laura M. D., 307 South 4th
St., Alhambra, Cal.
Min. P. — Born Halifax, Nova Scotia,
Canada, Jan. 12, 1883. Pupil of George
Bridgman, Kenyon Cox, Alice Becking-
ton at ASL of N. Y. Member: Cal.
S. Min. P. (sec.-treas.); Calif. AC;
Hollywood AA. Awards : First
prize, C. W. Wolfe Art Club, 1908;
Gold medal, Panama-Pacific Exp., San
Francisco, 1915; Panama-Calif. Exp.,
■San Diego, 1916.
MITCHELL, Thomas John, 53^/^ South
Ave.; h. 47 Franklyn St., Rochester,
N. Y.
P. — Born Rochester, N. Y., Feb. 22,
1875. Pupil of Mechanics' Inst., Roch-
ester. Member: Rochester AC.
MITCHILL, Neil R., Romford, Conn.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
507
MITTELL, Sybilla, 7 Landscape Ave.,
Yonkers. N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
MIZUNO, S., 881/2 Third St., Portland,
Ore. (P.)
MOCH, G(ladys) A(my), 156 Waverly PI.;
h. 348 Central Park, W., New York,
N. Y.
P., E.— Born New York, N. Y., Nov. 1,
1891. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.
MOCINE, Ralph F., 616 Broadway Cen-
tral BIdg., Los Angeles, Cal.
P.— M ember: Cal. AC.
MODJESKA, Marylka H., University Sta.,
Tucson, Ariz.
E.— Born Chicago, 111., Jan. 22, 1893.
Pupil of AIC and George Senseney.
Member : Chicago SE; Alumni AIC;
Provincetown AA.
MODRA, T(heodore) B., West A., On-
tario, Cal.
P.— Born in Poland, May 13, 1873. Pu-
pil of Henri; Colarossi Academy, Paris;
Groeber in Munich. Member: NAC;
MacD. C; Cal. AC; Allied AA; S.Indp.A.
MOE, George Eugene, 1486 Fulton St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M e m b e r : S.Indp.A.
MOELLER, Gustave, 757 36th St., Mil-
waukee, Wis.
P., T.— Born Wisconsin, Apr. 22, 1581.
Studied in Milwaukee, New York, Pari;*
and Munich. Member: Wis. PS.
Awards : Hon. mention, Milwaukee,
AI, 1917. Instructor at Wisconsin School
of Arts.
MOELLER, Louis (Charles), "Edenwald,"
Wakefield, N. Y.
P. — Born New York, Aug. 5, 1855. Pu-
pil of NAD In New York; Dlez and
Duveneck in Munich. Member: ANA
1884, NA 1894. Work: "Disagree-
ment," Corcoran Gallery, Washington.
MOELLER, Selma M. D., 823 West End
Ave., New York, N. Y. ; summer. Hick-
ory Bluff, South Norwalk, Conn.
Min. P.— Born New York, Aug. 3, 188a
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under Cox, Chase.
Birge Harrison. F. V. Du Mond; Lucte
Falrchild Fuller and Alice Beckington
for miniature painting. Member:
N. A. Women PS. Award : Silver
medal, P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915.
MOFFETT, Roit E., Provincetown, Mass.
P.— Born Iowa, Feb. 18, 1888. Pupil
ASL of N. Y.; AIC; Charles W. Haw-
thorne. Awards : Silver medal, AIC,
1918; first Hallgarten prize, NAD, 1921;
hon. mention. Carnegie Inst., 1921.
Work: "A Street in Provincetown,"
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts, Philadelphia.
MOHLTE, J(ohn) A(lfred), 41 Shepard
Ave., East Orange, N. J.
P. — Born Gothenburg. Sweden, April 2.
1865. Pupil of NAD in New York;
Benjamin -Constant and Lauren.s in
Paris. Member: S.Indp.A. Spe-
cialty, portraits and mural decorations.
MOLARSKY, Abraham, 62 High St., Nut-
ley, N. J.
P.— Born Kieff, Russia, Jan. 15, 1879,
Pupil of Chase in Philadelphia. Mem-
ber: Fellowship PAFA.
MOLARSKY
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MORAHAN
MOLARSKY, Maurice, 39 West 67th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Kieff, Russia, May 20, 1885.
Studied at School of Industrial Art
and PAFA, Philadelphia; and in France
and Kngiand. Member: P.-G. ;
Phila. Alliance; Lg. of N. Y. A.
Awards : Cresson Scholarship PAFA;
hon. mention, Phila. AC; Fellowship
prize PAFA; silver medal, P.-P. Exp.,
San F., 1915; gold medal. Art Club of
Philadelphia. 1919.
MOLARSKY, Sarah Shreve, 62 High St.,
Nutley, N. J. (P.)
MOLIN, C. G., 180 State St., Brooklyn,
N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A:
MOLINA, Valentino, 222 West 59th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
MOLINARY, Marie Seebold (Mrs. An-
dres Molinary), 2322 Canal St., New
Orleans, La.
P. — Born New Orleans, La., 1876. Pu-
pil of William Chase and A. Molinary.
Member: N. O. AA. Work in
Delgado Museum, New Orleans.
MOLL, Aage, 59 Lincoln St., Hartford, Ct.
P. — M ember: Conn. AFA.
MONAGHAN, Gertrude, 3309 Baring St.,
Philadelphia. Pa.
Mural P.— Born West Chester, Pa.
Pupil of School of Design for Women;
PAFA. Member: Plastic C. ; Fel-
lowship PAFA.
MONAHAN, P. J., 238 30th St., Woodcliff-
on-Hudson. N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI 1912,.
MONCURE, Eiise Vance, Wide Water,
Va. (P.)
MONTAGUE, Harriotte Lee Taliaferro
(Mrs. Jeffry Montague), 1609 Hanover
Ave., Richmond, Va.
P., T. — Pupil of George de Forest Brush
and Twachtman in New York; Angelo
Yank, Fehr, Hummel, and Knurr in
Munich; Simon in Paris. Member:
Richmond AC. Work: "Portrait of
Capt. Sallie Tompkins," Richmond Art
Club; portraits in D. A. R. Hall, Wash-
ington, D. C; in Confederate Museum
and the State Library in Richmond; al-
so in Westmoreland (Va.) Court House.
MONTANA, Pietro, 75 Wilson Ave.; h.
651 Kosciosko 'St., Brooklyn, New York,
N. Y.
P., S.— Born Italy, June 29, 1890. Pupil
of Macdugal, Brewster and Delbestin.
MOON, Anne Douglas. See Mrs. Philip
B. Peyton.
MOORE, Benson B(ond), The Oneida, 147
R St., N. E., Washington, D. C.
P., I. — Born Washington, D. C, Aug.
13, 1882. Pupil of Corcoran School of
Art, Wash. Member: Wash. SA. ;
Wash. WCC; Wash. Landscp. C.
MOORE, Cecil Gresham, 126 Plymouth
Ave., Rochester, N. Y.; summer, Rideau
River, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
P., I., C, W., T.— Born Kingston, On-
tario, Canada, June 12, 1880. Pupil of
Rochester Athenaeum & Mechanics
Inst. Member: Rochester AC. Work:
Mural decorations in Powers Hotel,
Rochester.
MOORE, Edwin A(ugustus), 901 West
Lane, Kensington, Conn.
P., E., W.— Born Plartford, Conn., Aug.
24, 1858. Pupil of NAD, his father,
N. A. Moore, and in Dresden.
MOORE, Ellen Maria, Kensington, Conn.;
Box 115, Boothbay Harbor, Me.
Min. P., T. — Born Kensington, Conn.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. ; Mary Elmer and
I. A. Josephi. Member: Copley S.
MOORE, Frank M(ontague), 939 Eighth
Ave., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Taunton, Somersetshire, Eng-
land, Nov. 24, 1877. Pupil of John
Finnic, Liverpool. Member: NYWCC;
Salma. C.
MOORE, Mrs. Grace Cook, 2814 Melrose
Ave., Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
MOORE, Guernsey, Swarthmore, Pa.
I.— M ember: SI 1912; Fellowship
PAFA.
MOORE (Harry) Humphrey, 75 Rue de
Courcelles, Paris, France.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., 1844. Pupil
of Bail in New Haven; S. Waugh in
Philadelphia; Ecole des Beaux- Arts in
Paris, under G^rome, Boulanger and
Yvon. Member: Rochester AC.
MOORE, Mrs. Lou Wall, 5476 Ridgewood
Court, Chicago, 111.
S. — M ember: Chicago SA. Award :
Bronze medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
MOOREPARK, Carton, 63 Washington
Sq., New York, N. Y.
P., I.— M ember: SI.
MORA, F(rancis) Luis, 142 East 18th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I., T. — Born Montevideo, Uruguay,
July 27, 1874. Pupil of School of Boston
Museum, under Benson and Tarbell;
ASL of N. Y. under Mowbray. Mem-
ber: ANA 1904, NA 1906; ASL of N.
Y.; Salma.C. 1899; SI 1901; SAA 1905;
N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1903; AWCS; NYWCC;
AlliedAA; P-G; NAC. Awards: Gold
medal, AC Phila. 1901; gold medal, AAS
1902; two bronze medals, St. Louis Exp.,
1904; first Hallgarten prize. NAD 1905;
Beal prize, NYWCC 1907; Evans prize,
Salma.C. 1908; Shaw prize, Salma.C.
1910; gold medal for oil painting and
gold medal for water color painting,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915. Work:
Decoration for Lynn (Mass.) Public
Library; "Spanish Merrymakers," Mu-
seum of Art, Oakland, Cal. ; "Jeanne
Cartier," Toledo Museum; "Color Har-
mony," Newark Museum Association.
MORAHAN, Eugene, 1931 Broadway,
Manhattan; h. 305a President St.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Aug. 29, 1869.
Pupil of Augustus Saint Gaudens.
Member: xnSS. Wo r k : Alfred
Gwynne Vanderbilt memorial fountain,
Newport, R. I.; Elks Memorial, BufCalo;
Soldiers and Sailors Memorial, Carroll
Park, Brooklyn, N. Y.
508
MORAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MORRISON
MORAN, Percy, 105 East 78th St., New
York, N. Y. ; and Easthampton, Long
Island, N. Y.
P., Etcher.— Born Philadelphia, Pa.,
July 29, 1862. Pupil of his father, Ed-
ward Moran; PAFA under S. J. Ferris;
NAD in New York; studied four years
in Paris and London. Member:
AWCS. Awards: First Hallgarten
prize, NAD 1886; first gold medal. Am.
Art Assoc, New York, 1888. Work:
"Castle Garden, New York." Wilstach
Gallery, Philadelphia, Pa.; "Washington
and Betsy Ross," Masonic Hall, Chi-
cago; "Signing the Compact on May-
flower," Plymouth Museum; "The
Woodcutter's Daughter," Hamilton
Club, Brooklyn.
MORAN, (John) Leon, 97 Mercer Ave.,
Plaintield, N. J.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Oct. 4, 1864.
Pupil of his father, Edward Moran, and
of NAD; and in France and England.
Member: AWCS; AAS. Awards:
Gold medal, ACPhila. 1893; gold medal,
AAS. 1902.
MORAN, Thomas, 253 West 42nd St.;
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Easthamp-
ton, L. I., N. Y.
Ldscp.P., Engr.,E. — Born Bolton, Lanca-
shire, England, Jan. 12, 1837; brought to
America in 1844. Pupil of James Ham-
ilton in Pliiladelphia; studied in Lon-
don, Paris and Italv. Member: ANA
1881, NA 1884; AWCS; PAFA; Salma.C.
1888; Century Assoc; Lotos C; A.Fund
S. of Phila. Awards: Medal and di-
ploma. Centennial Exp., Philadelphia,
1876; silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; gold medal, AAS 1902.
Work: "The First Ship at Salvador,"
"View in the Susqueiianna Valley,"
"Ruins on the Nile" and two studies
after Turner, Wilstach Gallery, Phila-
delphia; "Bringing Home the Cattle,"
Fine Arts Academy, Buffalo; "Grand
Cafion of the Yellowstone" and "Chasm
of the Colorado," the Capitol. Washing-
ton; "The Breaking Wave," Carnegie
Inst., Pittsburgh.
MOREY, Bertha Graves, 327 West Fourth
St., Ottumwa, Iowa; summer. Green
Lake, Wis.
P., E., C, W., T.— Born Ottumwa,
Iowa, July 22, 1881. Pupil of AIC,
Cliicago AG, Alliance. Award : prize
($100) for silk design. Art Alliance of
America, 1918.
MORGAN, Alexander C(onverse), 134
West 73d St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Sandusky, O., July 1, 1849.
Member: Artists' Fund S. (pres.);
Salma.C. 1876; Century Assoc.
MORGAN, F(ranklin) Townsend, Moylan,
Rose Valley, Pa.
P., I., E., C— Born Brooklyn, N. Y.,
Dec. 27, 1883. Pupil of Bridgman, Carl-
sen. Member: Phila. Alliance;
Phila. Sketch C. ; Phila. PC; Fellowship
PAFA; The Print Society, England.
MORGAN, Lynn T(homas), 522 West
112th St., New York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Richmond, Ind., April 24,
1889. Pupil of William Forsyth, Mea-
kin, James Hopkins, George Bridgman.
Member: S. Indp. A.; SI; SPNY.
MORGAN, M. De Neale, Box 67, Carmel,
Monterey Co., Cal.
P., T.— Born San Francisco, Cal., 1868.
Pupil of San Fi-ancisco Art Institute,
and Chase. Member: San Fran-
cisco Art Assoc; Carmel Club Arts and
Crafts; N. A. Women PS. Work in
Memorial Museum, Los Angeles; Del
Monte Gallery; San Francisco Art
Assoc; University of Texas; Stanford
Univ.; Univ. of Southern Calif. Direc-
tor Carmel (Calif.) Summer School of
Art.
MORGAN, M., 244 Arlington Ave., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
MORGAN, Theo. J., 1814 16th St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C; Provincetown,
Mass.
P.— Born Cincinnati, O., Nov. 1, 1872.
Member: Wash. SA; Wash. AC;
NAC; NYWCC; Beachcombers; Wash.
WCC.
MORGAN, Wallace, 312 West 93rd St.,
New York, N. Y.
I.— Member: SI, 1909. Official art-
ist with American Expeditionary Forces
in France during world war.
MORITZ, T. E., 1513 Sherwin Ave., Chi-
cago, 111. (P.)
MORRELL, Edith Whitcomb, 660 Madi-
son Ave., New York, N. Y.
P.— Pupil of Richard Miller, ASL of
N. Y. Member: N. A. Women PS.
MORRIS, Adelaide, 904 West 52nd St.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
P.— M ember: Calif. AC.
MORRIS, Catharine Wharton, Old York
Road and 65th Ave.; h. Oak Lane
P. O., Philadelphia, Pa.; summer,
Jamestown. R. I.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Jan. 26, 1899.
Pupil of H. B. Snell and Leopold Seyf-
fert. Member: NYWCC; Phila.
Alliance; Phila. WCC; Newport AA.
MORRIS, George Spencer, Crozer Bldg.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Member: Fellowship PAFA.
MORRIS, Nathalie, 43 South 18th St.; h.
323 West Mermaid Lane, Chestnut Hill,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia. Pupil of PAFA
under Anshutz. Member: Fellow-
ship PAFA.
MORRISON, David H(erron), 242 East
105th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Rawalpindi, Punjab, British
India, Nov. 15, 1885. Pupil of Kenneth
Hayes Miller and Geo. B. Bridgman.
Member: N. Y. ASL.
MORRISON, L. G., 5233, 12th St., N. E.,
Seattle, W^ash. (P.)
MORRISON, M. M., 2113 East 52nd St.,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
MORRISON, Zaidee (Lincoln), 152 West
57th St., New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Gloucester, Mass.
P., I., T.— Born Skowhegan, Me. Pupil
of J. H. Twachtman, F. V. DuMond,
Chase, R. H. Nicholls. Member:
509
MORROW
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MOWBRAY
ASL of N.Y. ; Alliance; NYWCC. Work
in Mary Lyon Room, Mount Holyoke
College, Mass.; Colby University, Water-
ville. Me.; magazine covers for "Life,"
"Judge"; posters, etc.
MORROW, Julie (Mathilde), 101 West
85th St., New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born New York, N. Y. Pupil
of Jonas Lie and C. W. Hawthorne.
Member: N, A. Women PS; Pro-
vincetown AA; Lg. of N. Y. A.
MORSE, Anne Goddard, care of Dr. C. C.
Simmons, P. O. Box 235, North Scitu-
P.,'L— Born Providence, R. I., Jan. 17,
1854. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art
School; ASL of N. Y.; Wyatt Eaton
in New York; John La Farge for
stained glass. Member: Prov.
WCC.
MORSE, Edward L(ind), 164 Bartlett
Ave., Pittsfield, Mass.
P., W.— Born Poughkeepsie, N. Y.,
March 29, 1857; son of S. F. B. Morse.
Pupil of Thumann, Gussow, Thedy in
Germany; Bouguereau and Ferrier In
Paris.
MORSE, Jean H., Englewood, N. J.
S.— Member: N. H. PCC.
MORSE, Mary Minns, 211 Savin Hill Ave.,
Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Dorchester, Mass., June 30,
1859. Pupil of Ross Turner and Louis
Ritter in Boston ; George Hitchcock In
Holland. Member: Boston WCC;
Copley S. Specialty, landscapes and
marines in water colors.
MORSE. Sadie May, 11 Hancock Ave.,
Lexington, Mass.
P., C. T. — Born Lexington, Mass., May
5, 1873. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art
School, Boston; one year in Italy.
Member: Boston SAC; Hingham
Arts and Crafts Society. Educational
director under Federal Board for Voca-
tional Education.
MORTON, Christina (Mrs. Benjamin A.
Morton), 27 West 67th St., New York,
N. Y.
P. — Born Dardanelle, Ark. Member:
Allied AA; N. A. Women PS; MacD. C.
MORTON, Mrs. Josephine A(mes), 144
Main St., Williamstown, Mass.
P. — Born Boston, Mass., Mar. 12, 1854.
Pupil of Eakins; Laurens and Constant
in Paris. Member: Newport AA;
S.Indp.A.
MOSCHOWITZ, Paul, 42 West 39th St.;
h. 2085 Lexington Ave., New York,
N. Y.
Port.P., T. — Born Giralt, Hungary,
March 4, 1876. Pupil of ASL in New
York; Julian Academy in Paris. Mem-
ber: SAA 1901; ANA 1906. Awards:
Silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904. In-
structor, Pratt Inst., Brooklyn.
MOSCON, Arthur, 253 West 42nd St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
MOSELEY. Helen E., 206 Cherry St.,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
P.— Born Grand Rapids, Mich., 1883.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. and Hawthorne.
Member: N. A. Women PS.
MOSER, Carl, 80 Winfield Ave., Jersey
City, N. J.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
MOSES, Thomas G., 417 South Clinton
St., Chicago, 111.; h. 233 South Euclid
Ave., Oak Park, 111.
Ldscp. P. — Born Liverpool, England, in
1856. Pupil of AIC, and of R. M. Shurt-
leff . Member: Palette and Chisel
C; Chicago SA; Calif. AC; Laguna
Beach AA; Salma. C.
MOTLEY, Mrs. Thomas, 22 Common-
w^ealth Ave., Boston, Mass.
P.— M ember: Boston WCC.
MOTTET, Jeanle Gallup (Mrs. Henry
Mottet). 47 West 20th St., New York,
N. Y.
P. — Born Providence, R. I., Nov. 14,
1864. Pupil of Chase, Richard E. Miller,
E. Ambrose Webster. Member: N.
A. Women PS; Provincetown AA. Cu-
rator of painting, Museum of French
Art, New York, N. Y.
MOTT-SMITH, May, 941a West Sixth St.,
Los Angeles, Cal.
P.,S.,Min.P.,C.— Born Honolulu, T. H.,
Mar. 17, 1879. Pupil of Colarossi Acad-
emy; Van Der Weyden; Spicer Simson.
Member: Calif. AC; S. Indp. A.
Awards: Bronze medal for small re-
lief, Panama-Calif. Exp., San Diego,
1915; silver medal for jewelry, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915.
MOTZ, Ray E., Monessen, Pa.
P. — Member: Pittsburgh A A. Award:
Water color pastel prize, Pittsburgh AA,
1913.
MOTZ-LOWDON, Elsie, 105 East 17th St.;
23 East 62nd 'St., New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Waco, Tex. Pupil of ASL
of N.Y. ; Am. School of Min. P. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS.
MOULTON, Claxton B., 172 Townsend
St., Boston, Mass. (P.)
MOUNTFORT, Arnold, Sherwood Studios,
58 West 57th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Eggbaston, England, Jan. 21,
1873. Pupil of Birmingham Municipal
School of Art, England.
MO WAT, H. J., Westport, Conn.; 315
Tote Rd., W., Montreal, Quebec, Can-
ada.
I.— Member: SI 1912; Salma.C.
MOWBRAY, H(enry) SIddons, Washing-
ton, Conn.
P. — Born Alexandria, Egypt, Aug. 5,
1858, of English parents; brought to
U. S. in 1859. Pupil of Bonnat in Paris.
Member: SAA 1886; ANA 1888, NA
1891; Conn.AFA; A. Fund S.; Century
Assoc; Nat. Inst. AL.; National Commis-
sion of Fine Arts. Awards : Clarke
prize, NAD 1888; medals at Atlanta,
Boston. Chicago; gold medal. Pan- Am.
Exp.. Buffalo, 1901. Work: "A Lady
in Black," Fine Arts Academy. Buffalo;
"Idle Hours," National Gallery, Wash-
ington. Mural decorations: Appellate
Court, New York: University Club Li-
brary, New York; Morgan Library,
New York; Gunn Memorial Library,
and St. John's Episcopal Church, Wash-
510
MOWBRAY-CLARKE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MUNROE
Ington, Conn.; Federal Court, Cleveland.
Director American Academy in Rome,
1903-4.
MOWBRAY-CLARKE, John Frederick,
53 East 44th St., New York, N. Y.;
summer, "The Brocken," Pomona,
Rockland Co., N. Y.
S. — Born Jamaica, West Indies, Aug. 4,
1869. Pupil of Lambeth School. London.
Member: Am.P.S. Represented in
Metropolitan Museum, New York.
MOWRIS. Mrs. C. C, South Lima, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
MRUK, W(ladys!aw E.), 38 Ashley St.,
Buffalo, N. Y.
P.— Born Buffalo, N. Y.. June 12, 1895.
Pupil of J. E. Thompson.
MUEDEN, Mathilda. See Mrs. L. M.
Leisenring.
MUELLER. Alexander, School of Fine
and Applied Arts of State Normal
Pr-hool; h. 405 Stratford Ct., Milwaukee,
Wis.
P., L.. T.— Born Milwaukee. Wis., Feb.
29. 1872. Pupil of Richard Lorenz in
Milwaukee; Max Thedy in Weimar;
Carl Marr in Munich. Member:
Wisconsin PS; Milwaukee AS; Milwau-
kee Art Commission; Wisconsin Soc.
Applied Arts; Alliance. Director School
of Fine and Applied Arts of State Nor-
mal School.
MUELLER, John C, 4224 Ivanhoe Ave.,
Norwood, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati AC.
MUENDEL, George F., Rowayton, Conn.
P. — Born West Hoboken, N. J., 1871.
Pupil of Ochtman and ASL of N. Y.
Member: Conn. AFA. Award:
Prize ($100). Conn. AFA 1914.
MUHLHOFER, Elizabeth, 130 Eleventh
St., S. K., Washington, D. C.
P.— Born Maryland. Pupil of Corcoran
School under Moser, Brooke and Messer,
Member: Wash.WCC; S. Wash. A.;
Chicago WCC.
MULFORD, Stockton, 3004 Heath Ave.,
New York, N. Y. (I.)
MULHAUPT, Frederick J(ohn), 57 East
59th St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Rockport, Mo., March 28,
1871. Pupil of Art Academy in Kansas
City; AIC; Paris schools. Member:
Palette and Chisel C. Chicago;
Salma. C; Paris AAA.; NAC. (life);
Allied AA. Awards : Evans prize,
Salma. C; Proctor prize, Salma. C,
1921.
MULLER, Mrs. Olga Popoff, 77 Frank-
lin PL, Flushing, N. Y.
S.— Born New York City. Dec. 1, 1883.
Member: N. A. Women PS.
Awards : Cahn hon. mention AIC.
1911; McMillin prize, N. A. Women PS,
1914; medal of honor. Paris exhibition
of women's works: bronze medals. P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915.
MULLER-URY, Adolph, 33 West 67th St.,
New York. N. Y.
Port. P. — Born in Switzerland, March 28,
1864. Came to U. S. 1886. Pupil of
Royal Academy in Munich; Ecole des
Beaux-Arts in Paris under Cabanel.
Member: Lotos C.
MULLIKIN, Mary Augusta, 22 Elgin Ter-
race, Tientsin, China.
P., L.— Born in Ohio. Pupil of Walter
Beck in Cincinnati; Birge Harrison at
Woodstock; Whistler in Paris. Mem-
ber: Copley S. W o r k in Lasell
Seminary, Auburndale, Mass. ; Peking
Inst, of Fine Arts.
MUMFORD, Alice Turner. See Mrs.
Roberts.
MUMFORD, Jane. See Mrs. Pearson.
MUMMERT, S(ailie) B(iyth), 1308 South
Adams St., Fort Worth, Texas.
P. — Born Cisco, Texas, Oct. 12, 1888.
Pupil of Chase in Florence; Aunspaugh
Art School. Dallas. Member: S. Indp.
A. ; Forth Worth AA. Award : Linz
medal for best figure. Woman's Forum
Annual Art Exhibit, Texas.
MUNCY, P. W., 152 West 55th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
MUNDY, Ethel Frances, 121 College
Place, Syracuse, N. Y.
Wax Port. — Born Syracuse, N. Y.
Pupil of Twachtman, Beckwith and
Sacker. Member: A.R.M.S., Lon-
don.
MUNDY, Louise E., University of Ne-
braska; h. 1507 R St., Lincoln, Neb.
P., T.— Born Nokomis, 111. Pupil of
Univ. of Neb.; AIC; Stout Inst.; Chi-
cago Academy of Fine Arts. Mem-
ber: Neb. AA.
MUNGER. Anne Weils (Mrs. W. L. C.
Munger), Sign of the Pine, South Well-
fleet, Mass.
Ldscp.P., C. — Born Springfield, Mass.,
July 17. 1862. Pupil of Philip Hale.
Woodbury and De Camp in Boston;
Brush in New York. Member:
Boston SAC; Worcester AS; Province-
town AS. Specialty, landscape paint-
ing.
MUNN, Marguerite C, 1242 16th St.,
N. W., Washington, D. C. (P.)
MUNRO, Albert A., Springfield, L. I.,
N. Y.
P., E., T.— Born Hoboken, N. J., Aug.
17, 1868.
MUNRO, Ruth, 211 B Iroquois Apts.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
MUNROE, Marjory, 12 East 30th St.: h.
121 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. ;
summer, East Hampton. L. I., N. Y.
P.— Born in New York, N. Y., Sept. 21,
1801. Pupil of Frank DuMond, E. Percy
Moran, Geo. Elmer Browne.
MUNROE, Sarah Sewell, 1903 N. St.,
Wasliington. D. C; summer, "Wind-
over," Provincetown, Mass.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y. Member :
Wash. SA.; N. A. Women PS; Wash.
A.C.; Wa.sh. WCC. Awards: Sec-
ond Corcoran prize, Wash. WCC; hon.
mention, S. Wash. A., 1921.
511
MUNSELL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
MUSSER
MUNSELL, W(illiam) A. O., 416 Stimson
Bldg., Los Angeles; h. 1970 South El
Molino Ave., Pasadena, Calif.
P., A.— Born Cold Water, O., March 2.
1866. Member: AIA; S. Indp. A;
Laguna Beach AA.
MURA, Frank, 12 Lafayette Ave., Brook-
lyn, N. Y. (L)
MURDOCH, Ada Oliphant, 1748 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Edinburgh, Scotland. Mem-
ber: Lg. of N. Y. A.
MURDOCH, Dora Louise, 245 West Biddle
St., Baltimore, Md.
P., C. — Born New Haven, Conn., Sept.
14, 1857. Pupil of Courtois, Rixen and
Boutet de Monvel in Paris. Mem-
ber: Baltimore WCC; NYWCC.
Award : Purnell prize, Baltimore
WCC 1903.
MURDOCH, Florence, 2448 Maplewood
Ave., Mt. Auburn, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
MURDOCH, Frank C, 5709 Woodmont
St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
MURDOCK, Mary Frances, F2 Alder Ct.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
MURPHY, Ada C(lifford) (Mrs. J. Francis
Murphy), 222 West 23d St., New York,
N. Y.
P., I. — Pupil of Cooper Union and Doug-
las Volk in New York. Member:
N. A. Women PS; NAC. Awards:
Hallgarten prize, NAD. 1894; hon. men-
tion, Pan. -Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
MURPHY, Christopher P. H., 11 Perry
St., Savannah, Ga. (P.)
MURPHY, Ella, 320 Sunset Ave., Day-
ton, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
MURPHY, Emma J., 630 Bedford Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
MURPHY, H. Dudley, East Lexington,
Mass.
P., L, C, T. — Born Marlboro, Mass.,
Aug. 25, 1867. Pupil of Boston
Museum School; Laurens in Paris,
Member: Copley S. 1886; Boston
WCC; NYWCC; Salma.C; Boston SAC;
Boston GA; NAC; Boston AC; Boston
SWCC. Awards: Bronze medal, Pan.-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver medal
for portrait and bronze medal for water
color, St. Louis Exp., 1904; silver medal
for oil painting and silver medal for
water colors, P.-P. Exp., San P., 1915.
Work: "Mt. Monadnock," Art Insti-
tute of Chicago; "The Opal Sunset,"
Art Association, Nashville, Tenn. ;
"Murano" and "Still Life," Albright Art
Gallery, Buffalo. N. Y. ; "Moro Castle,
San Juan," Dallas (Tex.) Museum of
Fine Arts. Noted as designer of frames.
MURPHY, Henry C, Jr., Greenwich,
Conn.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
MURPHY, John J. A., 21 Greenwich Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
MURPHY, L. M., 1151/2 North Main St.,
Los Angeles, Cal.
P.— M ember: Cal. AC.
MURPHY, M(ichael), Thomas, 4 East
Ohio St.; h. 5739 Harper Ave., Chicago,
S. — Born Cork, Ireland, Nov. 24, 1867.
Studied at Royal College of Art. Lon-
don. Member: Western Society of
Sculptors; Chicago SA. Work: Relief
in Fourth Presbyterian Church, Chi-
cago.
MURPHY, Mrs. Minnie B. Hall, 805 Gay-
lord St., Denver, Colo.
P.— Born Denver, Colo., May 2, 1863.
Pupil ASL of N. Y.; AIC; Henry Read
in Denver. Member: Denver AA.
MURPHY, Nelly LIttlehale (Mrs. H. Dud-
ley Murphy), East Lexington, Mass.
P., I.— Born Stockton, Cal., May 7, 1867.
Pupil of Museum FA, Boston. Mem-
ber: Copley S.
MURPHY, T. Rowley, 235 South 11th St..
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
MURRAY, Grace H. (Mrs. Archibald Gor-
don Murray), 129 East 56th St.. New
York, N. Y.; North Hampton, N. H.
P. — Born New York, Nov. 9, 1872.
Pupil of Bouguereau and Gabriel Fer-
rier. Member: N. A. Women PS.
MURRAY, Samuel, 3326 Lancaster Ave.;
h. 3324 Lancaster Ave., Philadelphia,
Pa.
S., T.— Born Philadelphia, June 12, 1870.
Pupil of Thomas Eaklns. Award*:
Diploma, Columbian Exp., Chicago,
1893; gold medal, ACPhila. 1894; hon.
mention, ACPhila. 1897; hon. mention,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904. Work:
"Prophets," WItherspoon Bldg., Phila-
delphia; "Com. Barry" and "Joseph
Leidy"; and J. H. Windrim portrait.
Smith Memorial, Falrmount Park, Phil-
adelphia; Pennsylvania State monu-
ment, Gettysburg, Pa.; Corby statue,
Notre Dame Universitv. Notre Dame,
Ind. ; portrait. Dr. J. C. Wilson. Jeffer-
son Medical College, Philadelphia.
MUSGRAVE, A(rthur) F(ranklyn), 3241
Thirty-Eighth St., Santa Pe, N. M.
P. — Born Brighton, England, July 24,
1880. Pupil of Stanhope Forbes, New-
lyn School of Art. London. Mem-
ber: Santa Fe AS.
MUSSELMAN-CARR, M(yra) V., 1 Stuy-
vesant Alley, New York, N. Y. ; sum-
mer, Zena, Ulster Co., N. Y.
g.— Born Georgetown. Ky., Nov. 27, 1880,
Pupil of Bourdelle; ASL of N. Y.. Cin-
cinnati Art School. Work: Foun-
tain, Kansas City; Roslyn, L. I., N. Y.
MUSSER, B(yron) J., 392 Fifth Ave.; h.
112 Twenty-Third St., Elmhurst, N. Y.
I., E.— Born Chicago, 111.; Feb. 15. 1885.
PuDil of Robert Henri. Member:
Art Directors Club. Work: "Inter-
ior," Santa Fe Museum.
512
MUTTON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
NEEDHAM
MUTTON, Hilda, 1946 Vista Del Mar.
Hollywood. Calif.
E.— M ember: Calif. P.M.; Calif. AC.
MYERS, Annie M., Castile, N. T.
P., T.— Born Warsaw, N. Y., Apr. 19,
1858. Pupil of Perkins and Rondel in
New York; Bourgoyne in Paris. Mem-
ber: Rochester AC.
MYERS, Datus E., 1549 East 57th St.,
Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Jefferson, Ore., Sept. 29, 1879.
Pupil of Los Angeles School of Art and
Design; AIC. Member: Chicago
ASL; Chicago SA; Oregon SA.
Award : Englewood Women's Club
prize, AIC, 1913.
MYERS, E. E., Willowby-on-the-Ohio,
Chesapeake, O. (E., P.)
MYERS, Ethel (Mrs. Jerome Myers).
143 East 58th 'St.. New York, N. Y.;
Carmel, N. Y. (P., I., S.)
MYERS, Frank H., 5011 Stewart Piirk.
Norwood, Cincinnati, O. (P.)
MYERS, Jennie C(hace), Castile, N. Y.
P., Min. P., T. — Born Avon, N. Y., Aug.
7, 1861. Pupil of Granville Perkins and
W. J. Whittemore in New York; Ertz
in Paris. Member: Rochester AC.
MYERS, Jerome, 143 East 58th St., New
York, N. Y.; h. Carmel. N. Y.
P. — Born Petersburg, Va., March 20,
1867. Pupil of Cooper Union and ASL
in New York. Member: ANA; P.-G.
Awards : Bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; Clarke prize, NAD, 1919.
Specialty, New York street scenes.
W o rk : "The Night Mission," Metro-
politan Museum, JSiew York.
MYERS, Mary S. Lukens, 445 Ivanhoe
PL, Milwaukee, Wis.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
MYERS, O. Irwin, Studio Bldg., 4 East
Ohio St., Chicago, 111.
P., I. — Born Bananza, Neb., Nov. 12,
1888. Pupil of AIC; Chicago Academy of
Fine Arts. Member: Chicago SA;
Chicago AG; Chicago AC; Chicago S.
Indp. A.; Alumni AIC.
MYRICK, Katherine S. (Mrs. H. M. My-
rick), Pelham Manor, N. Y.
MIn.P.— M e m b e r : Am. S. Min. P.;
N. A. Women PS.
NADELMAN, Eli, 6 East 46th St., New
York, N. Y.
S. — M ember: Contemporary.
NAEGELE, Charles Frederick, R. F. D.,
Marietta, Ga.
Port P. — Born Knoxville, Tenn., May 8,
1857. Pupil of William Sartain, Chase
and C. Myles CoUier. Member: A.
Fund 'S.; Salma C. 1893; Lotos C; At-
lanta Art Assoc; NAC. Awards:
Gold medal. Mechanics Fair, Boston,
1900; silver medal, Charleston Exp.,
1902. W o r k : "Mother Love." Na-
tional Gallery. Washington.
NAGEL, Eva M. See Mrs. Addison
Wolf.
NAGLE, Fred, Spuyten Duyvil, New
York, N. Y. (P.)
NAGEL, Herman F., 23 Pennington St.,
Newark, N. J.
P.— Born Newark, N. J., Dec. 1. 1876.
Pupil of NAD. Me m b e r : S.Indp.A.
NAHL, Perham W., 6043 Harwood Ave.,
Oakland, Calif.
P., T. — Born San Francisco, Jan. 11,
18G9. Studied at San Francisco, Paris,
and Munich. Member: Calif. SE;
FAA of the University of Calif.; San F.
AA. Represented in the Palace of Fine
Arts, San Francisco; Municipal Art Gal-
lery, Oakland; University of California.
Assistant Professor of Fine Art, Uni-
versity of California.
NANKIVELL, Frank A(rthur), 219 West
14th St., New York, N. Y.
P., I., E. — Born Maldon Victoria, Aus-
tralia, Nov. 16, 1869. Studied in New
York and London.
NASH, Edgar S>, care of The Beck En-
graving Co., 620 'Sansom St., Philadel-
phia, Pa. (I.)
NASH, Willard, Museum of New Mexico,
Santa Fe, N. M. (P.)
NASON. Gertrude, Fenway Studios, Ips-
wich St., Boston, Mass. (P.)
NAVE, Royston, 146 West 55th St., New
York. N. Y.; h. Victoria, Tex.
P.— Born La Grange, Tex., Nov, 5. 1878.
Pupil of Robert Henri. Member:
Salma. C. Work: "Mrs. Rebecker
Fisher," State of Texas.
NEAL, Grace Pruden, 715 West 170th St.,
New York, N. Y.
S.— Born St. Paul, Minn., May 11, 1876.
Studied in Munich and Paris. First
prize, Minnesota Art Soc, 1906; hon.
mention, AIC, 1917.
NEALE, Marguerite B., The Woodlty,
Columbia Rd., Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
NEAN DROSS, Lief, Ridgefleld, N. J.
P.— M ember: NYWCC.
NEANDROSS, Sigurd, Ridgefleld, N. J.
S. — Born Stavanger, Norway, Sept. 18,
1871; came to America at age of 10;
U. S. citizen. 1894. Pupil of Cooper
Union evening classes in New York;
P. S. Kroyer and Stefan Shiding in Co-
penhagen. Member: NSS. Award:
Mention, collaborative competition, N.
Y. Arch. Lg.. 1915.
NEBEL, Berthold, American Academy In
Rome, Porta San Pancrazio, Rome, Italy.
S. — A ward: Fellow^ship, American
Academy at Rome, 1914-17.
NEEBE, Minnie Harms, 1320 Clybourn
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P., ^.. L., T.— Born Chicago, 111., Dec.
25, 1873. Pupil of Hawthorne, Browne.
Webster, Reynolds, Ufer. Member:
Chicago SA.
NEEDHAM, Charles Austin, 145 East 23d
St.; h. 218 East 19th St., New York,
N. Y.
Ldscp.P., S.. I., C— Born Buffalo, N. T..
Oct. 30, 1844. Pupil of August Will
and ASL of N. Y. Member:
NYWCC: AWCS; Salma. C. 1903.
Awards: Medal and hon. mention,
513
NEEL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
NEW HALL
Atlanta Exp., 1895; hon. mention, New
York State Fair, Syracuse, 1898; bronze
medal, Paris Exp., 1900; silver medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902; bronze medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904.
NEEL, Birdie M., Stanley St., Pittsburgh,
Pa
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
NEILL, Frances Isabel, 939 Eighth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., E., T.— Born Warren, Pa. Studied
in New York, Boston and Paris. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; Balto. WCC;
MacD.C.
NEILL, John R., 36 East 28th St.; 593
Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: Salma. C.
NEILSON, Raymond P(erry), Rodgers,
Westbury, Long Island, N. Y.
P. — Born New York. Pupil of Chase
in New York, Laurens and Lucien
Simon and of Richard Miller in Paris.
Awards : Silver medal, Paris Salon,
1914; silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F.,
1915. Work: "Le Chapeau Noir,"
owned by French Government.
NELL, (IVliss) Tony, 2 Riverview Terrace,
New York, N. Y.
P., L, T.— Born Washington, D. C.
Pupil of Chase; DuMond; Denver Stu-
dents' School of Art. Member:
NYWCC; Chicago WCC. Awards:
Beal prize, NYWCC, 1910; Harriet
Brooks Jones prize, Baltimore WCC,
1921.
NELL, William, 106 South Troy Ave., N
Ventnor, N. J. (P.)
NELSON, Clara K., 617 Hope St., Provi-
dence. R. I. N
P. — Member: Providence WCC.
NELSON, G. "Lawrence, 15 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born New Rochelle, N. Y., Sept. ,
26, 1887. Pupil of NAD; Laurens in
Paris. Member: Allied AA; Salma.
C; AWCS, 1917; Conn. AFA; NYWCC.
Award : Dunham portrait prize,
Conn. AFA, 1918. Work: Portraits
in New York Hospital and Mt. Sinai
Hospital, New York; Reed Memorial
Library, Carmel, N. Y. Instructor,
National Academy of Design and
Cooper Union.
NELSON, G. Patrick, 140 Wadsworth
Ave., New York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI 1911. N
NEMOEDE, Eda. See Mrs. Casterton.
NESBERT, Vincent, 258 Oakland Ave.,
Pittsburgh. Pa.
P. — M e rn b e r : Pitts. AA.
NESEMANj Enno, 1635 Euclid Ave.,
Berkeley, Calif. m
P._Born Maysville, Calif., April 25, 1861.
Pupil of Alfred Hart. Member: S.
Indp. A. AV o r k : 'The First Dis-
covery of Gold in California at Sutter's
Mill," De Young Memorial Museum, San N
Francisco, Calif.
514
NETTLETON, Walter, Stockbrldge, Mass.
Ldscp.P. — Born New Haven, Conn.,
June 19, 1861. Pupil of Yale School of
Fine Arts; Boulanger and Lefebvre in
Paris. Member: SAA 1901; ANA
1905; Conn. AFA.; New Haven PCC.
Awards: Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1892; silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
gold medal, AAS, 1907; bronze medal,
Buenos Aires and Santiago Exp., 1910.
Work: "December Sunshine," Yale
Art Museum, New Haven; "A January
Morning," Museum of Art, New Britain,
Conn.; "The Beloved Physician," Jack-
son Library, Stockbridge, Mass.; "Wal-
desdjimmerung," Vassar College Art
Gallery.
NEUBAUER, Frederick August, 22 Hul-
bert Block, Sixth and Vine Sts.; h.
3227 Vine St., Cincinnati, O.
Ldscp.P., I. — Born Cincinnati, 1855. Pu-
pil of Cincinnati Art Academy. Mem-
ber: Cincinnati AC.
NEUHAUS, Eugen, 2922 Derby St., Berk-
ley, Cal.
P., W., L., T. — Born Barmen, Germany,
Aug. 18, 1879. Pupil of Royal Art
School, Kassel; Institute of Applied
Art, Berlin. Member: San Fran-
cisco AA.
NEUHAUSER, Marguerite Phillips (Mrs.
Roy L. Neuhauser), 1707 21st St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
P. — Born North Arlington. Va., Aug. 31,
1888. Pupil of Bertha Perrie, George
Noyes, Corcoran School of Art. Mem-
ber: S. Wash. A.; Wash. AC.
EWCOMER. Florence E., 323 Wallace
Bldg., Pittsburgh. Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
EWELL, G(eorge) Glenn, Carnegie Hall,
57th St. and Seventh Ave., New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born Berrian Co., Mich., 1870.
Pupil of NAD under Ward; Teachers
College, New York, under Will S. Robin-
son, and W. H. Howe. Member:
ANA; Salma. C. 1898; AWCS; NAG;
AlHed AA. Award : Prize, ($500)
Salma. C. 1906. Work: "Mists
of the Morning," National Gallery,
Washington; "Twilight," Detroit Insti-
tute; "My Pets" and "The Old Red
Mill," Art Assoc, Dallas, Tex.; "The
Unconquered" and "Monarch of All He
Surveys," "The Drovers' Inn," Butler
Museum, Youngstown, O. Specialty,
Cattle and sheep.
EWELL, Hugh, 51 Warren St., Bloom-
field, N. J.
P. — Born Belfast, Ireland, Oct. 4, 1830.
Pupil of Antwerp Academy; Couture in
Paris; South Kensington Museum in
London. Member: AWCS. Wate
principal, four years, of Maryland Inst.,
Baltimore.
EWELL, Peter (Sheaf), Leonia, N. J.
L, P.— Born in Illinois, March 5. 1862.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. M e m b e r : SI
1912; Salma.C.
EWHALL. D. W., 140 W. 57th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
NEW HALL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
NICHOLS
NEWHALL, Harriot B., Studio Bldg., 82
Chestnut St., Boston, Mass.
P., E., T. — Born Topeka, Kan..^ June
23, 1874. Pupil of Benson, Wooubury,
Denman Ross and Hawthorne. M e m-
b e r : Copley S.
NEWLIN, Sara Julia. See Mrs. Donald
MacGregor.
NEWMAN, Allen G., 1947 Broadway; h,
263 West 71st St., New York, N. Y.;
summer, Marbletown, N. Y.
S.— Born New York, Aug. 28, 1875. Pu-
pil of J. Q. A. Ward. Member: NSS
1907; Beaux- Arts Inst.; NAC. Award:
NAC prize ($500) for design for "Valor
Medal." Work: Marble figures;
"Day and Night," Harriman Bank,
New York; Henry Hudson Monument,
New York; "The Hiker," Providence,
R. I.; "Gate City Guard Peace Monu-
ment" and portrait on "Joel Chand-
ler Harris Monument," Atlanta, Ga.;
statue of "Governor Gates," Montgom-
ery, Ala.; "Gen. Philip Sheridan Monu-
ment," Scranton, Pa.; "Doughboy Mon-
ument," Pittsburgh, Pa.
NEWMAN, Anna Mary, 25 North 16th
St., Richmond, Ind.
P., I., T. — Born Richmond, Ind. Pupil
of AIC; School of Applied and Nor-
mal Art, Chicago; Overbeck School of
Design and Pottery, Cambridge City,
Ind. Member: Alumni AIC; Chicago
ASL; Richmond AA. Work: "Old
Irish Chain Quilt," Vanderpoel Memo-
rial, Chicago; "William Mossman," Y.
M. C. A., Fort Wayne; "Chester T.
Lane," High School, Fort Wayne, Ind.;
"Judge Erwin," Supreme Court, Indi-
anapolis. Instructor in Art at Fort
Wavne High and Manual Training
School.
NEWMAN, Carl, R. F. D., Huntington
Valley, Pa.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
NEWMAN, Willie Betty (Mrs. J. W
Newman), Hotel Tulane, Nashville,
Tenn.
P. — Born Murfreesboro, Tenn. Pupil of
Cincinnati Art School under T. S.
Noble; Constant, Bouguereau, Bachet,
Robert Fleury and Laurens in Paris,
and in Holland and Italy. Awards :
Hon. mention, Paris Salon 1900; gold
medal, Nashville AA; first prize, Tenn.
State Fair. 1914, 1915. 1916 and 1917.
Work: "Fisherman's Daughter,"
Cincinnati Museum; "En Penitence,"
Nashville Art Association; "Le Pain
B6nite." Centennial Club, Nashville;
"Reverie," Philadelphia Art Club;
"Fisherman's Daughter," Cincinnati
Art Museum; "Mrs. E. W. Cole," and
"Bishop Galloway." Vanderbilt Uni-
versity; "Bishop Galloway," University
of Mississippi; "Hon. John Bell," U. S.
Capitol, Washington,
NEWTON, Clara C, care of Cincinnati
Woman's Club. Cincinnati, O,.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
NEWTON, E(dith) W(hittlesey), New
Milford, Conn.
P. — Born Saginaw, Mich., June 7, 1878.
Member: N.A. Women PS.
NEWTON, Francis, 130 West 57th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Lake George, N. Y., June 30,
1873. Pupil of Howard Pyle in Wil-
mington, Del.; ASL and Chase School,
New York; Drexel Inst., Philadelphia;
Colarossi Academy in Paris. M e m-
b er : N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1911; Mural P.; N.Y.
Municipal AS; Lg. of N. Y. A.
NEWTON, Josephine (Mrs. R. C. New-
ton), Scarsdale, N. Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
NEWTON, Parker, 507 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; Norfolk, Conn.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
NEWTON, Richard, Jr., 270 Park Ave.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
NEY, Lloyd R., care of Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadel-
phia, Pa. (P.)
NEYLAND, Harry, 391 County St., New
Bedford, Mass.
P.— Born Erie, Pa., 1877. Pupil of
Zanerian Art College, Columbus; Pratt
Inst., Brooklyn; ASL of N. Y.; Col-
arossi, Julian, and Grande Chaumi6re
Academies in Paris under Baschet,
Gervais and Laurens; Henry Snell.
Member: Boston AC; Copley S.;
Providence AC; New Bedford AC. Di-
rector of Swain Galleries and Swain
Free School of Design, New Bedford,
Mass.
NICHOLLS, Josephine (Lewis), 188
Franklin St., Buffalo, N. Y.
P., C, W., L.— Born Hamilton, Ontario,
Sept. 26, 1865. Pupil of Siddons Mow-
bray, G. Bridgman, Lucius Hitchcock.
Member: Alliance; Buffalo SA;
Guild of Allied Arts; Mineral Painters
of Buffalo.
NICHOLLS, Mrs. Rhoda Holmes, 39 West
67th St., New York, N. Y.; summer,
Rowayton, Conn.
P., I., W., T.— Born Coventry, England;
came to America in 1884. Pupil of
Bloomsbury School of Art in London;
Cammerano and Vertunni in Rome.
Member: ASL of N. Y.; AWCS (as-
soc): NYWCC; NAC; Pen and Brush
C. ; MacD.C; Woman's Art Assoc. Can-
ada (hon.); SPNY; N.A. Women PS.
Awards : Gold medal, Competitive
Prize Fund Exh., New York; medal, Co-
lumbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; medal. At-
lanta Exp., 1895; medal, Nashville Exp.,
1897; medal. Boston; medal. Char-
lotte. N. C; bronze medal, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; bronze medal.
Charleston Exp., 1902; bronze medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904. Work: "The
Scarlet Letter," "Those Evening Bells,"
"Indian After the Chase," and "Search-
ing the Scriptures." Boston Art Club;
"Prima Vera, Venezia," and "Water
Lilies," Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
NICHOLS, H(arley) D(e Witt), 189 Mon-
tague St.; h. 258 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn,
N. Y.
Ldscp.P., I. — Born Barton. Washington
Co.. Wis., Feb. 3, 1859. Pupil of Hakel
in Munich. Member: NYWCC. Il-
lustrated "French and English Furni-
ture" and "Loves of Great Poets";
515
NICHOLS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
NIVEN
architectural illustrations for books and
magazines, chiefly for "Harper's" and
"Century."
NICHOLS, (Henry) Hobart, Lawrence
Park, West, Bronxville, N. Y.
Ldscp.P., I. — Born Washington, D. C,
May 1, 1869. Pupil of Howard Hel-
mick and ASL in Washington; Julian
Academy and Castellucho in Paris.
Member: ANA 1912; NA 1920; S.
Wash. A.; Fellowship PAFA; Wash.
WCC; NYWCC; Salma. C. ; Cosmos C;
NAC; Allied AA. Awards: Second
Corcoran prize, Wash. WCC; 1901; Par-
sons prize, S. Wash. A., 1902; Parsons
prize, Wash. WCC, 1904; first Corcoran
prize, Wash. WCC, 1906; Turnbull prize
($100), Salma. C, 1913; Evans prize
($100), Salma. C, 1915; bronze medal
NAC, 1915; silver medal ($300), NAC,
1920. Assist, to Dir. of Fine Arts,
U. S. Commission. Paris Exp,., 1900.
Work: "Moonrise at Ogunquit," Na-
tional Gallery, Washington; represented
In Museum of Natural History, New
York.
NICHOLS, Hildegarde (Mrs. Hobart
Nichols), Lawrence Park, West, Bronx-
ville, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N.A. Women PS.
NICHOLS, John W., 819 Carnegie Hall,
New York, N. Y.; h. Vassar College,
Poughkeepsie, N. Y. ; summer, Univ. of
Vt., Burlington, Vt.
E.— Born Keokuk, Iowa, Aug, 1, 1881.
Pupil Charles A. Cumming.
NICHOLS, Peggy (Martin), 517 South
Coronado St., Los Angeles, Cal.
P., S., Arch., C— Born Atchison, Kan.,
Mar. 22, 1884. Pupil of Cecilia Beaux
and Chase. Member: Calif. AC.
NICHOLS, Spencer B(a!rd), Bronxville,
N. Y.
P., I.— Born Washington, D. C, 1875.
Pupil of ASL in Washington under
Howard Helmick; Corcoran Art School,
Member: Wash.WCC; S. Wash. A.;
Salma. C; NYWCC; AWCS; Lg. of
N. Y A. Award: Third Corcoran
prize, S. Wash. A., 1901.
NICHOLSON, Frank S., 116 West 39th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
NICHT, Edward W(illiam), 105 Cook St.,
East Onondaga, Syracuse, N. Y.; Onon-
daga Valley, N. Y.
P.— Born Auburn, N. Y., March 7, 1872,.
NICKLES, Martha, 1406 John St.. Cin-
cinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman s
AC.
N I CO LAY, Helen, 2301 Connecticut Ave.,
N. W., Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash.WCC.
NICOLOSI, Joseph, 1079 Lexington Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., S., A.. L., T. — Born in Italy, Aug.
4, 1893. Pupil of Beaux Arts Inst, of
Design.
NICOLSON, Edith Reynaud (Mrs. H. W.
Nicolson), 4 Parmley PL, Summit, N. J.
I, — Born Mount Vernon, N. Y., Sept.
24, 1896. Pupil of New York School of
Applied Design for Women.
NIEDECKEN, George Mann, 436 Milwau-
kee St.; h. 523 Prospect Ave., Mil-
waukee, Wis.
Mural P., Arch., C. — Born Milwaukee,
Wis., Aug. 16, 1878. Pupil of Mucha,
Robert-Fleury, Lefebvre and Laurens
in Paris. Member: S.Milwaukee A.
NIEHAUS, Charles H(enry), Eagle Crest
Studio, Grantwood, N. J.
S. — Born Cincinnati, O., Jan, 24, 1855.
Pupil of McMicken School in Cincin-
nati; Royal Academy in Munich. M e m-
ber: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1895; NSS 1893;
ANA. 1902; NA, 1906; Salma. C, 1908;
Nat. Inst. AL. Awards: Gold medal,
Pan- Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; gold medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902; gold medal, 'St.
Louis Exp., 1904. Work: "Dr.
Hahnemann, Washington, D. C; "Gar-
field," Cincinnati, O.; Aster Memorial
doors. Trinity Church, New York;
"Caestus" and "The Scraper," Metropol-
itan Museum, New York.
NIELSON, Harry A., 701 California Ter-
race; h. 346 Lincoln Ave., Pasadena,
Calif.
P. — Born Slagelse, Denmark, Sept. 25,
1881. Pupil of AIC, Jean Manheim.
Member: Calif. AC.
NIEMEYER, John H(enry), 251 Lawrence
St.. New Haven, Conn.
P., T., L. — Born Bremen, Germany. June
25, 1839; came to U. S. in 1843. Pupil
of G^rome and Yvon at Ecole des
Beaux-Arts, and of Jacquesson de la
Chevreuse and Cornu in Paris. M e m-
b e r : SAA 1882; ANA 1906; Paris AAA;
Conn. AFA; New Haven PCC. Award:
Hon. mention. Pan- Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901. Prof. Yale School of Fine Arts
1871-1908; emeritus since 1908.
NIEPOLD, Frank, 913 F St., S. W.,
Washington, D. C; h. Thrifton, Va.
P., C. — Born Frederick, Md., Jan. 1,
1890. Pupil of Corcoran School of Art,
Washington. Member: Wash AC;
S. Wash. A.
NIKOLAKI, Z. P., 33 West 67th St., New
York, N. Y. (E., L)
NISBET, Robert H., South Kent, Conn.
P.— Born Providence, R.L, Aug. 25, 1879.
Pupil of R. I. School of Design; ASL of
N.Y. Member: ANA, 1920; N.Y.Arch.
Lg. 1912: Providence AC; Conn. AFA;
NAC (life); Salma. C; Allied AA.
Awards : Dunham prize, Conn. AFA,
1913; third Hallgarten prize, NAD, 1915;
silver medal, P.-P, Exp., San F., 1915.
Work: "Eve of St. John," National
Arts Club, New York; "Earliest Spring,"
R. I. School of Design, Providence; "The
Emerald Robe," Mahoning Institute of
Art, Youngstown, O.
NITZSCHE, Eisa Koenig, Westview St.,
Germantown, Pa.
P., L. — Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil of
Elliot Daingerfield, Dagnan Bouveret,
Work: "Boy Blowing Bubbles," Art
Club, Philadelphia; Portrait in National
Museum, Washington, D. C.
NIVEN. Frank R., 402 Municipal Bldg :
h. 424 Electric Ave., Rochester, N. Y.
P., I., C. — Born Rochester. N. Y., March
2, 1888. Pupil of S. C. Jones. M e m-
ber: Rochester AC.
516
NOBLE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
NOSWORTHY
NOBLE, Mrs. Ida C(handler), care of
David Lipscomb College; h. Scott and
Straightway Ave., Nashville, Tenn.
P., T.— Born Beech Grove, Tenn., Feb.
25, 1865. Pupil of Bryson. Represented
by portraits in David Lipscomb College.
NOBLE, John, Provincetown, Mass.; 9
Rue Falguiere, Paris, Prance.
P.— Born Wichita, Kan., March 15, 1874.
Pupil of Cincinnati Academy of Fine
Arts; Jean Paul Laurens; Julian; Acad-
emy des Beaux Arts, Brussels. Mem-
ber: Paris American Art Associa-
tion; Society of Artists of Picardy; In-
dependents of Paris; Allied Artists, Lon-
don; Salma. C; Provincetown Art As-
sociation.
NOBLE, W. Clark, 739 Boylston St., Bos-
ton, Mass.
P., S.— Born Gardiner, Me., Feb. 10,
1858. Pupil of Pierce and Greenough,
and studied in London. Member:
NSS. Work: Walters' Memorial, W.
E. Channing and Soldiers and Sailors
Monument, Newport, R. I. ; memorial
to Bishop Phillips Brooks in Church of
the Incarnation, New York; portrait
bust of Gen. Potter, Chamber of Com-
merce, New York; Challenge statue and
Gen. Christ statue, Antietam, Md. ; Gov.
Curtin, Bellefonte, Pa.; jewelled cruci-
fix in Church of St. Mary the Virgin.
NOLL, Arthur Howard, 608 Woodlawn
St., Memphis, Tenn.
Engr., C, W., L., T.— Born Caldwell,
N. J., Feb. 4, 1855. Award : Hon.
mention, Am. Bookplate Soc, 1919.
NORDELL, Carl J., Fenway Studios, 30
Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Copenhagen, Denmark. Pupil
of Boston Museum School under Tar-
bell; ASL of N. Y. under Bridgman
and Du Mond; Julian Academy in Paris
under Laurens; R.I. School of Design.
Member: ASL of N. Y.; Boston AC;
Boston WCC; Providence AC; Provi-
dence WCC; Salma. C. Award:
Fourth W. A. Clark prize ($500) and
hon. mention, Corcoran Gallery, Wash-
ington, 1912; silver medal, P. -P. Exp.,
San Y., 1915; first prize, Swedish- Amer-
ican Exhibition, Chicago, 1917.
NORDELL, Emma A. (Mrs. Carl J. Nor-
dell), 409 Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass.
P. — M ember: Providence AC; Provi-
dence WCC.
NORDFELDT, B(ror) J(u!ius) (Olsson),
'Santa Fe, N. M.
P., E., Engr., T. — Born Tulstorg,
Scania, Sweden, Apr. 13, 1878. Pupil
of AIC; Albert Herter in New York;
Laurens in Paris; Frank M. Fletcher in
Reading, England. Member: Chi-
cago SE; P-G: Calif. SE. A av a r d s :
Silver medal, Milan, Italy, 1906. for
wood block prints; silver medal for
etching, P.-P. Exp., San F.. 1915.
Work in Sidney (Australia) Museum
of Fine Arts; Chicago Art Institute;
New York Public Library; Toledo Art
Museum: Biblioteque des Arts et Arch-
eologie, Paris; National Museum, Chris-
tiania, Norway; Detroit Inst, of Arts;
Toronto Art Museum ; Museum of New
Mexico.
NORDMARK, A., 1116 East Thomas St.,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
NORMAN, Mrs. Da Loria, Crags Studio,
Lyme, Conn.
P., C. — Born Leavenworth, Kan., Nov.
18, 1872. Studied abroad. Represented
in New York Public Library.
NORRIS, Marie deJarnet, 1947 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
NORRIS, S. Walter, 1716 Chestnut St.;
h. Biyn Mawr, Philadelphia, Pa.
Ldscp. P., W. — Born Philadelphia, Jan.
12, 1868. Pupil of PAFA. Member:
Phila. Sketch C; Fellowship PAFA;
Phila. Alliance.
NORRIS, W. J., 60 East 8th Ave., Co-
lumbus, O.
1.— Born Chicago, 111., Aug. 20, 1869.
Member: Pen and Pencil C, Colum-
bus; Art Lg. Instructor in art, Ohio
State University, Columbus, O.
NORSTAD, Magnus, Valhalla, N. Y.
P.— Born Norway, June 24, 1884. Pupil
of NAD. Member: St. Paul SA.
Awards: Hon. mention, Minnesota
State Art Exh., 1914; silver medal, St.
Paul Inst., 1917; prize for group of four
pictures at Minnesota State Art Exh.,
1917. Work: "The City on the Hill,"
St. Paul Institute.
NORTHCOTE, Stafford M(ant!e), 283
Carlton Ave., Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
Wood Engr. — Born Brooklyn, July 7,
1869. Studied engraving with E. Heine-
man; drawing and painting at Art Inst.,
Brooklyn, under Boyle. Awards :
Hon. mention, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; bronze medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904.
NORTON, Clara Mamre, 49 Woodland St.,
Bristol. Conn.
P., I., T. — Born Burlington, Conn. Pu-
pil of School of Boston Museum of Fine
Arts; under Tarbell and Benson. M e m-
ber: Conn. AFA; S. Conn. A.; S.
Indp. A. ; Alliance. Award : Paige
traveling scholarship, 'School of Boston
Museum of Fine Arts.
NORTON, Elizabeth, 353 Lowell Ave.,
Palo Alto, Calif.
P., S.— Born Chicago, 111., Dec. 16, 1887.
Pupil of AIC; ASL of N. Y. Member:
Alliance. Work: Wall fountain in
Detroit Athletic Club.
NORTON, Helen G(aylord), Laguna
Beach, Calif.; h. 189 Magnolia Ave.,
Riverside, Calif.
P. — Born Portsmouth, Ohio, April 12,
1882. Pupil of Mills College; Jean Man-
heim. Member: Laguna Beach AA;
Calif. AC. Awards : Second prize.
Riverside Co. Fair, 1914; First prize,
Southern Calif. Fair, 1920.
NORTON. John Warner, Lockport, 111.
P.— Born Lockport, 1876. Pupil of AIC.
Member: Chicago SA. Instructor
Chicago Academy of Fine Arts.
NOSWORTHY. Florence (Pearl). England
(Mrs. William A. Nosworthy), Hampton,
Conn.
P., I., D.— Born Milwaukee, Wis. Pupil
of Boston Museum School under Tarbell
517
NOTMAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
NYE
and Benson; Cowles Art School in Bos-
ton; ASL. of N. Y. under Cox and Barse.
Illustrated "Betty of Wye," "The
Cardinal's Snuff Box." "Land of Play,"
"Diary of a Birthday Doll," "Tommy
Tucker's Book," "Bunny Brown," etc.
Designs calendars and postal cards.
NOTMAN, Howard, 136 Joralemon St.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Keene Valley, Essex Co., N. Y.
P.— Born Brooklyn, April 20, 1881.
Pupil of Constantin Herzberg, Brook-
lyn Polytechnic Insti.tute. Member:
Brooklyn SA; S. Indp. A.
NOURSE, Elizabeth, 80 Rue d'Assas,
Paris, France.
P.— Born Cincinnati, O., 1860. Pupil of
Art Academy in Cincinnati; Lefebvre,
Henner and Carolus-Duran in Paris.
Member: Soc.Nat.des Beaux-Arts
1901: Paris Woman's AAA; N. A. Wom-
en PS (hon.). Awards: Medal. Colum-
bian Exp., Chicago, 1893; third class
medal, Inst.de Carthage, Tunis, 1897;
first class gold medal, Nashville Exp.,
1897; silver medal, Paris Exp., 1900;
silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
gold medal. P. -P.Exp., San F,., 1915.
Work: "Closed Shutters," Luxem-
bourg Museum, Paris; "Peasant Wo-
man of Borst," Cincinnati Museum;
"Twilight," Toledo Museum; "Happy
Days." Detroit Institute; "Mother and
Children," Art Institute, Chicago;
"Fisher Girl of Picardy," National Gal-
lery, Washington.
NOVANI, Cossado, 126 East 75th St., New
York, N. Y. (S.)
NOVANI, Guilio, 126 East 75th St., New
York, N. Y.
S. — Born Massa-Carrara, Italy, June 11,
1889. Pupil of Academy of Massa-Car-
rara and Beaux-Arts Institute in New
York.
NOWELL, Effie Alexander, 14 St. James
Ave., Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Boston. Pupil of Juglaris,
Henry R. Rice and Louis Kronberg.
Member: Copley S. 1892.
NOXON, Grace P. 710 Carnegie Hall, 56th
'St. and 7th Ave., New York, N. Y.
P., W., L., T.— Born Ossining, N. Y.
Pupil of Laurens; Ecole des Beaux-
Arts; Chase at ASL of N. Y. ; N. Y.
School of Applied Design. Mem-
ber: S. Indp. A. ; Lg. of N. Y. A.
NOYES, Bertha, 614 19th St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: S.WashA.; Wash.WCC;
Wash. AC; N. A. Women PS,
NOYES, George L., 100 Revere 'St., Bos-
ton, Mass.
P. — Born in Canada. Pupil of Courtois.
Rixen. Le Blanc and Delance in Paris.
Member: Boston AC. Award :
Silver medal, P.P.Exp., San F,, 1915.
Work: "Gloucester Wharves," Mu-
seum of Fine Arts, Boston; "New
Hampshire Hills," Des Moines Art Mu-
seum; "Road to Lisbon," Utah State
Museum.
NUDERSCHER, Frank, 119 North 7th
St.; h. 3130 South Compton Ave., St.
Louis, Mo. ; summer, Provincetown,
Mass.
P., I., E., T.— Born St. Louis, Mo.,
July 19, 1880. Self-taught. Mem-
ber: Artists Guild; 2x4 Soc.
Award : Chamber of Commerce,
($350) prize, 1919. Works: Missis-
sippi River scenes, in Chamber of Com-
merce, St. Louis, Mo.
NUNN, Evylena, 802 North Ross St..
Santa Ana, Calif.
P., L., T. — Born Mayfield, Kan., July 4.
1888. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. ; Berkshire
Summer School of Art and A. A. Hills;
School of Art and Design of Pomona
College; studied in Japan. Mem-
ber: Calif. AC; Laguna AA; Santa
Ana AG; West Coast Arts.
NUNN, Frederic, 320 Harmony St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Aug. 18, 1879.
Pupil of PAPA under Anshutz, Breck-
enridge. Chase and Cecih"a Beaux.
Member: Fellowship PAFA; Sketch
C; Phila. Alliance; Phila. WCC. Rep-
resented in the collection of the Fel-
lowship of the Pennsylvania Academy
of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia.
NUSE, R(oy) C(leveland), Beechwood
School of Fine Arts, Jenkintown, Pa. ;
h. Pipersville, Pa.
P., T.— Born Springfield, O., Feb. 23,
1885. Pupil of Duveneck, Cincinnati Art
Academy, PAFA. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA; Lg. of N.Y.A.; Phila.
Alliance. Awards : Cresson Euro-
pean Scholarship, PAFA, 1918; second
Cresson, first Toppan and first Thouron
prizes, PAFA, 1918; medal. Phila.
Sketch C, 1921. Director of Beech-
wood School of Fine Arts, Jenkintown,
Pa.
NUYTTENS, J(osef) P(ierre), 19 East
Pearson St., Chicago, 111.; summer,
Antwerp, Belgium.
P., E.— Born Antwerp, Aug. 7, 1880.
Studied at Antwerp Royal Academy,
Ecolo des Beaux-Arts in Paris and in
Brussels. Awards : Bronze medal
from Queen of Belgium, 1918; Chevalier
of the Order of Leopold, 11. Member:
Cliff Dwellers, Chicago; Alumni AIC.
Work in Chicago Art Institute; White
House. Washington; Royal Palace, Brus-
sels, Belgium; State House, Springfield
111.
NYE, Edgar, 75 Bryant St., N. W., Wash-
ington, D. C.
P. — Born Richmond, Va., Apr. 30, 1879
Pupil of Corcoran Gallery of Art, Wash-
ington, and John Noble Barlow, Eng-
land. Member: Wash. SA: Wash.
WCC. Work: Picture in Plymouth
Gallery, England.
NYE, Elmer L(esly), Grand Fords, N. D.;
summer, Santa Fe, N. M.
E., C— Born St. Paul. Minn., June 29.
1888. Member: Minneapolis Attic
C. Award: First prize, poster, Minn.
SA.
518
NYHOLM
WHO'S WHO IN ART
OCHTMAN
NYHOLM, Arvid F., 4 East Ohio St.;
h. 4829 Warner Ave., Chicago, III.
P.— Born Stockholm, Sweden, 1866. Pu-
pil of Royal Acadenny, Stockholm, and
of Anders Zorn; Colarossi Academy in
Paris. Member: Chicago SA; Chi-
cago WCC. Awards : Municipal Art
Lg. prize, also popular prize, AIC, 1915.
Work: "Captain John Ericson," Na-
tional Gallery, Washington, D. C; "Gen.
Whipple," West Point Academy.
NYS, O. A., 431 West 47th St., New York,
N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
OAKEY, Maria. See Mrs. T. W. Dewing.
OAKLEY, Thornton, 10 South 18th St.;
h. 905 Clinton St.. Philadelphia, Pa.
I., P., W., Arch., T. — Born Pittsburgh,
Pa.. 1881. Studied architecture at Univ.
of Pa. (B.S. and M.S. in Arch.); pupil
of Howai'd Pyle at Wilmington. Mem-
ber: T. Sq.C; Phila.WCC (sect.);
Phila.Sketch C; SI 1913; Fellowship
PAFA; Phila. Alliance; Wilmington So-
ciety Fine Arts. Awards: Beck Prize
($100), Phila. WCC, 1914; silver medal,
P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915. Instructor in
drawing, Univ. of Pa., 1914-15; in
charge, Dept. of Illustration, School of
Industrial Art of the Pa. Museum;
1914*-21. Drawings of Hog Island adopt-
ed 1918 by U. S. Government for For-
eign News Service; Lithographs in Li-
brary of Congress, National Gallery,
Washington; Boston Public Library;
New York Public Library; Phila. Free
Library; Newark Free Library; State
Library of Calif.; Seattle Public Li-
brary; St. Louis Public Library; Musee
de la Guerre, Paris; British Museum,
Jjondon.
OAKLEY, Violet, Cogslea. Allen Lane,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Mural P., i., C— Born New York, 1874.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; PAFA under
Howard Pyle and Cecilia Beaux; Aman-
Jean, Collin and Lazar in Paris. Mem-
ber: ANA; Phila. WCC; Fellowship
PAFA; NYWCC; Plastic C; SI (Assoc.)
1904; Mural P; AIA (iion.); Phila. Alli-
ance. Awards: Gold medal for il-
lustration and silver medal for mural
decoration. St. Louis Exo.. 1904; gold
medal of honor, PAFA 1905; medal of
honor, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915; medal
of honor for painting, N.Y.Arch.Lg.
1916. Work: Decorations in All
Angels' Church, New York; frieze,
"Founding of the State of Liberty
Spiritual," 18 panels, State Capitol, Har-
risburg; panel, "The Constitutional Con-
vention," Cuyahoga Co., C. H., Cleve-
land; 9 panels, ','The Creation and
Preservation of the Union," Senate
Chamber, Harrisburg.
OBERHARDT, William, 11 East 14th St.;
h. 920 Bryant Ave., New York. N. Y. ;
summer, Quonocontang Beach, R. I.
P., I.. E. — Born Guttenburg. N. J., Sept.
22, 1882. Pupil of NAD; Munich Acad-
emy of Fine Arts. Member: SI;
Guild of Free Lance Artists; Art Di-
rectors' Club. Illustrated "The Sci-
ence of Poetry" and "Philosophy of
Language," by Hudson Maxim; "God's
Country and the Woman," by Oliver
Curwood, etc.
OBERTAUFFER, Helen, 139 West 55th
St., New York, N. Y. (P.)
OBERTEUFFER, George, care of Wis-
consin School of Art, Milwaukee, Wis.
P. — Born Philadelphia, 1878. Pupil of
Chase, Anshutz. Member: Salon
d'Automne; Salon des Independents.
Works: "Stevenson's Moret," and
"Eglise St. Roch," Brooklyn Museum;
"Springtime, Paris,"' National Gallery
of New South Wales; "Winter," owned
by French Government.
OBERTEUFFER, Henrietta Amiard, care
of State Normal School, Milwaukee,
Wis.
P. — Born Havre, France, 1878. Pupil
of Laurens, Constant. Member:
Salon d'Automne, Salon des Independ-
ents. Work: Still life owned by
French Government.
O'BRIEN, Catherine C, 437 West 117th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
O'CALLAHAN, C(linton) C(lement),
American Art Association, 4 Rue Jos-
eph-Bara, Paris, France.
P.— Born Hartford, Conn., Feb. 19, 1890.
Pupil of Charles Noel Flagg, Charles
Hawthorne, Charles Guerin. Mem-
ber: Soc. Conn. Artists; Paris AAA.
OCHTMAN, Dorothy^ Cos Cob, Conn.
P.— Born Riverside, Conn., May 8, 1892.
• Pupil of NAD and Ochtman.
OCHTMAN, Leonard, "Grayledge," Cos
Cob, Conn.
Ldscp.P. — Born Zonnemaire, Holland,
Oct. 21, 1854; settled at Albany, N. Y..
1866. Self-taught. Member: SAA
1891; ANA 1898; NA 1904; AWCS; NY.
WCC; Brooklyn AC; A.Fund S; A. Aid S.;
Salma.C. 1901; Lotos C; NAC; Nat.
Inst. A.L.; Greenwich Society of Art-
ists. Awards : Prize, Brooklyn AC
1891; medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago
1893; gold medal, ACPhila. 1894; silver
medal. Pan- Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver
medal, Charleston Exp., 1902; Morgaii
prize, Salma.C. 1902; Shaw fund prize,
SAA 1902; Inness gold medal, NAD 1903;
Evans prize, Salma.C. 1903; Webb
prize, SAA 1904; two gold medals (oil
and water color), St. Louis Exp., 1904;
second Corcoran prize, S.Washington A.
1905; Rhead purchase, Richmond (Ind.)
AC 1905; Inness prize, Salma.C. 1906;
Evans prize, Salma.C. 1907; medal of
second class, Knoxville Exp., 1911;
silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F.. 1915.
Work: "Winter Light," Metropolitan
Museum, New York; "November Morn-
ing," Corcoran Gallery, Washington;
"Frosty Acres," City Art Museum, St.
Louis; "Silent Morning," Columbus (O.)
Gallery of Art; "Morning Haze." Evans
Collection, National Gallery, Washing-
ton; "A Gray Morning," Brooklyn In-
stitute Museum; "December," Museum
of Art, Fort Worth. Tex.; "Winter
Morning," Art Association, Dallas. Tex.;
"Landscape." Hackley Art Gallery.
Muskegon, Mich: "Autumn Morning,"
Bruce Museum, Greenwich, Conn.
519
OCHTMAN
WHO'S WHO IN At^T
OPERTI
OCHTMAN, Mina Fonda (Mrs. Leonard
Ochtman), "Grayledge," Cos Cob, Conn.
F.— Born Laconia, N. H., March 28, 1862.
Pupil of ASL, in New York and of
Leonard Ochtman. Member: ASL, of
N. Y.; AWCS; N. A. Women PS; Chi-
cago WCC; Greenwich SA.
O'CONNOR, Andrew, Jr., Worcester,
Mass.
S. — Born Worcester, Mass., June 7,
1874. Pupil of his father; of D. C.
French in New York. Member:
ANA, 1919. Awards : Bronze medal,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; second
class medal, Paris Salon, 1906. Work:
"Meditation," Art Association, Indian-
apolis; work purchased by French Gov-
ernment; "Adam and Eve," marble,
Corcoran Gallery, Washington, D. C;
Lincoln statue. State House Grounds,
Springfield, 111.; Santa Fortunata,
Springfield (111.) Art Association.
O'CONNOR, Henry M., 58 Putnam Ave.,
Cambridge, Mass.
P., E. — Born Brookline, Mass., Mar. 5,
1891. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art School
and Boston Museum School. Mem-
ber: Boston SE; Copley S.; Chicago
SE.
OF, George F(erdinand), 2794 Morris Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P._Born New York, N. Y., Oct. 16,
1876. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. ; Weinhold
in Munich; Delecluse Academy in Paris.
Member: S. Indp. A.; Modern
Artists of America.
OFFUTT, Lucy Lee, Friendship Heights,
Md.
P.— M ember: Wash.WCC.
OGDEN, Helen Eastman. See Mrs. Camp-
bell.
OGDEN, Henry A., 709 Times Bldg., New
York, N. Y.; h. Englewood, N. J.
I.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., July 17, 1856.
Pupil of NAD; ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: SI, 1911. Work: Collection of
uniforms of the United States Army,
1775-1906, made by order of Quarter-
Master General's Department. Author
and illustrator of "The Boy's Book of
Famous Regiments," etc. Specialty,
military and historical subjects.
OGDEN, Lyman Garfield, East St.; h. 66
North St., Walton, N. Y.
P., I., C, Landscp. Arch. — Born Walton,
N. Y., March 23, 1882. Pupil of Thomas
Anshutz, Robert Henri.
O'KELLY, Aloysius, 402 Clermont Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P.— Born Dublin, Ireland, 1853. Pupil
of Bonnat and Gerome at Ecole des
Beaux-Arts in Paris. Member:
NYWCC.
OLINSKY. Ivan G., 27 West 67th St.,
New York. N. Y.
P. — Born in Russia 1878. Studied at
NAD and in France and Italy. Mem-
ber: ANA, 1914; NA, 1919; Mural P.;
N. Y. Arch Lg., 1912; Salma. C; Phila.
AC; AAS; NAC; Allied AA. Awards:
Clarke prize ($300). NAD. 1914: Shaw
purchase prize, Salma. C, 1919. Work:
"Ada," Omaha Society of Fine Arts;
"Young Girl," Detroit AC; "Gossip,"
Dallas (Tex.) Ai't Asso.; "Old Fash-
ioned Gown" and "Two Girls," Detroit
Institute; "Maytime"; "Fairy Stories";
portraits of Mr. Stambaugh and Mr.
J. G. Butler, Butler Art Institute,
Youngstown, O.
OLIVE, Myron A., 131 Waverly PL, New
York, N. Y. (P.)
OLIVER, Ellis A.. 3311 Walnut St., Phil-
adelphia, Pa. (P.)
OLIVER, Frederick W., Fenway Studios,
30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.
P. — M ember : Boston AC.
OLIVER, Jean Nutting, Fenway Studios,
SO Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.; summer,
East Gloucester, Mass.
Min. P., T., W. — Born Lynn, Mass. Pu-
pil of Boston Museum School, C. H.
Woodbury, Philip Hale. Member:
Copley S, 1883; N. A. Women PS; Bos-
ton GA; Conn. AFA; Concord AA; Prov-
incetown AA. Awards : Hudson prize,
PAPA, 1916; "People's Prize," Boston
Women Painters Exhibition, 1917.
OLIVER, Myron A(ngelo), 106 Main St.,
Monterey, Calif. ; summer, care of
American Express Co., 11 Rue Scribe,
Paris, France.
P.— Born Fulton, Kansas, June 16, 1891.
Pupil of Chase, DuMond. Member:
ASL of N.Y.; Lg. of N.Y.A.; Salma. C.
OLMSTEAD, Vincent H., 264 Asylum St.,
Hartford, Conn.
P. — M ember : Conn. AFA.
OLSON, Albert Byron, 25 East 18th St.;
817 Pearl St., Denver, Colo.
P., C— Born Montrose, Colo., May 3,
1885. Pupil of PAFA under Chase,
Anshutz and McCarter. Member:
Denver AA. Represented in collection
of Denver Art Asso., St. Mark's Church,
Denver.
OLSON, J. Olaf, 104 Columbia Heights,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P.— Born Buffalo, Minn., Jan. 28, 1894.
Pupil of H. Tadama. Member:
AWCS.
ONDERDONK, Julian, 128 West French
Place, San Antonio, Tex.
P. — Born San Antonio, Tex., July 30,
1882. Pupil of his father, R. J. Onder-
donk: Chase. Henri and Du Mond in
New York. Member: Salma. C, 1913;
Allied AA. Work: "Springtime,"
Dallas (Tex.) Art Association; "Morning
Sunlight," San Antonio (Tex.) Art
League.
O'NEILL, George Kerr, 1515 Arch St.; h.
1411 Reed 'St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, March 1, 1879.
Pupil of PAFA.
O'NEILL, R(aymond) E(dgar), 331 Johns-
ton Ave., "Trenton, N. J.
P., C, T.— Born Trenton, N. J., July
8, 1893. Pupil of A. W. Dow, Lachman,
Angel Zarrago and C. H. Martin.
Member: S. Indp. A.
O'IMEILL, Rose Cecil. See Mrs. Wilson.
OPERTI, Albert (Jasper Ludwig Rocca-
bigllera), American Museum of Natural
History, West 77th St., New York, N.Y.
I., P., S.— Born Turin, Italy, March 17,
520
OPPER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
OTIS
1852. Studied abroad. Member:
Palette Club; Tile Club. Scenic artist
in New York theatres; illustrator of
books on arctic subjects, having made
two voyages to the arctic regions with
Rear Admiral Peary. Awards :
Medals and diplomas as official artist,
U. S. Government exhibits, Chicago and
San Francisco Expositions. Work:
"Rescue of the Greeley Party" and
"Farthest North"; paintings for Army
and Navy Dept., Washington; mural
decorations in Museum of Natural His-
tory, New York; "The Last Franklin
Search," American Geographic Society,
New York, etc.
OPPER, Frederick Burr, care of "New
York American," New York, N. Y. ; h.
62 Circuit Road, New Rochelle, N. Y.
Cartoonist. — Born Madison, Lake Co.,
O., Jan. 2, 1857. Member: SI 1910.
On staff of "Journal" since 1899. Il-
lustrated "Mark Twain," "Mr. Dooley/'
ORDWAY, Mrs. S. H., 123 East 71st St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
ORGAN, Marjorie (Mrs. Robert Henri),
10 Gramercy Park, New York, N. Y.
Caricaturist. — Born New York, N. Y.,
Dec. 3, 1886. Pupil of Dan McCarthy
and Robert Henri. Member: S. Indp.
A. Work : "Reggie and the Heavenly
Twins," "The Man Haters' Club,"
"Strange What a Difference a Mere Man
Makes," in New York "Journal"; cari-
catures of stage, etc., for New York
"World."
ORMOND, M. Georgia, 1861 Parkwood
Ave.. Toledo, Q.
S.— M ember: N. A. Women PS,
ORR, Alfred Everitt, 14 West 72nd St.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. San Gabriel, Calif.
P., I.— Born New York. N. Y., Jan. 6,
1886. Pupil of N. Y. ASL; Royal Acad-
emy in London; W. M. Chase and Haw-
thorne. Author of poster, "For Home
and Country," for 5th Liberty Loan.
ORR, Frances (Morris), Woodland Road,
Sewickley, Pa.; summer. Amos Chese-
bro Farm, Stonington, Conn.
P.— Born Springfield. Mo., Sept. 26, 1880,
Pupil of G. A. Thompson. Member:
New Haven PCC; Pittsburgh AA.
ORR, Mrs. J. B,, Woodland Rd., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts AA.
ORR, J. Edward. 1421 Franklin Ave., Co-
lumbus, O.
P. — M ember: Pen and Pencil Club,
Columbus
ORR, Louis, 5 Rue Mazarine, Paris, France.
P., E. — Born Hartford, Conn., May 19,
1879. Pupil of Laurens in Paris;
Knight of the Legion of Honor.
Work: Mural decorations in State
Bank, Hartford. Conn.; 22 original pen-
cil drawings "Rheims Cathedral, 1917,"
and 11 etchings in the Luxembourg,
Paris; one etched copper plate in the
Louvre, Paris; one plate in New York
Public Library; two etchings in Oak-
land (Calif.) Museum; etching in Stras-
bourg Museum; 3 etchings of Rheims
Cathedral, National American Red
Cross; 2 plates in French Government
collection.
ORWIG, Louise, City Library, Des Moines,
Iowa.
P., I., T.— Born Mifflinburg, Pa. Pupil
of William M. Chase, Henry McCarter
and Daniel Garber, Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA; Des Moines AFA.
Awards : Cresson scholarship, PAFA,
1911; Women's Club prize ($100), 1911,
1921,
OSBORN, Frank, Box 236, Dobbs Ferry,
N. Y.
P., E, — Born Altamont, Albany Co.,
N. Y., June 13, 1887. Member: S.
Indp.A.
OSBORN, Mrs. Robie, Dobbs Ferry. N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp.A.
OSGOOD, Harry Haviland, 1538 East 57th
St.; h. 5647 Blackstone Ave., Chicago,
111.
P., E.— Born in Illinois, 'Sept. 1875. Pu-
pil of AIC; Julian and Colarossi Acad-
emies in Paris. Member: Chicagro
SA.
OSGOOD, Mrs. Nellie Thorne, 1538 East
57th St.; h. 5647 Blackstone Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.
P., T. — Born in Michigan, June, 1879.
Pupil of AIC; Julian and Oolarossl
Academies, Paris.
OSGOOD, Ruth, 1713 P St., N. W., Wash-
ington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash.WCC,
O'SHEA, John, Carmel, Calif. (P.)
OSNIS, Benedict A., 1611 Chestnut St.; h.
2129 North Ninth St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P., T.— Born in Russia, 1872. Pupil or
PAFA. Member: ACPhila.
OSNIS, D. Hartman, southwest corner
15th and Walnut Sts., Philadelphia. Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellow.ship PAFA.
OSTHAUS, Edmund H(enry), 27 Bed-
ford Rd,, Summit, N. J.
P. — Born Hildesheim, Germany, Aug. 5,
1858. Pupil of Royal Academy in Diis-
seldorf. Came to U. S. 1883. Mem-
ber: Toledo Tile C, Specialty, dogs.
Work: "Afield," "A Good One," Mu-
seum of Art, Toledo, O.
OSTRANDER, William C(hesebrough), 48
West Housatonic St,, Pittsfield, Mass.
P.— Born New York. N, Y., March 5,
1858. Pupil of Carl Hecker and Venino.
Member: Salma.C. 1897; A.Fund S.
OSTROWSKY, Sam, 1868 South Central
Park Ave., Chicago, 111.
P., L., T.— Born Russia, May 5, 1885.
Pupil of Harry Wolcott and AIC, Lau-
rens and Academic Julian in Paris.
Member: S. Indp. A. Award:
Hon. mention, AIC.
OSWALD, Kalman, 520 East 82nd St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
OTIS, Amy, Wheaton College, Norton,
Mass.
Min. P.. T. — Born Sherwood, N. Y, Pu-
pil of Philadelphia School of Design and
PAFA: Colarossi Academy, Courtola
521
OTIS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
PALL
and Garrido in Paris. Member:
Plastic C; Phila.WCC; Pa.S.Min.P.;
Fellowship PAFA. In charge, Art
Dept., Wheaton College.
OTIS, Sam(uel) D(avis), 112 Waverly P1-.
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Westport,
Conn.
I., E. — Born Sherwood, N. Y., July 24,
1889. Pupil of H. MeCarter.
OTT, Ralph C, 645 Belmont St., Spring-
field, Mo. (P.).
OUREN, Karl, 1536 North Kedzie Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
P. — Born in Norway in 1882. Studied in
Copenhagen and at AIC. Member:
Palette and Chisel C. Award: Gold
medal, Palette and Chisel C, 1919.
OUTCAULT, Richard F(elton), 245 Madi-
son Ave... Flushing, L. I., N. Y.
Comic I. — Born Lancaster, O., Jan. 14,
1863. On staff of the "New York Jour-
nal" since 1905. Created the "Yellow
Kid" and "Buster Brown." Mem-
ber: Salma.C.
OVERBECK, Hannah, Cambridge City,
Ind.
P., C. — M ember: Cincin. Woman's
AC.
OVERBECK, Mary Frances, Cambridge
City, Ind.
P., C. — Born Cambridge City, Ind., Jan.
28, 1878. Pupil of Arthur Dow at Co-
lumbia University, New York. Mem-
ber: Cincinnati Woman's AC; Indi-
ana Artists' Club.
OVERLAND, Mrs. Cora L., Scituate,
Mass. (S.)
OWEN, Mrs. Esther S. D., 40 Willard
St., Hartford, Conn.
P.— Born Boston, Mass., Sept. 19, 1843.
Pupil of Votin, Geary and Tuckerman.
Member: Conn.AFA. Represented
in Worcester Art Museum.
OWEN, R. Emmett, Springdale, Conn.
P. — M ember: Conn.AFA.
PACH, Walter, 13 East 14th Street, New
York, N. Y.
P._Born New York, July 11, 1883. Pu-
pil of Leigh Hunt, Chase and Henri in
New York. Member: Society des
Artistes Independants, Paris; S.Indp.A.
PACKARD, Mabel, 2031 Berkshire Ave.,
South Pasadena, Calif.
Min.P. — Born in Iowa. Pupil of AIC;
Colarossi Academy in Paris. M e m-
b e r : Chicago SA. Award: Bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
PACKER, Francis H(erman), 53 Lake-
side Drive, New York, N. Y.
S.— M ember: NSS 1905.
PADDOCK, Ethel Louise, 12 East 15th
St.; h. 149 West 72nd St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born New York City, Apr. 19, 1887.
Pupil of New York School of Art, and
Henri. Member: S. Indp. A.; N. A.
Women PS.
PADDOCK, Josephine, 141 West 70th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS;
Conn. AFA.
PADDOCK, Willard D(ryden), care of
Glenn Hall Gallery, 6 West 56th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, South Kent,
Conn.
S., P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 23,
1873. Pupil of Herbert Adams in New
York; Pratt Inst, in Brooklyn; Courtois
and Girardot in Paris. Member:
Salma.C. 1904; MacD.C; NSS 1915 (as-
soc); A. Aid S. ; Allied AA; Wash. AC;
Century Asso.; Guild of N. Y. A.
PAEFF, Bashka, 6 Pinckney St., Boston,
Mass.
S.. T.— Born Minsk, Russia, Aug. 12,
1893. Pupil of Bela Pratt. Member':
Boston GA; Detroit SAC; BSAC; Bos-
ton SA.
PAGE, Josephine, 1863 Kalorama Road,
Washington, D. C. (P.)
PAGE, Marie D(anforth) (Mrs. Calvin Q.
Page), 128 Marlborough St., Boston,
Mass.
Port.P. — Born Boston. Pupil of School
of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. .
Member: Copley S. 1890; Inter. Soc;
AL; Newport AA. Awards: Boston
GA; bronze medal, P-P. Exp., San. F.,
1915; Bok prize, PAFA 1916; Shaw
Memorial prize, NAD 1916; First prize
and hon. men., Duxbury AA, 1920.
PAGE, Walter Oilman, 310 Fenway
Studios, 30 Ipswich St., Boston. Mass,
P., W., T.— Born Boston. Pupil of
Boston Museum School; Boulanger and
Lef ebvre in Paris. Member: Cop-
ley S.; Mass. State Art Commission.
Work: "A Head," Toledo Museum
of Art; portraits in: Massachusetts
'State House; Portland (Me.) City Hall;
Bowdoin Collee-e; Maine Historical So-
ciety; Colby College, Maine; Vermont
State House; Worcester Public Library,
etc. Chairman, State Art Commission,
Mass.
PAGES, Jules, 42 Rue Fontaine, Paris,
France.
P., T.— Born San Francisco, Cal., 1867.
Pupil of Constant, Lefebvre and Robert-
Fleury in Paris. Awards: Hon.
mention, Paris Salon, 1895; third medal,
Paris Salon, 1899; second medal, Paris
Salon, 1905. Knight of the Legion of
Honor, 1910. Instructor at the Julian
Academy night class since 1902; life
class since 1907. Member: Int. Soc.
Paris SP. Represented in Museum of
Pau, France; Museum of Toulouse,
France; the Luxembourg, Paris; Golden
Gate Park Museum and Art Inst., San
Francisco; Municipal Art Gallery, Oak-
land, Calif.
PAGON, Katherine W. Dunn (Mrs. Wil-
liam W. Pagon), 114 St. John's Road,
Roland Park, Md.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
PAINE, Richard G., East Falls Church,
Va.
S. — Born Charleston, S. C, Feb. 15,
1875. Pupil of Amateis and Kemeys.
PALL, Augustin G., 19 East Pearson St.,
Chicago, 111.
P. — M ember: Chicago SA.
522
PALMER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
PARAMIX:
PALMER, Adelaide, 739 Boylston St., Bos-
ton, Mass.; summer, Piermont, N. H.
P., T.— Born Orford, N. H. Pupil of
John J. Enneking in Boston and G. H.
Bartlett. Member: Copley S. 1893.
PALMER, Elizabeth. See Mrs. Brad-
field.
PALMER, Mrs. Fredrikke S(chjbth), 221
Everit St., New Haven. Conn.
P. — Born Drammen, Norway, May 26,
1860. Pupil of Knut Bergslien in Chris-
tiania; Carl Gussow in Berlin. Mem-
ber: New Haven Paint and Clay C.
Staff artist for "Woman's Journal."
PALMER, Herman, 73 West 55th St.,
New York, N. Y. (I.)
PALMER, Mrs. Minette D., 3539 Reading
Road, Avondale. Cincinnati, O.
P. — Member: Cincinnati Woman's AC.
PALMER, Pauline (Mrs. Albert E. Pal-
mer). 4 East Ohio St., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born McHenry, 111. Pupil of
AIC, Chase, Miller and Hawthorne;
Collin, Prinet, Courtois and Simon in
Paris. Member: Chicago SA; Chi-
cago WCC; Chicago Municipal AL;
Chicago Art Guild; Chicago AC; Cor-
don C. ; Chicago Alliance; Alumnae AIC.
Awards: Bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; Young Fortnightly prize.
AIC 1907; Marshall Field prize, AIC
1907; Thompson portraiture prize, AIC
1914; participant in Fine Arts prize.
SWA 1915; hon. mention Chicago AG
1915; Cahn hon. mention AIC 1916;
Rosenwald purchase prize AIC, 1916;
hon. mention, AIC, 1916; Carr prize, AIC'
1917; Butler Purchase Prize, AIC. 1920;
silver medal, Chicago SA, 1920. Repre-
sented in permanent collections of West
End Woman's Club; Municipal Art
League collection at Art Institute of
Chicago; Nike Club; Klio Association
and Arche Club, all of Chicago; public
school collection of Decatur, 111.; Muncie
(Ind.) Art Association; "Village by the
Sea," Chicago Municipal Commission
purchase; represented in collection of
Aurora, III., Art Association.
PALMER, Samuel M., 1020 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
PALMER, Walter L(aunt), 5 Lafayette
St., Albany, N. Y.
I>dscp.P. — Born Albany, Aug. 1, 1854;
son of the sculptor, Erastus Dow Pal-
mer. Pupil of F. E. Church at Hudson,
N. Y. ; Carolus-Duran in Paris. Mem-
ber: ANA 1887, NA 1897; SAA 1881;
NYWCC; AWCS; Salma.C. 1901; Pastel;
Century Assoc; Union Inter.des Beaux-
Arts et des Lettres. Awards: Sec-
end Hallgarten prize. NAD 1887; medal.
Columbian Exp., Chicago. 1893; gold
medal. ACPhila. 1894; Evans prize,
AWCS 1895; first prize, Boston 1895;
second prize. Tennessee Centennial
Exp., Nashville, 1897; hon. mention,
Paris Exp., 1900; silver medal for water
color, Pan-Am. Exp.. Buffalo. 1901; silver
medal for water color, Charleston Exp..
1902; silver medal for water color and
bronze medal for oil. St. Louis Exp.,
1904; silver medal, Philadelphia, 1907;
bronze medal, Buenos Aires Exp., 1910;
Butler prize, AIC, 1919. Specialty,
winter landscapes. Work: "Sundown
at Walpole, N. H.," Buffalo Fine Arts
Academy, Buffalo, N. Y. ; "The Pasture
Fence," Public Gallery, Richmond,
Ind.; "Lingering Oak Leaves," Omaha
(Neb.) Art Society; "Under the Pines,"
Memorial Art Gallery, Rochester, N. Y. ;
"Silent Dawn," Metropolitan Museum
of Art; "The Dell," Ai't Museum,
Youngstown, O.
PALMGREEN, Charles J., 615 Bayne St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
PALUMBO, Alphonse, 778 Prospect Ave.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
PANCOAST, Morris Hall, 12 East 8th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., 1.— Born Salem, N. J., April 27,
1877. Pupil of PAFA under Anshutz;
Julian Academy under Laurens in Paris.
Member: Fellowship PAFA; Phila.
Sketch C; Salma. C. Work : "Pennsy
Train Shed," Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; "Easter
Storm," Municipal Art League, Wil-
liamsport, Pa,
PAOLO, C(artaino) S(ciarrino), 80 Wash-
ington Square, East, New York, N. Y.;
739 Boylston St., Boston, Mass.
S. — Born Palermo, Italy. June 29, 1882.
Pupil of American Academy in Rome;
Pine Arts Institute of Palermo.
Work: Bust of ex-Gov. MacCall of
Mass., in 'State House, Boston; Cardinal
O'Connell in Boston Cathedral; marble
memorial in Cathedral of St. John the
Divine, New York; "Cardinal Mercier
of Belgium," New York University;
bronze female figure, Toledo Museum
of Art; bronze tablet for John Bur-
roughs memorial field.
RAPE, Eric, "The Plains," Manchester-
by-the-Sea, Mass.; and The Players,
Gramercy Park, New York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born San Francisco, Cal.. Oct.
17, 1870. Pupil of Emil Carlsen in New
York; Ecole des Beaux- Arts in Paris
under Gerome, Constant, Lefebvre,
Doucet and Delance. Member:
United Arts C, London; Royal Soc.of
Arts, London; Atlantic Union, London;
North British Academy; Players C.,
New York. Director, Eric Pape School
of Art- 1898 to 1913. Awards: Five
medals and diplomas at various exhibi-
tions. Illustrations for "The Fair God."
"The Scarlet Letter." "The Life of Na-
poleon Bonaparte"; "Life of Mahomet";
"Poetical Works of Madison Cawein";
portraits for "The Memoirs of Ellen
Terry," etc. Designed monument at
Stage Fort Park, Gloucester, commem-
orating founding of Massachusetts Bay
Colony, 1623. Director and master of
pageants, "The Canterbury Pilgrims,"
Gloucester, Mass., 1908. and "The Flow-
ers of the Sea." Lookout Hill, Mass..
1912.
PARAMINO, John F., 295 Huntington
Ave., Boston, Mass.; 28 Everett St.,
Arlington, Mass.
S.. T.— Born Boston. 1889. Pupil of
Augustus Saint Gaudens and Bela L.
Pratt. Member: Boston GA.
523
PARCELL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
PARRISH
PARCELL, Malcolm, Washington, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
Award: Saltus gold medal, NAD,
1919.
PARIS, WiSliam Francklyn, 53 West 39th
St., New York, N. Y.
Mural P.. Arch., W,., L. — Born in New
York. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Julian
Academy in Paris; Salvi in Rome.
Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1898; NSS
(lay); Century Assoc; Museum of
French Art (bd. trustees) ; A.
Aid S.; Alliance. Author: "Rodin
as a Symbolist"; "Biography of Al-
bert Besnard"; "The French Institute
and American Art"; "Modern Gobelin
Tapestries,"; "Decorative Elements in
Architecture," etc. Lecturer, Univ. of
Pa., Vassar College, St. John's College,
Univ. of Md., Cornell Univ. U. S. Com-
missioner of Decorative Art, Paris Exp.,
1900.
PARKER, A(nna) B(enedict) (Mrs. Neil-
son T. Parker), Woodstock, N. Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS;
NAC.
PARKER, Cora, Greenwich, Conn.
P., I. — Born in Kentucky. Pupil of Cin-
cinnati Art School; Julian Academy in
Paris. Work: "Blue Waters of
Gloucester," Kansas City (Mo.) Art
Club; "Prune Orchard, California,"
Nebraska Art Association, Lincoln,
Custodian Art Gallery, Bruce Museum,
Greenwich, Conn.
PARKER, Cushman, Woodstock, Ulster
Co., N. Y.; Onset, Mass.
I. — Born Boston, Mass., Apr. 28, 1881.
Pupil of Laurens and Carl Marr. Mem-
ber: SI. Designer of covers for "Sat-
urday Evening Post", "McCall's", "Col-
lier's", etc.
PARKER, Emma Alice, 42 College St.,
Providence, R. I.
P., I. — Born Gardner, Mass., Feb. 15,
1876. Pupil of Sydney R. Burleigh.
Robert Henri, F. V. Du Mond and H. R.
Poore. Member: Providence WCC.
PARKER, John E., 3413 Hamilton St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
PARKER, John F., 401 Convent Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., S.— Born New York City, May 10,
1884. Pupil of Henri in New York;
studied in England and with Laurens
and Steinlen in Paris. Member:
AG of Am.; Alliance; 'Salma. C.
Award : Whitney prize. Labor Com-
petition. Directed pageant of the City
History Club, New York, 1916; West-
field 200th Anniversary pageant, etc.
Represented in National Gallery, Wash.
PARKER, Lawton S., 2 Rue Brea, Paris,
Frcinc©.
Port. p., T.— Born Fairfield, Mich, Aug.
7, 1868. Pupil of Gerome, Laurens, Con-
stant, Besnard and Whistler in Paris;
Chase in New York. Instructor, St.
Louis School of Fine Arts. 1892; direc-
tor of fine arts. Beloit College, 1893;
president. New York School of Art.
1898-9; director of Parker Academy,
Paris, 1900; non-resident professor. Art
Institute of Chicago, 1902; president.
Chicago Academy of Fine Arts, 1903
Member: ANA 1916; Chicago SA;
Paris AAA. Awards : John Arm-
strong Chandler five-year European
Scholarship, 1896; hon. mention, Paris
Salon, 1900; third medal, Paris Salon,
1902; silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
gold medal. Inter. Exp., Munich, 1906;
hon. mention, CI Pittsburgh, 1907; first
medal, Chicago SA, 1908; Cahn prize,
AIC 1909; gold medal, Paris Salon 1913;
medal of honor, P. -P. Exp., San F.,
1915; Altman prize, NAD, 1916.
Work: President Harry Pratt Judsou
and Martin A. Ryerson, Chicago Uni-
versity; Judge Peter S. Grosscup and
Judge James G. Jenkins, U. S. Court
of Appeals, Washington; "Portrait of a
Lady," Art Institute of Chicago.
PARKER, Mrs. W. L., 312 Dartmouth St..
Boston, Mass.
P. — M ember: Boston WCC.
PARKHURST, Anita (Mrs. Willcox), 412
West 20th St., New York, N. Y.
P., L— Born Chicago, Nov. 11, 1892.
Pupil of AIC. Member: Guild of
Free Lance Artists; SI. Illustrations
for Saturday Evening Post, Collier's,
etc.
PARKHURST, C(lifford) E(ugene), 63
East 59th St., New York, N. Y.; sum-
mer. Vails Gate, Orange Co., N. Y.
I. — Born Toledo O., Dec. 5, 1885. Pupil
of Vanderpoel, Freer and Armstrong.
M e m b e r : N. Y. Arch. Lg. Awards :
Three hon. mentions, AIC, 1906.
PARKHURST, Thomas Shrewsbury,
Highlands Studio, Carmel-by-the-'Sea,
Calif.
Ldscp.P., I. — Born Manchester, England,
Aug. 1, 1853. Self-taught. Member:
Toledo Tile C; Salma. C; NAC.
Work: "October Skies" and "The
Spirit of the Maumee," Toledo Museum
of Art; "Landscape," Grand Rapids Art
Association; "Chariot of the Sky," Oak-
land (Calif.) Art Museum; represented
in Lima (O.) Art League; Des Moines
(la.) Art Club; Oklahoma Art League.
PARRISH, Clara Weaver (Mrs. Wm. P.
Parrish). 39 West 67th St., New York,
N. Y.
P., E., W.— Born Selma, Ala. Pupil of
ASL of N.Y. under Chase, Mowbray,
Cox and J. Alden Weir; Collin In Paris.
Member: NYWCC; AWCS (assoc);
N. A. Women PS; NAC; Pen and Brush
C; SPNY; MacD.C. Awards: Watrous
prize, N. Y. Women's AC, 1902 and 1913;
silver medal. Appalachian Exp., Knox-
ville, 1910; silver medal, P.-P. Exp., San
F., 1915.
PARRISH, Maxfield, Windsor, Vt.
I., P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., July 25,
1870; son of Stephen Parrish. Pupil of
PAFA and Howard Pyle. Member:
SAA 1897; ANA 1905. NA 1906; Fellow-
ship PAFA; Nat. Inst. A. L.; Union In-
ter, des Beaux-Arts et des Lettres.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Exp.,
1900: silver medal for drawings, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; Beck prize,
Phila. WCC 1908; gold medal, N. Y.
Arch. Lg., 1917.
524
PARRISH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
PATTERSON
PARRISH, Stephen, Windsor, Vt.
Etcher.P. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., July
y, 1846. Member: R. Soc. Painter-
Etchers, London; N. Y. Etching C.
Work: "The Break-up of Winter,
Cornish, N. H.," painting, Toledo Mu-
seum of Art; "Winter at Trenton,
N. J.," Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh.
PARSHALL, De Witt, Santa Barbara,
Calif.
Ldscp., P.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 2,
1864. Pupil of Cormon and Alexander
Harrison and Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: ANA 1910; NA 1917; Al-
lied AA; SMPF West; Inter. Soc. AL;
Lotus C. (life); Century Assoc; NAC.
MacD.C; Calif. AC; S. Indp. A.;
NAC. Work: "Catskills," Metro-
politan Museum, New York; "Granite
Gorge," Toledo (O.) Museum of Art;
"Isis Peak," Syracuse (N. Y.) Museum
of Art; "Hermit Creek Canyon," Wor-
cester Art Museum; "Great Abyss,"
Metropolitan Museum of Art.
PARSHALL. Douglass Ewell, Santa Bar-
bara, Calif.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., Nov. 19,
1899. Pupil of DeWitt Parshall.
Work: "Marine", 'Syracuse Museum.
PARSONS, Mrs. Edith Barretto Stevens,
204 West 13th St., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Houston, Va., July 4, 1878. Pu-
pil of ASL of N. Y. under French and
Barnard. Member: N. A. Women
PS.
PARSONS. Margaret, 122 East 76th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
PARSONS, Maude B., 618 West Highland
Drive, Seattle, Wash. (P.)
PARSONS, Philip N., 5735 Dorchester
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
PARSONS, Sheldon, Santa Fe, N. M.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
PARTINGTON, Richard Langtry, 1713
Sansom St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Stockport, Eng., Dec. 7, 1868.
Member: Bohemian Club, Athenean
Club, and San F. AA.
PARTON, Ernest, The Chelsea, 222 West
2'Vd St.; 119 East 19th St., New York,
N. Y.
Ldscp. P.— Born Hudson, N. Y., March
17, 1845. Member: AFund S.; Royal
Inst. of Painters, London. Awards :
Hon. mention, Paris Exp., 1889; hon.
mention, Paris Exp., 1900. Has resided
in England since 1873.
PARTON, Henry W., 119 East 19th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M e m b e r : Salma. C, 1889; Cen-
tury Assoc; NAC.
PARTRIDGE, Roi, 4540 Evelyn St., Oak-
land, Calif.
Etcher.— Born Centralia, Wash., Oct. 14,
1888. Pupil of NAD in New York.
Member: Chicago SE; Cal. SE.
Awards: Two silver medals, Alaska-
Yukon-Pacific Exp., Seattle, 1909;
Logan medal, AIC, 1921. Work in:
New York Public Library; Newark
(N. J.) Public Library; Library of
Congress, Washington, D. C. ; Park
Museum, San Francisco, Calif.; Worces-
ter (Mass.) Art Museum; Art Institute
of Cliicago; Walker Art Gallery, Liver-
pool, England; Toledo Museum of Art;
Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh.
William
Ordway, Bar
M. L., Box 151,
PARTRIDGE,
Harbor, Me.
S., W.— Born Paris, France, Apl 11, 186L
Studied in New York, Paris, Florence
and Rome. Member: Lotos C; N.
Y. Arch. Lg. Work: Equestrian
statue of Gen. Grant, Union Lg. Club,
Brooklyn; statue of Alexander Hamilton,
Brooklvn; "Shakespeare", Lincoln Park,
Chicago; "Pocahontas", Jamestown,
Va,; "Nathan Hale", St. Paul, Minn.*
font, Cathedral of St. Peter and St.
Paul, Washington, D. C. ; S'chermerhorn
Memorial Columbia Univ., New York.
Author: "Art for America", "The
Song of Life of a Sculptor", "The Tech-
nique of Sculpture".
PASQUELLE, Frances
Glenbrook, Conn.
P.— M ember: S. Indp. A.
PATIGIAN, Haig, 923 Polk St.; h. 898
Francisco St., San Francisco, Cal.; and
Bohemian Club, San Francisco.
S. — Born in Armenia, Jan. 22, 1878.
Pupil of Marquet in Paris. Mem-
ber: NSS; Societe des Artistes Fran-
cais: Member: Jury of Awards,
Panama-Pacific Inernational Exp., San
Francisco, 1915. Work: "Ancient His-
tory," Bohemian C, and "Gen. Funs-
ton," City Hall, San Francisco; monu-
ment to Dr. Rowell, Fresno, Calif.; bust
of John Keith, Memorial Museum, San
Francisco; pediment for Metropolitan
Life Bldg., San Francisco; allegoric fig-
ures and tympanum for Memoria.l
Museum, San Francisco, etc.
PATRICOLA, Philip, 247 Cherry St., Buf-
falo, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Buffalo SA.
PATTEE, Elsie Dodge, 154 West 57tb
St.. New York, N. Y.
P., L, L., T.— Born Chelsea, Mass., Sept.
4, 1876. Pupil of Julian Academy in
Paris. Member: AS Min. P.; N.
A. Women PS. Award: Silver
medal, Panama-Pacific Exp., San f
1915.
PATTERSON, Ambrose, 917 Seneca St..
■Seattle, Wash.
P., T. — Born Daylesford, Victoria, Aus-
tralia. Member: Salon d'Automne,
Paris. Award : Hon. mention, Seat-
tle Fine Arts Society, 1920. Works:
"Boulevard Waterloo, Brussels," Na-
tional Gallery, Adelaide, Australia, and
"Collens St., Melbourne," National Gal-
lery, Sydney, Australia; portrait C. C.
Kingston, Australian Commonwealth
Government.
PATTERSON, C. R., 119 East 19th St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
PATTERSON, Charles W., 4403 Stanton
Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — Member: AA, Pittsburgh.
Award : Second prize AA Pittsburgh,
1914.
525
PATTERSON
WHO'S WHO IN AHT
PAYNE
PATTERSON, Howard A(shinan), 514
Walnut St.; h. 4032 Green St., West
Philadelphia. Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 13,
1891. Pupil of Phila. Ind. Art School;
PAFA. Member: Fellowship PAFA;
Phila. Sketch C; S. Indp. A. Work:
"Lines and Patches". Fellowship of
the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts, Philadelphia.
PATTERSON, Margaret (Jordan), Trin-
ity Court, Boston, Mass.
P., I. — Born Soerabaija, Java. Pupil
of Pratt Inst, under Arthur Dow
in Brooklyn; Charles H. Woodbury in
Boston; Castellucho in Pans. Mem-
ber: Boston SE; Boston WCC; Copley
S: 1900; Phila. WCC; N. A. Women PS;
Calif. P.M. Award : Hon. mention
for etching, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915.
Work: "Basque Fishing Boats,"
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; repre-
sented in Oakland (Cal.) Art Museum.
Director, art department, Dana Hall
School, Wellsley, Mass.
PATTERSON, Rebecca Burd Peale, 5522
Morris St., Germantown, Philadelphia,
Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil of
Pa. Museum and School of Ind. Art,
Phila.; Rebecca Van Trump and W. J.
Whittemore. New York. Member:
Pa. Soc. Min. P.
PATTON, Katharine, 1522 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — Born Philadelphia. Pupil of Cox,
Hawthorne and Snell in New York;
Frank Brangwyn in London. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; Phila. WCC;
Fellowship PAFA; Plastic C; Phila.
Alliance. Awards : Silver medal,
Knoxville, Tenn., Exp., 1913; prize for
landscape, N. A. Women PS, 1918.
Work: "The Maple Woods," Penn-
sylvania Academy of the Fine Arts;
"Wood Interior," Fellowship, Penn-
sylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Philadelphia; "Through the Old Win-
dow Screen," Southern High School,
Philadelphia, Pa.
PATTON, Katherine Maxey, 718 South-
west St., Wheaton, 111.
P. — A ward: Mary Smith prize,
PAFA, 1921.
PATTY, W(illiam) A(rthur), 1454 Sev-
enty-Eighth St., Brooklyn, New York,
N. Y.
P. — Born New Hartford, Conn., Mar. 17,
1884. Pupil of Charles Noel Flagg, Robt.
B. Brandegee. Edgar M. Ward. Mem-
ber: Brooklyn SA; S. Indp. A;
Brooklyn WCC; Lg. of N. Y. A.
PAUL, Charles R., 17th and the Parkway,
Philadelphia, Pa.; h. Wynwood, Pa.
I._Born Indiana, Pa., Dec. 29, 1888. Pu-
pil of Anshutz. Chase and McCarter.
Member: Phila. Sketch C.
PAULDING, John, 1200 Steinway Hall,
Chicago, 111. ; h. Park Ridge, 111.
S.— Born Dark County, C, Apr. 5, 1873.
Pupil of AIC. Member: Alumni
AIC; Chicago SA; Cliff Dwellers.
PAULI, Corinne, 524 Walnut St., Phila-
delphia, Pa. (I.)
PAULLIN, Telford, 61 Poplar St., Brook-
lyn, New York. N. Y. (I.)
PAULUS, Francis Petrus, Bruges, Bel-
gium.
P., Etcher.— Born Detroit, Mich., March
13. 1862. Pupil of PAFA; Royal Acad-
emy In Munich under Loefftz; Ecole de«
Beaux-Arts in Paris under Bonnat.
Member: Chicago SE; NAC; La
Gravure Originale en Nolr; Soci4t6
Inter, des Beaux-Arts et des Lettres.
Work: "Alley in Bruges," Herron
Art Institute, Indianapolis; "Low Tide,"
"Fish Market," "Shimmering Sea,"
"Old Bridge, Bruges," and set of etch-
ings, Detroit Institute. Etchings in:
New York Public Library; Library of
Congress, Washington, D. C; Oakland
(Cal.) Museum.
PAXON, Edgar Samuel, 611 Stephens
Ave.. Missoula, Mont.
I., P. — Born East Hamburg, N. Y.. April
25, 1852. Specialty. Indians and Ameri-
can pioneers. Work : Eight murals in
Missoula County Court House; six mu-
rals in Montana Capitol; "Custer's Last
Fight," exhibited in many cities.
PAXSON. Ethel, (Mrs. Clement Esmond),
Kew Gardens. L. I., N. Y.
P., I.. W.. T. — Born Meriden, Conn..
Mar 23, 1SS5. Pupil of Chase, Poore and
PAFA.
PAXTON, Mrs. Elizabeth Okie, 19 Mont-
vale Rd., Newton Centre, Mass.
P. — Born Providence, R. I. Pupil of
W. M. Paxton. Award : Silver medal,
Panama-Pacific Exp., San F., 1915.
PAXTON, W. A., 955 Edgeware Road,
Los Angeles, Calif.
P.— M ember: Calif. AC.
PAXTON, William M(cGregor), River-
way Studios, 120 Riverway, Boston,
Mass.
P.. T.— Born Baltimore, Md., June 22,
1869. Pupil of Ecole des Beaux-Arts In
Paris under Gerome; Dennis M. Bunker
in Boston. Member: ANA 1917;
Copley S. 1894; Boston GA; St. Botolph
C, Boston; Phila. AC. Awards:
Hon. mention. Pan. -Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; bronze medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904; Lippincott prize, PAFA 1915; hors
concours (jury of awards), P. -P.Exp.,
San F., 1915; popular prize. Corcoran
Gallery, Washington, 1919; Philadelphia
prize and Stotesbury prize, PAFA. 1921.
Work : "A Girl Sweeping." Pennsyl-
vania Academy, Philadelphia; "Tea
Leaves," Metropolitan Museum, New
York; mural decoration. Army and
Navy Club, Washington, D. C; "Nude,"
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston: "Inter-
ior," Cincinnati Museum; "Girl Comb-
ing Her Hair," Detroit Inst, of Arts:
"The Housemaid," Corcoran Gallery of
Art.
PAYNE, Edgar, 867 North Dearborn St.,
Chicago, 111.
P.__Born T^^ashburn. Mo.. March 1. 1882.
Pupil of AIC; chiefly self-taught. Mem-
ber: Palette and Chisel C. ; Chicago
SA; Int. Soc. A. L.; Calif. AC; 10
526
PAYNE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
PEIRCE
Painters of Los A.; Alumni AIC.
Chisel Club, 1913; gold medal, Sacra-
mento State Fair, 1918. Works: Mural
decorations American and Empress
Theatres, Chicago; Northern Hotel,
Billings, Mont.; Clay County Court
House. Brazil, Ind. ; Hendricks County
Court House, Danville, Ind.; Queen
Theatre, Houston, Tex.; "Hills of El
Toro," Nebraska Art Assoc, Lincoln;
"The Hills of Marin," Peoria (111.) So-
ciety of Allied Arts; "Pleasant Valley,"
Chicago Muncipal Art Commission pur-
chase; "The Restless Sea," Herron
Art Institute, Indianapolis.
PAYNE, Jeanne. See Mrs. Louis C. John-
son.
PEABODY, Grace Allen, 830 Park Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
PEABODY, Mrs. R. S., 940 Park Ave.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
PEACEY, Jess. See Lawson.
PEARCE, Edgar L(ewis), 3620 Washing-
ton Blvd., St. Louis, Mo.
P., E., T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Apl.
26, 1885. Pupil of Chase and Weir.
Member: Union Internationale des
Arts et des Lettres. Represented in
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts collection, Philadelohia; National
Academy of Design collection, New
York; Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh.
PEARSALL, Mrs. A. B., 92 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
PEARSON, Mrs. Jane Mumford, Feather
Farm, High Falls. Ulster Co., N. Y.
P. — Born Baltimore.
PEARSON, Joseph T., Jr., 5139 Wayne
Ave., Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
P., T.— Born Germantown, Feb. 6. 1876.
Pupil of J. Alden Weir and Wm. M.
Chase. Member: ANA; NA 1919;
Fellowship PAFA. Awards: Second
Hallgarten prize, NAD, 1911; hon. men-
tion. C. I. Pittsburgh, 1911; Sesnan
medal, PAFA. 1911; Inness medal,
NAD, 1915; gold medal, P. -P.. Exp.,
San F., 1915; Harris silver medal
and prize ($500), AIC 1915; Temple gold
medal, PAFA 1916; Stotesbury prize,
PAFA 1916; Beck gold medal, PAFA
1917; Saltus gold medal, NAD, 1918.
Instructor, Pennsylvania Academy of the
Fine Arts.
PEARSON, (Nils) Anton, 226 South
Washington St.. Lindsborg, Kan.
P.— Born Sweden. Mav 23. 1892. Punil
of BIrger 'Sandzen. Member: Smoky
Hill AC.
PEARSON, Ralph M., Ranches of Taos,
New Mexico.
E.— Born Angus, la.. May 27. 1883. Pu-
pil of AIC under C. F. Browne and Van-
derpoel. Member: ASL of Chi-
cago; Chicago SE: N.Y.SE.: Cal.AC;
Calif. P.M. ;. Calif. SE: Brooklvn SE.
Awards: Prize, Chicago SE, 1914;
silver medal for etching, P. -P.Exp.,
San F., 1915.; first prize for book-
plate, American Bookplate Soc, 1917.
W o r k in: New York Public Library;
Library of Congress, Washington, D.
C; Mechanics' Institute, Rochester,
N. Y. ; Art Institute of Chicago; Muse-
um of Fine Arts, Los Angeles; Chicago
University Library; Avery Library,
Columbia University, New York.
See Mrs. Christian
PEART, Caroline
Brinton.
M.
1160 Bay St..
PEBBLES, Frank
Alameda, Calif.
P.— Born Wyoming. N. Y., Oct. 16, 1839.
Pupil of NAD and Edwin White in New
York; G. P. A. Healy in Chicago.
Member: Chicago SA; Chicago Ar-
tists' G. ; Chicago AD (ex-pres.).
Award: Medal, San Francisco, 1877.
PECK, Anne Merriman (Mrs. Frank E.
Fite), 164 Waverly PL, New York. N. Y.
P., 1.— Born Piermont, N. Y., July 21,
1884. Pupil of Robert Henri and Irving
R. Wiles. Member: Guild of Free
Lance Artists; Whitney Club; S. Indp.
A. Specialty, children's portraits. Illus-
trated "Mother Goose Primer," "Every
Child's Fairy Book," etc.
PECK, Clara Elsene. See Mrs. Williams.
PECK, Henry J(arvis), 121 East 23rd
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, Warren,
R. I.
I., P. — Born Galesburg, 111.. June 10, 1880.
Pupil of Eric Pape and Howard Pyle.
Member: Alliance,
PECK, Julia, 80 West 40th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
PECK, Julia E., 3201 Conger St., Edison
Beach, Port Huron, Mich.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
PECK, Natalie, 50 Sixth Ave.; h. 12
West 92d St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Jersey City, N. J., Feb. 27,
1886. Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller.
Member: N. A. Women PS;
S.Indp.A. Work: "Storm Clouds," in
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
PEDDLE, Caroline. See Mrs. Ball.
PEETS, Orville Houghton, Woodstock,
N. Y.
P., E.— Born Cleveland, O. Pupil of
Baschet. Royer and Laparra in Paris.
Member: Salma. C. Award:
Hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1914.. Paint-
ing owned by French Government.
PEGRAM, Fred(erick), 11 Avenue Stu-
dios, Fulham Road; h. 67 Earls Court
Square, London, S. W. ; summer, Worl-
ington, Mildenham, Suffolk, England.
P., I., E.— Born London, Dec. 19, 1870.
Pupil of Frederick Brown. Member:
Graphic SA; Imperial Arts League.
Contributor to "Punch."
PEIRCE, H. Winthrop, 39 Pinckney St.,
Boston, Mass.
P., I. — Born Boston, Nov. 25, 1850. Pu-
pil of Boston Museum School under
Grundmann and RImmer; Bouguereau
and Robert-Fleury in Paris. Mem-
ber: Copley S. 1879 (v.-pres.); Boston
SWCP; S. Indp. A.; Chicago AG.
Work: in: John-Esther Gallery,
Andover: Phillips Academy, Andover,
Mass.; Bowdoin College, Brunswick,
Me.; Public Library, Maiden, Mass.
527
P EI X OTTO
WHO'S WHO IN ART
PERARD
PEIXOTTO, Ernest C(lifford), 137 East
66th St., New York, N. Y.; and Credit
Lyonnais, Paris, France.
I., P., W.— Born San Francisco, Cal.,
Oct. 15, 1869. Pupil of Constant, Le-
febvre and Doucet in Paris. Mem-
ber: ANA 1909; Mural P.; N.Y.Arch.
Lg. 1911; SI 1906; Salma.C; MacD.C.
(pres.); Allied AA; Societe des Artistes
Prangais. Awards : Hon. mention,
Paris Salon, 1895; chevalier of theLegion
of Honor, 1921. Work : Scenes from
"Le Morte d'Arthur" in Library of
Henry A. Everett, near Cleveland, O. ;
illustrations for Roosevelt's "Life of
Cromwell." Author: "By Italian 'Seas,"
"Romantic California"; "Our Hispanic
Southwest," "The American Front," etc.
Official artist, American Expeditionary
Forces, 1918. Director, Atelier of Paint-
ing', A. E. F. Art Training Center, Belle-
vue, France, 1919. Director, Dept. of
Mural Painting, Beaux Arts Inst., New
York.
PEIXOTTO, Mrs. Ernest, 137 East 66th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born in San Francisco. Pupil of
San F. A.A., and Delecluse. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS.
PEIXOTTO, George Da Maduro, Waldorf-
Astoria Hotel, New York, N. Y. ; sum-
mer, 21 Fairview Ave., Tuckahoe, N. Y.
P. — Born Cleveland, O. Pupil of
Meissonier and Munkacsy. Member:
Socl$t6 des Artistes Frangais.
Awards : Silver medal, Royal Acad-
emy, Dresden.
PELL, Ella Ferris, Beacon, N. Y.
P., S., I.— Born St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 18.
1846. Pupil of Cooper Union in New
York under Rimmer; Laurens, Ferdi-
nand Humbert and Gaston St. Pierre in
Paris. Work: "Salome" painting
owned by Boston Art Club; "Androme-
da" heroic statue.
PELTON, Agnes, 160 West 13th St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer. Culver Hill,
Southampton, L. L, N. Y.
P. — Born Stuttgart, Germany, of Amer-
ican parents, Aug. 22, 1881. Pupil of
Pratt Inst, under Dow; W. L. Lathrop,
Hamilton E. Field; and in Rome.
Member: N. A. Women PS; Inter.
Soc. AL.
PEMBER, Ada Humphrey, 103 Jackson
St., .Janesville. Wis.; summer, Tepee-
washta. Lake Kegonsa. Stoughton, Wis.
P.— Born Shopiere, Wis., Oct. 3, 1859.
Pupil of W. M. Clute and F. Fursman.
Member : Janesville AL; Wis. PS.
PEN FIELD, Edward, Pelham Manor,
N. Y.
T.. P. — Born Brooklyn, N. Y., June 2
1866. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: AWCS; SI 1901; Salma. C. 1905;
Specialty, posters and cover designs.
Author and illustrator of "Holland
Sketches" and "Spanish Sketches";
decorations for Rochester Country Club.
PENMAN. Edith, Van Dyck Studios. 939
Eighth Ave.. New York. N. Y. : summer,
Byrdcliffe. TVoodstock, Ulster Co., N. Y.
P., C. — Born London, England. Pupil
of R. Swain Gifford, Henry B. Snell.
Member: N. A. Women PS; 'SPNY;
NYWCC; Boston SAC; Alliance.
PENNELL, Joseph, Hotel Margaret,
Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, N. Y.
I., Etcher, W.— Born Philadelphia, Pa.,
July 4, 1860. Pupil of PAFA and Pa.
School of Industrial Art. Member:
ANA 1907, NA 1909; Nat.Inst.A.L.;
Phila. WCC (hon.); N.Y. Arch. Lg, 1894;
Salma. C; Phila. SE; New York SE;
SI; Inter. Soc. of Painters, Sculptors and
Gravers, London; Soc. of .Illustrators,
London; Royal Belgian Academy, assoc.
1914, member, 1917: Paris SAP; T Square
C; Societe des Peintres-Graveures
Francais; Paris Art Workers Guild, Lon-
don; Pa. Chapter AIA (hon.); Royal Inst.
British Architects (hon.); Fellowship
PAFA. Awards : Hon. mention,
Paris Exp., 1889; medal, AC Phila, 1892;
medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893;
gold medal, Paris Exp., 190O; hon. men-
tion, Paris Salon, 1901; silver medal,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; gold medal,
Dresden, 1903; Grand Prize, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; gold medal, LlSge, 1905;
Grand Prix, Milan, 1906; Barcelona, 1907;
Brussels. 1910; gold medal, Amsterdam,
1912; grand prize, London, 1913; grand
prize, Florence, 1915; medal, P.-P.Exp.,
San F., 1915. Represented In Luxem-
bourg and Cabinet aux Estampes, Paris;
Uffizi Gallery, Florence; Modern Gallery,
Venice; Modern Gallery, Rome; British
and South Kensington Museums, Lon-
don; Library of Congress, Washington;
Art Institute of Chicago; Brooklyn
Museum; Berlin, Dresden, and Munich
Galleries. Author: "Modern Illustra-
tion," "Life of J. McN. Whistler" (with
Mrs. Pennell); "The Graphic Art Ser-
ies," etc.
PENNIMAN, H(elen) A. F., 609 Cathe-
dral St., Baltimore, Md.; summer. Elk-
ridge, Md.
P., W.— Born New York, N. Y., Mar. 26,
1882. Pupil of Twachtman, Berkwith;
S. E. Whiteman. Everett L. Bryant,
and Anshutz, and 'Studied in Germany.
Member: S. Indn. A.
PENNOYER, A(Ibert) Sheldon, 152 West
55th St., New York, N. Y.; summer,
Litchfield, Conn.
P. — Born Oakland, Cal., Apr. 5, 1888.
Pupil of Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Acad-
emies Julian and Grande Chaumifere,
R^ne Menard and Lucien Simon Irt
Paris; Giuseppe Casciaro and Carlandl
in Italy; PAFA. Member: NAC.
San F. AA.
PEPPER, Charles Hovey, Fenway Stu-
dios, 30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.; h.
Concord, Mass.
P. — Born Waterville, Me.. Aug. 27, 1884.
Pupil of Chase in New York; Constant,
Laurens and Aman-Jean in Paris.
Member: NYWCC; Boston Vt^CC:
Coplev S. 1900; Boston AC; St. Botolph
C; New Haven PCC.
PERARD, Victor S(emon), 55 Charles
St., New York. N. Y.
Etcher. I. — Born Paris, France, Jan. 16,
1870. Pupil of NAD and ASL of New
York; Ecole des Beaux- Arts in Paris,
528
PERCY
WHO'S WHO IN ART
PERRY
under Gerome. Member: SI; Salma.
C. Instructor at Cooper Union. Spe-
cialty, character slcetches,
PERCY, Isabelle Clark (Mrs. George
Parsons West), 17 East 11th St., New
York, N. Y.; 9 Montague Terrace,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
I.— Born Alameda, Cal., Nov., 1882.
Pupil of Mark Hopkins Inst., San
Francisco; Dow and Snell in New
York; Brangwyn in England. Mem-
ber: Cal.SE; SanF.AA. Awards:
Hon. mention, California bookplate and
poster competitions; bronze medal for
etching, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
PERERA, Gino, 382 Commonweath Ave.,
Boston, Mass.
S.. P.— Born Siena, Italy, Aug. 2, 1872.
Pupil of Royal Academy, Rome; School
of Boston Museum; H. D- Murphy, Birge
Harrison and Ochtman. Member :
Boston AC; St. Botolph C; Copley S.;
Salma. C.
PERKINS, John U(re), 815 A St., N. E.,
Washington, D. C.
P.— Born Washington, D. C. Nov. 22.
1875. Pupil of Chase and Richard N.
Brooke. Member: S.Wash.A.
PERKINS, Lucy Fitch (Mrs. Dwight H.
Perkins), 2319 Lincoln St., Evanston. 111.
I., T.— Born Maples, Ind., July 12. 1865.
Pupil of Boston Museum School.
Member: Chicago SA. Author and
illustrator of "A Book of Joys," "The
Goose Girl." "The Dutch Twins." "Dan-
delion Classics," "Cornelia," etc.
PERKINS, Mary Smyth (Mrs. William F.
Taylor ">, Lumberville, Pa.
P. — Born Philadelphia. Pupil of
PAFA; Robert Henri; Philadelphia
School of Design under William Sartain;
Lawton Parker School, Cottet and Simon
in Paris. Member: Plastic C. ; Fel-
lowship PAFA; N. A. Women PS.
Award: Mary Smith prize, PAFA,
1907. Work: "Portrait of James L.
Miles," City Hall, Philadelphia, Pa.
PERLE, Henry, 5 Maspeth Ave., Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
P.— Born Germany, Feb. 24. 1872. Self-
taught. Member: S.Indp.A.
PEROT. Annie Levering. 1305 locust St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.; summer, Ft. Wash-
ington, Pa.
P.— Born Oct. 20, 1854. Pupil of An-
shutz, Breckenridge, Chase. Mem-
ber: Phila Alliance; Plastic C; Fel-
lowship PAFA.
PERRAULT, Mme. IVIarie, 292 Woodward
Ave., Detroit, Mich. (P.)
PERRETT, A. Louise, 316 South Grove
Ave., Oak Park, 111.
P., I.— Born Chicago, 111. Pupil of AIC;
Howard Pyle.
PERRETT, Galen Joseph, 51 West 10th
St., New York, N. Y.; h. 492 Mt. Pleas-
ant Ave., Newark, N. J.
I.— Born Chicago, 111., Sept, 14, 1875,
Pupil of AIC; Munich Art Academy,
Germany; Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: Salma.C; NYWCC.
PERRINE, Van Dearing, The Palisades,
Englewood, N. J,
P.— Born Garnett, Kan., Sept. 10, 1869.
Self-taught. Member: S.Indp.A.; P-G.
Awards : Silver medal, Charleston
Exp., 1902; hon. mention, CI Pitts-
burgh, 1903; silver medal, P.-P.Exp.,
San F., 1915. Work: "The Rob-
bers," Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh.
Experiments with color music.
PERRY, Clara Fairfield (Mrs, Walter
Scott Perry). 56 Cambridge PL, Brook-
lyn, New York, N. Y, ; summer, Elm-
croft. Stoneham, Mass.
P. — Born Brooklyn, N. Y. Pupil of ^
Walter Scott Perry, Henry B. Snell,
Ettore Caser. Member: Pen and
Brush C; Brooklyn SA.
PERRY, Clara G(reenleaf), 344 Boylston
St., Boston, Mass.
P., S.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
PERRY, Edith Dean Weir (Mrs. James
DeWolf Perry), Bishopes House, Provi-
dence, R. I.
Min.P. — Born New Haven, Conn., Aug.
17, 1875. Pupil of Yale School of Fine
Arts under her father, John F. Weir; of
Lucia Fairchild Fuller and of Adele
Herter. Member: Copley S. ; Provi-
dence AC. Award : Hon. mention,
Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901. Work:
"Virgin and Child," St. Paul's Church,
New Haven, Conn.; Tabernacle door,
Christ Church, West Haven, Conn.
Specialty, portraits, miniatures.
PERRY, Lilla Cabot (Mrs. Thomas S.
Perry), Fenway Studios, 30 Ipswich St.;
h. 312 Marlborough St., Boston, Mass.
P., W. — Born Boston. Mass. Pupil of
Cowles Art School under Dennis M.
Bunker and Robert W. Vonnoh in Bos-
ton; Julian and Colarossl academies and
at Alfred Stevens' studio in Paris.
Member: Boston GA (sec); Allied
A.Assoc.. London; Society des Artistes
Independants, Paris; Inter. Soc. AL;
Women's Inter, AC, Paris and London;
Nippon Bijitsu-in, Tokyo, Awards:
Silver medal. Boston, 1892; bronze medal,
St. T ouis Exp., 1904; bronze medal,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915, Work: "The
Young 'Cellist." Boston Museum of Fine
Arts, Author: "The Heart of the
Weed," "From the Garden of Hellas,"
"Impressions," etc.
PERRY. Raymond, 144 East 34th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Sterling, 111., 1876. Pupil
of AIC, Member: SI, 1912; Salma.
C, 1908. Work in St, Andrews'
Church, Pittsburgh; Memorial Library,
Hanover, Pa, Teacher in Illustrators'
School for Disabled Soldiers, New
York,
PERRY, R(oland) Hinton, 51 West 10th
St., New York, N. Y.
S., P.— Born New York, Jan. 25, 1870.
Pupil of Gerome, Delance, Callot, Chapu
and Puech in Paris, Member : NSS.
Work: "Fountain of Neptune," Library
of Congress, Washington; "Death of Si-
gurd," painting, Detroit Institute, Lang-
don doors, Buffalo Historical Society;
frieze. New Amsterdam Theatre. New
York; "Pennsylvania" on dome of Cap-
529
PERRY
WHO'S WHO !N ART
PEYTON
itol, Harrisburg; "Gen. Greene" and
"Gen. Wadsworth" at Gettysburg; "New
Tork State Memorial," Andersonville;
"Gen. Curtis," Ogdensburg; "Gen. Cas-
tleman," Louisville; "New York Monu-
ment." Chattanooga; "Benjamin Rush
Monument," Washington; monument to
38th Infantry, Syracuse, N. Y.
PERRY, Walter Scott. 56 Cambridge PL,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Blmcroft, Stoneham, Mass.
P., S., T.. W., L.— Born Stoneham, Mass.
Pupil of Langerfeldt, Higgins and Pierre
Millet; Mass. Normal Art School.
Member: NAC; Alliance; East-
ern AA. ; WD and MT Teachers.
Supervisor of drawing and art educa-
tion, public schools, Fall River, Mass.,
1875-79; and Worcester, Mass., 1879-87.
Director, School of Fine and Applied
Arts, Pratt Institute, since 1887. Au-
thor of "Egypt, the Land of the Tem-
ple Builders"; "With Azir Girges in
Egypt"; textbooks on art education.
PERRY, W(inlfred) A(nnette), 6172 Cha-
bot Road, Oakland, Calif.
P. — Born Wasepi, Mich. Pupil of San
Francisco School of Art and W. V.
Cahill and John Rich,
PESCHERET, Leon R., 64 East Van
Buren St.; h. 2261 Giddings St., Chi-
cago, 111.
Des. — Studied in London, and at AIC.
Member: Palette and Chisel C.
PETERS, C(harles) F(rederick), 412 East
50th St., New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Mt. Tremper, N. Y.
I., E. — Born Kristiania, Norway, Feb.
19, 1882. Cartoons in "Life"; illustra-
tions in "Scribner's," "Harper's,"
"Century."
PETERS, Charles Rollo, Monterey, Cal.;
and Bohemian Club, San Francisco, Cal.
P.— Born California, Apr. 10, 1862. Pu-
pil of Virgil Williams in San Francisco;
Ecole des Beaux-Arts under Gerome,
and of Boulanger and Lefebvre in Paris.
Member: Lotos C; Salma.C. 1901.
Awards: Bronze medal, Pan- Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904.
PETERS (Dewitt) Clinton, Studio 606,
1947 Broadway; h. 78 West 55th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I., T. — Born Baltimore, June 11, 1865.
Pupil of Ecole des Beaux-Arts under
G^rOme, and of Lefebvre, Boulanger and
Collin in Paris. Award: Bronze
medal, Paris Exp., 1889. Founder and
principal instructor, Clinton Peters Art
Classes, New York.
PETERSON, Elsa KIrpal, (Mrs. R. M.
Tower Peterson), 67 Hillside Ave.; h.
140 Barclay St., Flushing, N. Y.
S. — Born New York, N. Y., June 16,
1891. Pupil of Edith Woodman Bur-
roughs and J. E. Eraser. Member :
Alliance; ASL of N. Y.
PETERSEN, Martin, 437 West 59th St.,
New York, N. Y.; h. 325 Hillside Ave.,
West Nutley. N. J.
P.— Born Denmark, Nov. 23, 1870. Pu-
pil of NAD. Member: NYWCC;
Salma.C. 1906. Awards: Third Hall-
garten prize, NAD 1905; Beal prize,
NYWCC 1906; Inness prize, Salma.C.
19U7.
PETERSON, Jane, 58 West 57th St., New
York, N. Y.; and Elgin, 111.
P. — Born Elgin, 111. Pupil of Brangwyn,
Blanche and Sorolla. Member:
NYWCC; AWCS; N. A. Women PS;
SPNY; Wash. WCC; Conn. AFA; Pen
and Brush C; NAC. Awards: Water
color prize. Girls' Art Club, Paris;
hon. mention, Conn. AFA 1916; Fiagg
prize ($100), Conn. A. F. A., 1917;
hon. mention, NA Women PS, 1919.
Work: "Glimpse of the Grand
Canal," Art Association, Grand Rapids,
Mich.; Girls' Art Club, Paris; Brooklyn
Athletic Club; Public Schools, Evanston,
111.; Country Club, Torrington, Conn.;
Y. M. C. A, Elgin, 111.; Boise (Idaho)
Public Library. Instructor at Art
Students' League, 1914-1919.
PETREMONT, Clarice Marie, Shelton,
Conn.
P., L, C, T.— Born Brooklyn, New
York. Pupil of Marshall Fry and Paul
Cornoyer. Member: New Haven
PCC; Bridgeport AL; Boston SAC;
Alliance.
PETROVITZ, Milan, 723 Liberty Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
PEUGEOT, George l(ra), 693 Main St.;
h. 120 Highland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
P., L— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Nov. 26,
1869. PupU of Peter Gowans. Mem-
ber: Buffalo SA.
PEYRAUD, Elizabeth K., 1230 Judson
Ave., Highland Park, 111.
P. — M ember: Chicago SA; Chicago
WCC.
PEYRAUD, Frank C, 1608 Monroe Bldg.;
1230 Judson Ave., Highland Park, 111.
P.— Born Bulle, Switzerland, 1858. Pupil
of AIC; Ecole des Beaux- Arts, Bonnat,
Frieburg, in Paris. Member: Chi-
cago SA; Chicago WCC. Awards:
Fortnightly prize, AIC 1899; Butler
prize, AIC 1912; Municipal Art Lg.
purchase, AIC 1912; Chicago SA medal,
AIC 1912; Cahn hon. mention, AIC 1912;
Carr prize, AIC 1913; Grower prize, AIC
1915; bronze medal, P.-P.Exp., San F.,
1915; silver medal, Hamilton Club, Chi-
cago, 1920. Work in: Union League
Club, Chicago; Art Institute of Chicago
(Municipal AL collection); fresco in
Peoria Public Library; "After Rain,
Chicago," Friends of American Art,
Chicago, 111.
PEYTON, Alfred Conway, 33 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Dera Doon, British India,
Nov. 9, 1875. Pupil of South Kensing-
ton 'Schools, London, Eng. Member:
AWCS; NYWCC. Award: Silver
medal at Bombay, B. I.
PEYTON, Mrs. Alfred Conway. See Men-
zler-Peyton, Bertha S.
PEYTON. Ann Moon (Mrs. Philip B.
Peyton), 3804 Locust 'St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
P., I. — Born Charlottesville. Va., June
28, 1891. Pupil of George Bellows,
530
PFALTZGRAF
WHO'S WHO IN ART
PICCIRILLI
Robert Henri and W. M. Chase. Mem-
ber: Richmond AC.
PFALTZGRAF, R., 167 So. Warren Ave.,
Columbus, O.
p. — M ember: Pen and Pencil C, Co-
lumbus.
PFEIFFER, Fritz (Wllhelm), 69 Wiscon-
sin St.; h. 1614 Grand Ave., Milwaukee,
Wis. ^ „
P., I., C. — Born Adams County, Pa.,
June 3, 1889. Pupil of Henri, Chase and
Breckenridge. Member: Fellowship
PAFA.
PFEIFFER, Harry (R.), 539 West King
St., York, Pa.; summer, Delaware
Water Gap, Pa.
P,^ T. — Born Hanover, Pa., Oct. 19,
1874. Pupil of Char. C, ASL. of N.Y.,
PAFA.
PFIEFER, Herman, 25 East 26th St.,
New York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: SI.
PHARES, Frank, 218 Pine St., Mt. Holly,
N. J.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
PHELAN, Harold L(eo), 67 West 67th St. ;
65 Central Park West, New York, N. Y.
P._ T.— Born New York, N. Y., July 23,
1881. Pupil of H. W. Ranger.
PHELPS, Edith Catlin, 161 East 74th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Province-
town, Mass.
P., E. — Born New York City, April 16,
1875. Pupil of Hawthorne; Julian in
Paris. Member: Conn. AFA; N.A.
Women PS. Award : Hon. mention,
Conn. AFA, 1920.
PHELPS, Helen Watson, 58 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Attleboro, Mass. Pupil of
Julian Academy and Collin in Paris.
Member: N. A. Women PS; Prov-
idence AC; SPNY, Awards: Hon.
mention. Pan- Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
N. Y. Woman's AC prize, 1907; Filing
prize, N. Y. Woman's AC, 1909; Wa-
trous figure prize, N. A. Women PS,
1914; prize, N. A. Women PS, 1915.
PHILBIN, Clara, 2126 Auburn Ave., Cin-
cinnati, O.
S. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
PHILBRICK, Otis, 10 Hillcrest Parkway,
Winchester, Mass.
P.— Born Mattapan. Mass., Oct. 21, 1888.
Pupil of Major and De Camp. Mem-
ber: Boston SWCP.
PHILIPP, Robert, 15 East 87th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
PHILLIPS, Bert G., Taos, Taos Co., New
Mexico.
P., I., T.— Born Hudson, N. Y., July 15,
1868. Pupil of NAD and ASL in New
York; Constant and L-aurens in Paris.
Member: Taos Soc. of Artists (sec.)
Salma.C. Specialty, Indian subjects.
Work: Mural decoration, Polk County
Court House, Des Moines, Iowa.
PHILLIPS, Coles, New Rochelle, N. Y.
(I.)
PHILLIPS, Grace H., 121 Washington PL,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
PHILLIPS, Harriet S., 39 West 67th St.,
New York, N. Y.; summer, Hague-on-
Lake George, N. Y.
P., C— Born Rome, N. Y. Pupil of Fehr
In Munich; Simon in Paris. Mem-
ber: Kunstlerinen Verein, Munich
(hon.); NAC; N.Y. Soc. C; SPNY.
PHILLIPS, J. Campbell, 1108 Carnegie
Hall; 156 West 86th St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born New York, Feb. 27, 1873. Pu-
pil of ASL of N. Y. under Chase, Cllne-
dinst and Mowbray. Member:
Salma.C. 1905; Lotos C. Awards:
Isidor portrait prize, Salma. C, 1914.
Work: "The First Born," Corcoran
Gallery, Washington, D. C. ; "The Age
of Wonder," Albright Gallery, Buffalo,
N. Y.
PHILLIPS, J(ohn) H(enry), 681 Fifth
Ave.; h. 121 Washington PI., Babylon,
L. I., N. Y.
E., A., T.— Born Sun Prairie, Wis., Feb.
12, 1876. Member: Salma. C, Lg.
of N.Y.A. Award : Traveling Schol-
arship, Chicago Architectural Club,
1903. W^ o r k : Elizabethan Theater,
Upper Montclair, N. J.
PHILLIPS, S. George, 1537 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Phila. AC.
PHOENIX, Lauros M(onroe), 64 Burling
Lane, New Rochelle, N. Y.
Mural P.— Born Chicago. 111.. Feb. 23.
1885. Pupil of AIC; Woodstock Summer
School, F. Carlson. Member: Mural
P.; Minneapolis SFA; St. Paul AS; ASL
of Chicago; Minneapolis AS. Work:
"Rip Van Winkle," Grill Room, St.
Paul Hotel; "Aesculapidus," "The
Fountain of Youth" and "Old Herb
Woman," Lobby of Lowry Doctors'
Bldg., St. Paul, Minn.; "Minnehaha, **
L. S. Daroldson Bldg.; "Nine Fairy
Stories," New Grand Theatre, Minne-
apolis, Minn. Dean, Eastern Division,
Federal School of Commercial Design,
New York City.
PIAZZONI, Gottardo F. P., 712 Montgom-
ery St., San Francisco, Cal.; h. Belve-
dere, Marin Co., Cal.
P., E. — Born Intragna, Switzerland,
April 14, 1872. Pupil of San Francisco Art
Assoc; Julian Academy in Paris under
Laurens, Benjamin-Constant and Henry
Martin and Ecole des Beaux-Arts under
Gerome. Member: San F. AA; Cal.
SE. Represented in Palace of Fine
Arts, San Francisco, and Golden Gate
Park Museum, San Francisco; and Oak-
land (Calif.) Art Gallery.
PICCIRILLI, Attilio, 467 East 142d St.,
New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Massa, Italy, May 16, 1866.
Pupil of Accademia San Luca, Rome.
Came to XJ. S. 1888. Member: ANA
1909; N.Y. Arch.Lg. 1902; NSS 1902; Al-
lied AA. Awards: Bronze medal,
Pan-Am.Exp.. Buffalo, 1901; silver med-
al. St. Louis Exp., 1904; hon. mention.
Paris Salon. 1912; srold medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915; Widener gold medal,
PAFA, 1917. Work: "Maine Memo-
rial," New York; "MacDonough Mon-
531
PICCIRILLI
WHO'S WHO IN ART
PL ATT
ument," New Orleans; "Dancing Faun"
and "Head of a Boy," Fine Arts Acad-
emy, Buffalo.
PICCIRILLI, Furio, 467 East 142d St.; h.
1 Beach Terrace, Borough of the Bronx,
New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Massa, Italy, March 14, 1868.
Pupil of Accademia San Luca, Rome.
Came to U. S. 1888. Member: ANA;
NSS 1907; N.Y. Arch Lg. 1914 (assoc),
Awards : Hon. mention. Pan Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915.
PICKNELL, George W., R.F.D., 43, Nor-
walk. Conn.
P.— Born Springfield, Vt., June 26, 1864.
Pupil of Lefebvre and Constant. Mem-
ber: Salma. C. "Work: "Stock
Yard in Winter," Detroit Institute of
Arts.
PIELKE, Rolfe, care of Foster and Klei-
ser, 28 Valencia St., San Francisco, Cal.
(I.)
PIERCE, Anna Harriet, 402 Edgewood
Ave., New Haven, Conn.; summer,
South Britain, Conn.
P., I., W., T.— Born in South Britain,
Conn., May 17, 1880. Pupil of F. C.
Jones, George Maynard, Mora, K. H.
Miller, John F. Weir, Niemeyer, E. C.
Taylor.
PIERCE, Rowena Elizabeth, 328 Broad-
way, Providence, R. I.
S. — M ember: Providence AC.
PIERPONT, Clarence S., 1216 Turks Head
Bldg., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
PIETERSZ, Bertus, Hancock, N. H.
P., W., T. — Born Amsterdam, Holland,
Sept. 13, 1869. Studied in Rotterdam,
and under Harry W. Ranger. Mem-
ber: Lg. of N.Y.A. Work: "Cam-
panile," Springfield, Mass.
PIETRO, Mrs. S. C, 561 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y. (S.)
PIETZ, Adam, 512 West Clapier St., Ger-
mantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
S., Medalist.— Born Offenbach, Ger-
many, July 19, 1873. Studied at PAFA;
AIC ; and in Germany. Member:
Phila. Sketch C; Fellowship PAFA;
American Numismatic Soc; N. Y. Nu-
mismatic Soc. Work in Chicago Art
Inst.; Memorial Hall, Philadelphia, and
American Numismatic Soc. ; Navy Yard,
Phila., Admintstration Bldg.; Huston
Club, University of Pa.; Phila. Sketch
Club.
PIGOTT, Frank E., care Steck and Spel-
rein Lithographic Co., 65 West Houston
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
PINCOVITZ, H. A., 721 "Walnut St., Phil-
adelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
PIQUET, M. S., 206 St. Nicholas Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
PIRSON, Elmer (William), 53 West 72nd
St., New York, N. Y.
P.. I.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., July 26,
1888. Pupil of George Bridgman, James
Earle Eraser. Member : Guild of
Free Lance Artists.
PITKIN, Caroline W., 550 West 157th
St., New York, N. Y.
S. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
PITMAN, Elizabeth S., Wallingford, Ct.
P. — M ember: New Haven PCC.
PITMAN, Sophia L., Moses Brown School,
156 Pitman St., Providence, R. I.
P., T. — Born Providence, R. I. Mem-
ber: Providence AC; Providence WCC;
Copley S.
PITMAN, Mrs. Stephen Minot, 125 George
St., Providence, R. I,
P. — M ember: Providence AC; Provi-
dence WCC.
PLACE, Mrs. Vera Clark, 621 Kenwood
Parkway, Minneapolis, Minn.
P. — Born Minneapolis, Minn., Feb. 5,
1890. Pupil of Chase, Dufner, Richard
Miller, Antonio de la Gandere. Mem-
ber: Attic C. Minneapolis; Alumni
Minneapolis School of Art; Minneapolis
SFA. Awards : First and second
prizes, Minnesota State Art Exhibit.
PLANT, Olive, 1738 N Street, Washing-
ton, D. C.
P.— M ember: S. Wash. A.
PLASCHKE, Paul A., care Louisville
"Times," Louisville, Ky.
P., I. — Born Berlin, Germany, Feb. 2,
1878. Pupil of Cooper Union and ASL
of N. Y. Member: Soc. Ind. A.;
Louisville AL; Palette and Chisel C,
Chicago. Work in Chicago Art Inst. ;
St. Louis City Art Museum; John Her-
ron Art Inst., Indianapolis, Ind.
PLATT, Alethea Hill, 939 Eighth Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. Sharon, Conn,
P.— Born Scarsdale, N. Y. Pup?'/ of
Henry B. Snell, Ben Foster and ASL
of N. Y. ; Delecluse Academy in Paris.
Member: NYWCC; AWCS; N. A.
Women PS; NAC; Pen and Brush C;
SP. N.Y. ; Yonkers A A. Awards: First
prize for water color, N. Y. Woman's AC
1903; first prize Minnesota Art Assoc,
Faribault, 1909. Work: "Old World
Work Shop," Public Library, Fari-
bault, Minn; "An Old Garden," Ander-
son (Ind.) Art Gallery; portrait of
Judge Lewis C. Piatt, Court House,
White Plains, N. Y.
PLATT, Charles Adams, 101 Park Ave.;
h. 135 East 66th St., New York, N. Y.
P., Arch., Ldscp.Arch., W. — Born New
York, Oct. 1, 1861. Pupil of NAD and
ASL in New York; Boulanger and Le-
febvre in Paris. Member: SAA
1888; ANA 1897; NA 1911; Nat.Inst.A.L. ;
AWCS; N.Y. Etching C; London Soc.of
Painter-Etchers; N.Y.Chapter AIA;
Century Assoc. Awards : Webb
prize, SAA 1894; bronze medal, Paris
Exp., 1900; silver medal, Pan-Am.Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; medal of honor, N.Y.
Chapter AIA 1913. Author: "Italian
Gardens."
PLATT, Charles H., Jr., 43 Glover Ave.,
Yonkers, N. Y. (P.)
532
PLAUCHE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
POOLE
PLAUCHE, Leda Hincks, 1716 Esplanade
Ave., New Orleans, La.
P. — Born New Orleans, La., Dec. 30,
1887. Pupil of G. L. Viavant and Ells-
worth Woodward. Award : First
prize for collection of Louisiana birds,
Nat. Farm and Live Stock Show, New
Orleans, .1916. Specialty, Carnival and
pageant costume design.
PLEADWELL, Amy M (argaret), 82
Chestnut St., Boston, Mass.; summer,
Nahant, Mass.
P., T.— Born Taunton, Mass., Sept. 15,
1875. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art
School, Boston; Grand Chaumiere and
Colarossi Academies in Paris. Mem-
ber: Copley S; N. A. Women PS.
PLEUTHNER, Walter C, Scribner Bldg..
599 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. ; Scars-
dale, N. Y.
P. Arch., W.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Jan.
24, 1885. Pupil of Du Mond and Mora.
Member : S.Indp.A. ; American Cam-
ouflage; Art in Trades C; N. Y. Arch.
Lg. Designed Emerson Phonograph
Galleries, New York.
PLOWMAN, George T(aylor), 99 Garden
St., Cambridge, Mass.
I.. E. — Born Le Sueur, Minn., Oct. 19,
1869. Pupil of Douglas Volk in Minne-
apolis; Eric Pape in Boston; studied at
Royal College of Art, South Kensington,
London and in Paris. Member:
Chicago SE; N.Y. SE; Salma. C; Bos-
ton SE (pres.) ; Cal. SE; NAC. Award:
Bronze medal for etching, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915. Work: Etchings in Boston
Museum of Fine Arts; New York Public
Library; Library of Congress, Washing-
ton. Author: "Etchings and Other
Graphic Arts," 1914.
PLUMB, H(enry) G(rant), 149 East 39th
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, Sher-
burne, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Sherburne, April 15, 1847.
Pupil of NAD in New York; Ecole des
Beaux-Arts in Paris, under Gerome.
Member: Salma. C; A. Fund S.
Award: Hon. mention, Paris Exp.,
1899.
PLUMMER, Ethel M'Clellan (Mrs. Jacob-
sen), 112 West 11th St., New York,
N. Y.
P., I. — Born Brooklyn, N. Y. Pupil of
Henri and Mora. Member: Guild
of Free Lance Artists. Illustrates for
"Vanity Fair," "Life," "Shadowland."
PODOLSKY, Henry, 1335 Greenmount
Ave., Baltimore, Md. (P.)
POGANY, W(illiam) A(ndrew), 145 West
55th St.; h. 196 'Seaman Ave., New
York. N. Y.
P., S., I., E., C— Born Hungary, Aug.
24, 1882. Member: Salma, C.
Awards : Gold medals, Leipsig, and
Budapest Expositions; gold medal,
Panama-Pacific Exp., San Francisco,
1915. Work : Twelve paintings,
Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest.
Author and illustrator of Pogany'.s chil-
dren books.
POGSON, Mrs. Annie L,, 112& Corunado
Terrace, Los Angeles, Cal.
P.— M ember: Cal. AC.
533
POLASEK, Albin, Tree Studio Bldg., Chi-
cago, 111.
S., T. — Born Frenstat, Czechoslavakia.
Pupil of PAFA; American Academy in
Rome. Member: NSS. 1914 (assoc);
N. Y. Arch. Lg. ; SW Sc. (pres.,.
Chicago SA; Cliff Dwellers; Alumni
Asso. of the Fellowship of the Am. Acad
in Rome. Awards : Academy of
Rome scholarship, 1910-1913; hon. men-
tion, Paris Salon, 1913; Widener priz-
($500), PAFA, 1914; silver medal, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915; Logan medal, AIC,
1917; Shaffer prize, AIC. 1917; Hea-
prize, AIC, 1917; medal, Milwaukee Inst.,
1917. Work: "Fantasy," Metropoli-
tan Museum, New York; "F. D. Mil-
let" bust, Pennsylvania Academy of the
Fine Arts, Philadelphia; "Sower," Chi-
cago Art Institue; and in the Det^'
Institute of Arts. Head of Sculpture
Department, Chicago Art Institute.
POLLEY, Frederick, 371 South Emerson
Avenue, Indianapolis. Ind.
P., E.— Born Union City, Ind., Aug. 15,
1875. Pupil of Corcoran Art School,
Washington; Herron Art Inst., Indian-
apolis, under William Forsyth. Mem-
ber: Ind. AC. Instructor of art at
Technical High School, Indianapolis,
Ind.
POLONYI, John, 434 East 15th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
POLOWETSKI, Charles Ezekiel, 47 Fifth
Ave., New York, N. Y,
P. — Born in New York. Pupil of Bon-
net in Paris. Member: Paris AAA;
Salma. C.
POOKE, Marion Louise, Fenway Studios,
Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.; h. 22 Win-
nemay St., Natick, Mass.
P., I. ,T.— Born Natick, Mass. Pupil of
Mass. Normal Art 'School, Boston ;
School of the Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston. Me m b e r : Conn. AFA.
Awards: Silver medal, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915; Hudson prize, Conn. AFA,
1917; hon. men., N.A. Women PS, 1921.
Instructor in art, Abbot Academy,
Andover, Mass.; and Walnut Hill
School, Natick, Mass.
POOLE, Bert. 298 Edgehill Road, East
Milton, Mass.
P., I., W.— Born North Bridgewater
(now Brockton), Mass., Dec. 28, 1853.
Pupil of Tommaso Juglaris and evening
art schools in Boston. Member: Cop-
ley S; Artist-Designers Lg. of New
England. Specialty, panoramic views in
color. Work: "City of Cambridge";
"Big Creek Panorama," Caribou, Calif.;
"Panorama," Kelsey City, Fla; water
color in Cambridge City Hall; repre-
sented in Boston Public Library, etc.
POOLE, Frederic Victor, 65 East Elm
St., Chicago, III.
P., I., C, T.— Born Southampton Hants.
England. Pupil of Frederick Brown in
London. Member: Chicago SA.
Work: "Portrait of President Low-
den", Toronto University. Illustrates
for magazines.
POOLE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
POSTGATE
POOLE, H(oratio) Nelson, 712 Mont-
gomery St.. San Francisco, Calif.
P., L, E. — Born Haddonfield, N. J., Jan.
16, 1885. Pupil of PAFA. Member:
Calif. SE; Chicago SE.
POOR, Henry V(arnum), Pamona, Rock-
land Co., N. Y.
P., T.— Born in Kansas, Sept. 30, 1888.
Pupil of Slade School and of Walter
Sickert in London; Julian Academy in
Paris. Member: San Francisco SA;
Calif. AC. Award: Walter purchase
prize ($300), San P. AA, 1918.
POOR, Henry Warren, Boston Normal
School; h. 23 Oakland St., Medford,
]Vl3.SS,
p., L., W., T. — Born Boston, Mass., Jan.
10, 1863. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art
School; studied in Paris. Member:
Boston AC.
POORE, Henry R(ankln), 45 Ridge St.,
Orange, N. J.; summer, Lyme, Conn.
P., I., W., T. — Born Newark, N. J.,
March 21, 1859. Pupil of Peter Moran
and PAFA in Philadelphia; NAD in
New York; Luminals and Bouguereau
in Paris. Member: ANA 1888;
Phila.Sketch C; ACPhila.; Salma.C;
Lotos C; Union Inter.des Beaux- Arts
et des Lettres; Fellowship PAFA, 1916;
MacD.C. ; NAC. Awards: First prize
($2,000), >\merican Art Association;
second Hallgarten prize, NAD, 1888;
bronze medal, Pan-Amer. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
gold medal, American Art Soc, Phila.,
1906; gold medal. Buenos Aires, 1910;
silver medal, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915.
Work : "Night of the Nativity." Fine
Arts Academy, Buffalo; "The Shore,"
City Museum, St. Louis; "In the
Meadow," Art Association. Indianapolis;
"Old English 'Stag Hound," Worcester
Museum. Author: "Pictorial Composi-
tion"; "The Pictorial Figure"; "The
Conception of Art."
POPE, Alexander, 125 Tremont St., Bos-
ton, Mass.; h. 1013 Beacon St., Brook-
line, Mass.; summer, Crow Point, Hing-
ham, Mass.
P., S. — Born Boston, March 25, 1849.
Member: Copley S. 1893; Boston
AC. Published "Upland Game Birds
and Water Fowl of the United States."
At first painted and modeled animals;
since 1912 chiefly portrait painter.
POPE, Mrs. Marion Hoiden, 854 Walker
Ave.. Oakland, Calif.
P., E. — Born San Francisco. Calif. Pupil
of A. Mathews and Whistler. Mem-
ber: San F. AA.; Calif. SE. Work:
Three mural decorations in the Carnegie
Library, Oakland, Calif.
POPINI, Alexander, 11 East 8th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., I. — M ember: Salma. C.
POPOFF, Andrew P., 121 Jamaica Ave.,
Flushing, L. I., N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
POPOFF, Olga. See Mrs. Miiller.
PORTER, Bruce, 944 Chestnut 'St., San
Francisco. Cal.
Mural P., S., W. — Born San Francisco,
Feb. 23, 18G5. Studied in San Francisco,
England and France. Member: Am.
PS. Award : Chevalier Legion of
Honor of France. Work: Designed
"Stevenson Memorial," San Francisco;
stained glass and mural paintings in
churches and public buildings of Cali-
fornia. Author: "The Arts in Cali-
fornia," etc.
PORTER, Charles Ethen, Rockville, Conn,
P.— M ember: Conn.AFA.
PORTER, James T(ank), 412 East 37th
St., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Tientsin, China, Oct. 17. 1883.
Pupil of Robert Aitkin. Member:
ASL of N.Y. Work: "Portrait bust
of James W. Porter," "Portrait relief
of my Mother," owned by Beloit Col-
lege, Wis.
PORTER, Love, 12 East 30th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.~M ember: S.Indp.A.
PORTER, IVI(ary) K(ing), 1761 Q St.,
Washmgton, D. C. -^ ,
Min.P.— Born Batavia, 111., June 8, 1865
Pupil of Volk; ASL of Washington. D.
C. Member: Wash. WCC; Wash.
AC.
''^'^J'^'^'. Raymond A(verm), Massachu-
setts Normal Art School, Boston; h.
Dana Hill Apts., 331 Harvard St., Cam-
bridge, Mass.
^^~^°P Hermon, N. Y., Feb. 18, 1883.
Member: Boston SAC; Copley S
Work: Memorial to President Tyler.
Richmond, Va.; statue, "The Green
Mountain Boy," Rutland, Vt. ; Victory
Memorial, Salem, Mass.; World War
Memorial, Commonwealth Armory, Bos-
ton, Mass.
PORTNOFF, Alexander, 703 Walnut St.,
h. 23rd St. and Fairmont Ave., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
S., T.— Born in Russia in 1887. Pupil
of Charles Grafly; PAFA. Member-
Fellowship PAFA; Graphic SC of Phila-
delphia. Awards : Cresson Euro-
pean Scholarship, PAFA, 1912 and 1913;
hon. mention, P. -P. Exp., San Fran-
cisco, 1915.
POST, May Audubon, 4446 Sansom St..
Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I. — Born in New York City. Pupil of
PAFA under Chase. Beaux, Grafly and
Breckenridge; Drexel Inst, under How-
ard Pyle; Lucien Simon in Paris.
Member: Fellowship PAFA; Phila
WCC; Plastic C; S.Indp.A. Awards:
Traveling scholarships, PAFA: gold
medal, ACPhila. 1903.
POST, W(illiam) Merritt, West Morris
Conn.
Ldscp.P. — Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec
11, 1856. Pupil of Frost Johnson; ASL
of N. Y. under Beckwnn. Member-
ANA 1910; AWCS: NYWCC; A. Fund S.
(treas.); Salma.C. 1900; Conn.AFA,
Award : Hon. mention, Pan-Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901. Work: "Landscape,"
Newark Museum Association.
POSTGATE, M. J., 5 St. Francis Place,
Brooklyn, N. Y. (P.)
534
POTTER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
POWELL
POTTER, Bessie. See Mrs. Robert Von-
iioh.
POTTER, E(dward) C(lark), 108 North
St., Greenwich, Conn.
S.— Born New London, Conn., Nov. 26.
1857. Member: SAA 1894; NSS 1893;
ANA 1905, NA 1906; N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1898;
Nat.Inst.A.L. Award: Gold medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904. Specialty, animals.
Work with D. C. French: "Gen. Grant,"
Fairmount Park, Philadelphia; "Wash-
ington," Paris and Chicago; "Gen.
Hooker," Boston. Alone: "Fulton," Li-
brary of Congress, Washington; "Gov.
Blair," Lansing, Mich.; "Gen. Slocum,"
Gettysburg; "Sleeping Fawn," Art In-
stitute of Chicago; equestrian statue of
Gen. Phil Kearny, Arlington Cemetery,
Washington, D. C.
POTTER, H(arry) S(pafford), 539 West
112th St., New York, N. Y.
1.— Born Detroit, Mich., 1870. Pupil of
Constant, Laurens and Jules Simon in
Paris. Member: SI 1910; Paris AAA.
POTTER, Martha J(ulia), 288 Dwight St.,
New Haven High School, New Haven,
Conn.
P., T.— Born Essex, Conn., Jan. 14, 1864.
Pupil of J. H. Niemeyer, John F. Weir,
A. W. Dow, Marshall Fry. Member:
N. H. Paint and Clay C; Conn. AFA;
Eastern Arts Asso.
POTTER, Mary Knight, 184 Boylston St.;
h. 66 Chestnut St., Boston. Mass.
P., W.— Born Boston. Pupil of Metro-
politan Museum School and ASL in New
York; Cowles Art School in Boston;
Julian Academy in Paris. Member :
Copley S., Boston; Author: "Love in
Art," "Art of the Louvre," "Art of the
Vatican," "Art of the Venice Acad-
emy," etc.
POTTER, IVl. Helen, 198 Waterman St.,
Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence WCC.
POTTER, Nathan D(umont), 149 Sixth
Ave.; h. 92 Riverside Drive, New York,
N. Y.; summer, 108 North St., Green-
wich, Conn.
P., S.— Born Enfield, Mass., Apl. 30,
1893. Pupil of D. C. French and Robert
Reid. Work: Clock, eagles, East
Ohio Gas Co., Cleveland; Clock, figures,
Greenwich Trust Co., Greenwich, Conn.
POTTER, William J., 22 Lake Ave.,
Broadmoor, Colorado Springs, Colo.
P., T.— Born Bellport, Pa., July 14,
1883. Pupil of PAFA, and of Walter
Siebert, in London.
POTTHAST, Edward H(enry), 222 Cen-
tral Park South, New York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Cincinnati, O., June 11, 1857.
Pupil of Cincinnati Academy; studied
in Antwerp, Munich and Paris. Mem-
ber: SAA 1902; ANA 1899, NA 1906;
AWCS; NYWCC, Salma. C, 1895; Lotos
C; Allied AA; Cincinnati AC. (hon.).
Awards: Clarke prize, NAD 1899;
Evans prize, AWCS 1901; Inness prize,
Salma.C. 1904; silver medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; Morgan prize, Salma.C. 1904;
Inness prize, Salma.C. 1905; Hudnut
prize ($200), AWCS 1914; silver medal,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915. Work
"Dutch Interior," Cincinnati Museum;
"On the Beach" and "Bathers," Brook-
lyn Institute Museum; "The Pilot";
Hackley Art Gallery, Muskegon, Mich.
"A Holiday," Chicago Art Institute.
POTTS, Wdliiam) Sherman, 45 East 59th
St.. New York, N. Y.
Port. P., Min.P.— Born Milburn, N. J..
July 29, 1876. Pupil of C. N. Flagg in
Hartford; PAFA; Laurens and Constant
in Paris. Member: Conn. AFA; AS
Min.P.; Lg. of N.Y.A.
POUPELET, Jane, 30 rue Dutot, Paris,
France.
S. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
POUSETTE-DART, Nathaniel J., Val-
halla, N. Y.
P., S., E., T., L.— Born St. Paul, Minn.,
Sept. 7, 1886. Pupil of St. Paul Art
School; Henri and MacNeil in New
York; PAFA. Member: Artists'
Soc, St. Paul Inst.; Gargoyle C.
Awards : Cresson Scholarships, 1909
and 1910; Toppan prize, 1910, all at
PAFA; hon. mention for painting and
second prize for etching, 1913; third
prize for painting and first prize for
etching, 1914; all from Minnesota State
Art Society; hon. mention for painting,
St. Paul Inst., 1915; first prize for paint-
ing, Minnesota State Art Society, 1916.
Director of art department at St. Cath-
erine's College, St. Paul, Minn.; St.
Benedict's College, St. Joseph, Minn.,
and Minnesota College, Minneapolis,
Minn.
POWELL, Arthur J. E., 59 East 59th St..
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Vanwert, O., Dec. 11, 1864.
Pupil of San Francisco School of De-
sign; St. Louis School of Fine Arts;
Julian Academy, Toudouze and Fer-
rier in Paris. Member: ANA, 1921;
Salma. C. 1904; Paris AAA; A. Fund S. ;
Allied AA; NAC (life); NYWCC.
Awards : Vezin prize ($100), Salma.
C, 1913; Ranger Purchase prize, NAD,
1921.
POWELL, Caroline A(melia), 121 West
Carrillo St., Santa Barbara, Calif.
Wood Engr. — Born Dublin, Ireland. Pu-
pil of W. J. Linton and Timothy Cole;
studied drawing at Cooper Union and
NAD in New York. Member: Soc.
of American Wood Engr. Awards:
Bronze medal, Columbian Exp., Chi-
cago, 1893; silver medal. Pan- Am. Exp.,
Buffalo. 1901. Work in: Boston Mu-
seum of Fine Arts; New York Public
Library; Springfield (Mass.) Public Li-
brary; Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh.
POWELL, Doane, 2149 South 33rd St.,
Omaha, Nebr.
I.— Born Omaha, Nebr., March 4, 1881.
Studied in France. Member: Omaha
AG. Cartoonist on "Omaha Bee."
POWELL, Ella IVIay, 639 Addison St.,
Chicago, 111.
P. — Born Davenport. la., Apl., 1879. Pu-
pil of Collin and Courtois in Paris.
POWELL, Lucien Whiting, Purcellville,
Va.
P.— Born in Virginia, Dec. 13, 1846.
Pupil of PAFA; London School of Art;
535
POWERS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
PRINCE
studied in Rome, Venice and Paris.
Member: S. Wash. A.; Wash.WCC.
Award: Parsons prize, S. Wash. A.
1903. Work: "The Afterglow," and
"Grand Canyon, Arizona," Corcoran
Gallery, Washington; "Grand Canyon
of the Yellowstone River," National
Gallerv. Washington.
POWERS, John M., 154 Nassau St., New
York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: SI.
POWERS, Marion (Mrs. W. A. Kirkpat-
rick). Fenway Studios, 30 Ipswich St.,
Boston, Mass.; summer, Friendship,
Me.
P. — Born London, England, of American
parents. Pupil of Garrido in Paris.
Member: N. A. Women PS. Awards:
liippincott prize, PAFA, 1907; silver
medal, Buenos Aires Exp., 1910; gold
medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915. Work:
."Tresors," in Luxembourg, Paris, bought
from Salon, 1904; mural decoration for
Canadian Pacific Railway at Vancou-
ver, B. C.
PRAHAR, Renee, 45 Christopher St., New
York, N. Y.
S. — Born in New York. Member: N.
A. Women PS.
PRASUHN, John G., 1310 Hiatt St., In-
dianapolis, Ind.
S.— M ember: Ind. SS.
PRATHER, Ralph Carlyle, 2795 E. 16th
Ave.; P. O. Box 1274, Denver, Colo.;
summer, Estes Park, Colo.
I. — Born Franklin, Pa., Nov. 4, 1889.
PRATT, Philip H(enry), School of Fine
and Applied Arts, Pratt Inst.; h. 224
Willoughby Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
P., I., T. — Born Kansas City, Mo., Aug.
10, 1888. Pupil of St. Louis School FA;
Phila. Industrial Art School; South
Kensington, London. Member: 2x4
Soc; St. L. AG. Work: Twelve
mural panels for Wisconsin State
Capitol.
PRECHT, Fred A., 70 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
PRELLWITZ, Edith Mitchill (Mrs. Henry
Prellwitz), Peconic, L. I., N. Y,
P. — Born South Orange, N. J., Jan. 28.
1865. Pupil of ASL under Brush and
Cox; Julian Academy in Paris under
Bouguereau, Robert-Fleury and Cour-
tois. Member: SAA 1898; ANA 1906;
N.Y. Woman's AC. Awards: Second
Hallgarten prize, NAD 1894; Dodge
prize, NAD 1895; medal, Atlanta Exp.,
1895; bronze medal, Pan-Am.Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901.
PRELLWITZ, Henry, Peconic, L. I., N. Y,.
P., T.— Born New York, Nov. 13, 1865.
Pupil of T. W. Dewing and ASL in
New "iork; Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: SAA 1897; ANA 1906, NA
1912; Salma. C. 1903; Century Assoc.
Awards : Third Hallgarten prize,
NAD 1893; bronze medal, Pan-Am.Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; silver medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; Clarke prize, NAD 1907.
PRENDERGAST, Charles E., 50 Wash-
ington Sq., New York, N. Y.
S., E., C. — Born Boston, Mass., May 27,
1868. Member: Copley S.; S.Indp.A.
James M., Bellport, L. I.,
PRENDERGAST, Maurice B(razil), 50
South Washington Square, New York,
N. Y.
P., I.— Born Boston, Mass., Oct., 1861.
Pupil of Academy Julian, Laurens and
Blanc in Paris. Member: NYWCC;
Copley S., 1898; Boston WCC; Boston
GA; Am. PS (pres., 1914); S.Indp.A.;
Lg. of N.Y.A.; New Soc. A. Award :
Bronze medal for water color, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
PRESTON,
N. Y.
I. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
PRESTON, Mary Wilson (Mrs. James M,
Preston), 22 West 9th St., New York,
N. Y.
I. — Born New York, Aug. 11, 1873. Pu-
pil of ASL of N. Y. and of NAD;
Whistler school in Paris. Member:
SI 1904 (assoc). Award: Bronze
medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
PRICE, Anna, 145 Greenway, Forest Hill
Garden, L. I., N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
PRICE, C. S., Belvedere, Calif. (P., L)
PRICE, Edith Ballinger, 7 Arnold Ave.,
Newport; summer, "The Acorn", Wake-
field, R. I.
P., I., W. — Born New Brunswick, N. J.,
Apl. 26, 1897. Pupil of P. L. Hale, A.
R. James, Helena Sturtevant, Geo. May-
nard and Thos. Fogarty. Member:
Newport AA. Work: Author and
illustrator of "Blue Magic"; "Silver
Shoal Light"; "Us and the Bottleman";
"The Happy Venture."
PRICE, Eugenia, 202 West French Place,
San Antonio, Tex.
P., T. — Born Beaumont, Tex., Jan. 29,
1865. Pupil of St. Louis School FA;
AIC; Julian Academy in Paris. Mem-
ber : Alumni AIC; Chicago AC; Texas
FAS; Chicago S. Min. P.
PRICE, Gray. See Mrs. Merrels.
PRICE, M. Elizabeth, 10 East 9th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. New Hope, Pa.
P., T. — Born Martinsburg, West Va.
Pupil Pennsylvania Museum and School
of Industrial Art, PAFA. Member:
Fellowship PAFA; Plastic C. ; N. A.
Women PS; Whitney Studio Club; Lg.
of N.Y. A. Director of Neighborhood
Art School of Greenwich House.
PRICE, Margaret Evans, 16304 Clifton
Blvd., Cleveland, O. ; h. East Aurora,
N. Y.
P., I.— Born Chicago, 111., Mar. 20, 1888.
Pupil of Mass. Normal Art School, De-
camp, and Major. Illustrator of chil-
dren's books.
PRICE, Mary Roberts Ball (Mrs. Joseph
Price), 5001 Frankford Ave., Philadel-
phia, Pa.
P. — Member: Fellowship PAFA
(assoc); Plastic C.
PRICE, Norman, 187 Riverside Drive,
New York, N. Y.
I. — ^M ember: SI.
PRINCE, Ethel, The Portner, Washing-
ton, D. C.
P. — M ember: S.Wash.A.
536
PRINCE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
QUIMBY
PRINCE, William Meade, 111 East 10th
St., New York, N. Y.; summer, Mil-
ford, Conn.
I.— Born Roanoke, Va., July 9, 1893.
Pupil of N. Y. School of Fine and Ap-
plied Art. Member: Guild of Free
Lance Artists; Salma. C.
PRIOR, Charles M., 571 W. 139th St.,
New York, N. Y.
I., P.. E,., D.. T.— Born New York, Dec.
15, 1865. Pupil of E. M. Ward and
NAD. Member: S. Indp. A.
PRIZER, Agnes I., 813 O'Fallon Ave.,
Dayton, Ky.
P.^ — M ember : Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
PRIZER, Tillie Neville, Westport. Conn.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
PROCTOR, A(lexander) Phimister, 168
East 51st St., New York City; 433 Mel-
ville Ave., Palo Alto, Calif.
S., P. — Born Bozanquit, Ont., Canada,
Sept. 27, 1862. Pupil of NAD and ASL
in New York; Puech and Injalbert in
Paris. Member: ANA 1901, NA
1904; SAA 1895; AWCS; N.Y.Arch.Lg.
1899; NSS 1S93; Nat.Inst.AL; A.Aid S.;
Century Assoc; Bohemian C, San Fran-
cisco. Awards : Medal, Columbian
Exp., Chicago, 1893; Rinehart scholar-
ship to Paris, 1895-1900; gold medal,
Paris Exp., 1900; gold medal for
sculpture and bronze medal for paint-
ing, St. Louis Exp., 1904; N.Y.Arch.Lg.
medal, 1911; gold medal. P.-P.Exp., San
F., 1915. Specialty, Western subjects.
Work: "Panthers," Prospect Park,
Brooklyn, N. Y. ; "Puma," "Fawn," "Dog
with Bone" and "Fate," Metropolitan
Museum, New York; "Indian Warrior,"
Brooklyn Museum; "Tigers," Princeton
Univ.; Buffaloes and Tigers on bridges,
Washington, D. C; "Moose," Carnegie
Inst., Pittsburgh; "Pioneer," University
of Oregon, Eugene; Louis McKinley
monument, Buffalo; "Broncho Buster,"
Denver Civic Center; "On War Trail";
equestrian statue of Col. Theodore
Roosevelt, Portland, Ore; "Circuit
Rider," State House, Salem, Ore.
PROTZMANN, George, 296 East 162d St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
PUGH, Mrs. Elizabeth Worthington, 1118
Cypress Ave., Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
PULLINGER, Herbert, 1430 South Penn
Square, Philadelphia.
I., P.— Born Philadelphia, Aug. 5, 1S78.
Pupil of PAFA under McCarter and
Anshutz. Member: Fellowship
PAFA; Phila. Sketch C; Phila. WCC.
PULSIFER, Janet D., 32 Argyle Park,
Buffalo, N. Y. (P.)
PURDIE, Evelyn, 383 Harvard St., Cam-
bridge, Mass.
Min.P. — Born Smyrna, Asia Minor. Pu-
pil of Boston Museum School under
Grundmann; Carolus-Duran, Henner
and Mme. Debillemont-Chardon in
Paris. Member: Woman's Inter.Art
Society, London and Paris; Copley S. ;
Pa.S.Min,.P.: Boston GA.
PUREFOY, Heslope, 27 Charlotte St.,
Asheville, N. C.
Min. P.— Born Chapel Hill, N. C, June
17, 1884. Pupil of Alice Beckington and
Lucia Fairchild Fuller. Member:
Pa.S. Min.P.
F>URVIS, William G., Maywood, 111.
P. — M ember: Chicago SA.
PUSHMAN, Hovsep T., 10 Ave. Perceval,
Paris, France; and Fine Arts Bldg.,
Chicago, 111.
P. — Pupil of Lefebvre, Robert-Fleury
and Dechenaud in Paris. Member:
Cal. AC; Paris AAA. Awards: Third
class medal, Paris Salon, 1914; Acker-
man prize, Calif. AC, 1918.
PUTHUFF, Hanson (Duvall), 161 N. Col-
lege View Ave., Eagle Rock, Calif.
P.— Born Waverly, Mo., Aug. 21, 1875.
Pupil of University Art School, Den-
ver, Col. Member: Calif. AC; San F.
AA; Ten Painters of Los Angeles.
Awards: Silver medal, Pan.-
Calif. Exp., 'San Diego, 1916; first prize,
Calif. AC, 1916. Work: "Majestic
Oaks," Exposition Park Museum, Los
Angeles, Calif.; "California Landscape,"
Artists' Club, Denver, Col.
PUTNAM, Arion, 757 South Los Angeles
'St., Los Angeles. Calif.
P.— M ember: Calif. AC.
PUTNAM, Arthur, care of Macbeth Gal-
lery, 450 Fifth Ave., New York, N, Y.
S.— Member: NSS 1913. Award:
Gold medal. P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
Work: "Snarling Jaguar," Metropoli-
tan Museum. New York.
PUTNAM, Miss Brenda, 49 West 12th St.,
New York, N. Y.
S., T. — Born Minneapohs, Minn., June
3, 1890. Pupil of Bela Pratt, J. E.
Eraser and Charles Grafly. Member:
NSS; N. A. Women PS. Award: Hon.
mention Chicago Art Institute, 1917.
PUTNAM, Stephen G(ree!ey), College
Point, Queens, New York, N. Y.
Wood Engr. — Born Nashua, N. H., Oct.
17, 1852. Studied drawing at Brooklyn
Art Assoc, and ASL of N. Y. ; pupil of
W. H. Herrick. Frank French and E.
J. Whitney. Member: AI Graphic
A. Awards: Bronze medal, Paris
Exp., 1889; medal, Columbian Exp.,
Chicago, 1893; bronze medal, Paris
Exp., 1900; silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901.
PYLE, W. Scott, 375 Park Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
QUANCHI, Leon William, 119 East 23rd
St.; h. 66 East 120th St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born New York City, Sept. 23, 1892.
Pupil of G. deF. Brush; F. C. Jones;
Douglas Volk.
QUEST, E. Eloise, 258 Ryerson St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y. (P.)
QUIMBY, Fred G., Trinity Court, Boston,
Mass.
P. — M ember: Boston AC.
537
QUINLAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
RAND
QUINLAN, Will J., 333 Warburton Ave.,
Yonkers, N. Y.
P., Etcher. — Born Brooklyn, N. Y., June
29, 1877. Pupil of J. B. Whittaker at
Adelphi College; NAD in New York
under Maynard and Ward; architecture
at Pratt Inst. Member: Salma.C. ;
Chicag-o SE; N. Y. SE; Cal. SE; New
Haven PCC; Brooklyn SE; Calif. P.M.
Awards : Shaw black and white
prize, Salma. C. 1913; Shaw etching
prize, Salma. C. 1913 and 1914. Work
in: New York Public Library; Oakland
(Cal.) Public Museum.
QUINN, Edmond I., 207 East 61st St.,
New York, N. Y.
S., P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil of
Eakins in Philadelphia; Injalbert in
Paris. Member: ANA; NSS 1907;
N.Y. Arch. Lg. 1911; Nat. Inst. A.L.
Award: Silver medal, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915. Work: Statue, "John
Howard," Williamsport, Pa.; statute,
"Zoroaster," Brooklyn Institute of Arts
and Sciences; reliefs on "King's Moun-
tain (S. C.) Battle Monument"; Bust of
Edgar Allan Poe, Fordham, New York;
figures on Pittsburgh (Pa.) Athletic
Club; "Nymph," statuette, Metropolitan
Museum, New York; statute of Maj.
Gen. John E. Pemberton, Vicksburg
(Miss.) National Military Pk.; statute
of Edwin Booth as "Hamlet," Gramercy
Park, New York; bust of Prof. Hooper,
Brooklyn Museum.
QUINTON, Mrs. W. W. See Sage, Cor-
nelia.
QUISTGAARD, J. von Rehiing, Oyster
Bay, L. I., N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
RAAB, George, 438 Jefferson Ave., Mil-
waukee, Wis.
P., S., T.— Born Sheboygan, Wis., Feb.
26, 1866. Pupil of Richard Lorenz in
Milwaukee; C. Smith in Weimar; Cour-
tols in Paris. Member: Milwaukee
AS; Wis. PS. Award: Medal, Mil-
waukee Art Inst., 1917. Work: "The
Lone Pine," St. Paul Institute; "The
Veil of Snow," Milwaukee Art Inst.
Curator, Layton Art Gallery.
RADITZ. Lazar, 1520 Chestnut St.; h. ISt)
North 20th St., Philadelphia, Pa.; sum-
mer, Pointe-au-Pic, P. Q., Canada.
P.— Born Dvinsk, Russia, Apl. 15, 1887.
Pupil of Chase and Tarbell. Mem-
ber: Fellowship PAFA; Phila. AC.
Awards : Bronze medal, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915; second Hallgarten prize,
NAD, 1918. Work: Self portrait.
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Philadelphia; "Dr. I. M. Hays", Amer-
ican Philosophical Societv. Phila.; "Mrs.
R". Reading, (Pa.) Museum; "Judge
Mayer Sulzberger". Dropsie College,
Phila.; "Dr. Hobert M. Hare", Universi-
ty of Pennsylvania, Phila.; "Daniel
Baugh", Baugh Inst, of Anatomy.
Phila.; "Dr. S. G. Dixon", Academy of
Natural Science, Phila.
RADITZ, Violetta C, ' 1520 North 20th
St., Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
RAE, John, Cedars Road, Caldwell, N. J.;
summer. Center Lovell, Me.
I.,P.,W.— Born Jersey City, N. J., July
4, 1882. Pupil of Howard Pyle and F. V.
Du Mond. Member: SI, 1912;
Illustrated "The Girl I Left Behind
Me," "Historic Houses of New Jersey,"
"The Big Family," "Pies and Pirates,"
"Why"; "Fables in Rhyme." Author
and illustrator of "New Adventures of
Alice." Represented in Library of Con-
gress, Washington.
RAISBECK, J. J., 211 Climax St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
RAKEMANN, Carl, North Chevy Chase,
Md.
Mural P., I. — Born Washington, April 27,
1878. Pupil of academies in Munich,
Diisseldorf and Paris. Member: S.
Wash. A.; Wash.WCC; Art and Archaeol-
ogy Lg. Work : Four lunettes in room
of Senate Committee on Military Af-
fairs and four paintings in lobby of
House of Representatives, U. S. Capitol,
Washington; portrait of ex-Speaker
Henderson, U. S. Soldiers' Home. Ten-
nessee; portrait of ex-President Hayes,
Hayes Memorial, Museum, Fremont, O.
Portraits for the State House, Colum-
bus, O.; Ohio State Archaeological and
Historical Society; Kenyon College, O.
RALEIGH, Henry, Westport, Conn.; sum-
mer, 60 Iverna Court, Kensington, W.,
London, England.
I., E. — Born Portland, Ore., Nov. 23,
1880. Pupil of Hopkins Academy, San
Francisco. Member: Alliance; P-G;
Guild of Free Lance A; Salma. C.
Award : Shaw prize for illustration,
Salma. C, 1916.
RAMSEY, L. A., 255 West 6th No.. Salt
Lake City, Utah.
P., I., T.— Born Bridgeport, 111., March
24, 1873. Pupil of Laurens and Julian
Academy in Paris. Member: Soc.
Utah Artists.
RANCH, Mildred, 3727 St. Martin Place,
Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
RAND, Ellen G. Emmet (Mrs. William
Blanchard Rand), Salisbury, Conn.
P. — Born San Francisco, Cal., March 4,
1876. Studied in New York and Paris.
Member: N. A. Women PS; Port. P.
Awards : Silver medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; gold medal, P.-P.Exp., San
F., 1915. Work: "Portrait of Augustus
Saint Gaudens" and of "Benjamin Alt-
man," Metropolitan Museum, New York.
RAND, Henry A(sbury), Holicong, Bucks
Co., Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., April 1,
1886. Pupil of PAFA under Chase, An-
shutz and Breckenridge. Member:
Phila. Sketch C; Fellowship PAFA.
Work: "Snow Shadows," Pennsylva-
nia Academy of the Fine Arts, Phila-
delphia.
RAND, Margaret A(rno!d), 49 Kirkland
St., Cambridge, Mass.
P.. T. — Born Dedham, Mass., Oct. 21,
1868. Pupil of Emily D. Norcroas, Clara
538
RANDALL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
RAVENSCROFT
Goodyear, Geo. H. Smillie and Henry
W. Rice. Member: Copley S. 1894.
W o '• k : "Pansies." Boston Art Club.
RANDALL, Asa Grant, 498 Broadway,
Providence, R. I.; summer, Boothbay
Harbor, Me.
P., T. — Born Waterboro, Me., Apr, 8,
1869. Pupil of Howard Helmick, Arthur
• Dow, and Pratt Inst. Member:
Providence AC; Providence WCC.
Founder, Commonwealth Art Colony,
Boothbay Harbor, Me.
RANDALL, D. Ernest, 1736 Union St.,
San Francisco, Cal.
P., I.— Born Rush Co., Ind., June 20,
1877. Pupil of AIC under Vanderpoel
and Hubble. Member: ASL of Chi-
cago; Art Workers' Guild of St. Paul;
Minnesota State Art Soc.
RANDALL, L. C, 154 Lorain Ave., Co-
lumbus, O.
P. — M ember: Pen and Pencil Club,
Columbus.
RANDALL, Paul A., 3204 Bellefontaine
St., Indianapolis, Ind.
P.. I.— Born Warsaw, Ind., Sept. 29,
1879. Pupil of William Forsyth and C.
A. Wheeler. Member: Indiana AC.
RANDOLPH, Lee F., care Cal. School of
Fine Arts, San Francisco, Cal.
P., E., Ldscp. Arch. — Born Ravenna, O.,
June 3, 1880. Pupil of Cincinnati Art
Academy; ASL of N. Y. under Cox;
Ecole des Beaux-Arts and Julian Acad-
emy in Paris. Member: Chicago SB;
Cal. SE; Buffalo SA. A w a r d s: Bronze
medal for painting, P. -P.Exp., San F.,
1915; silver medal for painting, San F.
AA, 1919. Work in: Luxembourg,
Paris. Director California School of
Fine Arts.
RAN NELLS, Will, 684 Miller Ave., Colum-
bus, O.
P., I., T.— Born Caldwell, O., July 21,
1892. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Acad.
Work: Cover designs for "Life,"
"Judge," "Country Gentleman"; "The
Red Cross Magazine" and "The People's
Home Journal." Illustrated "Dog
Stars." Specializes in portrait of dogs.
RANNUS, A. W., 900 Sixth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
S. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
RAPER, Edna, 5512 Montgomery Road,
Pleasant Ridge, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
RAPHAEL, Joseph, 345 Sutter St.. San
Francisco, Cal.
P. — Born Jackson, Amador Co., Cal., in
1872. Pupil of San F. AA.; Beaux- Arts,
Julian Academy, and Laurens in Paris.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1915; silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F.,
1915; first purchase prize. San F. AA;
gold medal, San F. AA. 1918. Work in
Golden Gate Park Museum. San Fran-
circo, and San Francisco Art Associa-
tion.
RAPHAEL, Samuel, 1 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
RAPPAPORT, Maurice I., 220 West 14th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
RASARIO, Ada, Valduggia, Prov. of
Novara, Italy. (P.)
RASCHEN, Carl Martin, 368 Alexander
St., Rochester, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Dec. 17, 1882. Pupil of
Rochester Athenaeum and Mectianics
Inst, and Gilbert Gaul. Member:
Rochester AC; Rochester Picture Paint-
ers' C; St. Louis Brush and Pencil C.
RASMUSSEN, Bertrand, 468 60th St.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Arendal, Norway, Oct. 8, 1890.
Pupil of Laurens in Paris. Member:
S.Indp.A; Brooklyn AVCC; Lg. of N.Y.A.
RATCLIFF, Blanche Cooley, (Mrs Walter
B. Cooley), 510 Kentucky Ave., Fort
Worth, Tex.
P.— Born Smithville. Tex.. May 26, 1896.
Pupil of O. B. Jacobson; Dura B. Cock-
rell. Member : Les Beaux-Art^,
Norman, Okla. Work in University of
Oklahoma.
RATHBONE, Edith K., Hotel Welling-
ton, 7th Ave. and 55th St., New York,
N. Y.
S. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
RATHBUN, Seward Hume, 1622 Massa-
chusetts Ave., Washington. D. C.
P., Arch., T. — Born Washington, D. C,
Jan. 18, 1886. Member: Wash. WCC.
RATTNER, Abraham, 1523 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
RAU, William, 161 Columbus Ave., New
York. N. Y. ; h. 10730 110th St., Rich-
mond Hill, L. I., N. Y.
P., I.— Born New York, N. Y., 1874. Pu-
pil of Chase and Edgar M. Ward; NAD.
Member: Inter. Soc. AL. Work:
Eight mural paintings, Douglas Co. C.
H., Omaha, Neb.; lunette in St.
Mathews' Church, Hoboken, N. J.;
panels in Melrose Public Library, and
High Bridge Public Library, New York,
N. Y., etc.
RAUGHT, John W(lllard), Dunmore, Pa.
P.— M ember: Salma.C. 1902.
RAUL, Harry Lewis, 1807 Washington
Blvd., Easton, Pa.; 55 Pearl St., Mystic,
Conn.
S.— Born Easton, Pa., Oct. 2, 1883. Pu-
pil of New York School of Art; F. E.
Elwell; ASL of N. Y. under F. V. Du-
Mond; PAFA under Grafly. Work:
"Green Memorial Statue," Easton, Pa.;
"Monument to Martyrs of the Maine"
(Hail, Martyrs' statue), Northampton
Co.. Pa.; "Soldiers' Monument" (Old
Glory statue). West Chester, Pa.
RAUL. Josephine Gesner (Mrs. Harry
Lewis Raul), 55 Pearl St., Mystic. Conn.
P.— Born Linden, N. J., April 23, 1897.
Pupil of NAD; G. Albert Thompson;
ASL of N. Y, Member: Conn. SA.
RAVENSCROFT, Ellen, 421 Lake Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer. Province-
town, Mass.
P.. C, T. — Born Jackson, Miss., April
29, 1876. Pupil of Chase, Henri; Cas-
tellucho in Paris. Member: N.A.
Women PS; St. L. AG; Provincetown
539
RAVLIN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
REDERUS
AA. Awards : Portrait prize, C. L.
Wolfe Art Club, 1908; landscape prize,
C. L. Wolfe Art Club, 1915.
RAVLIN, Grace, 28 West 37th St., New
York, N. Y. R
P.— Born Kaneville, 111. Pupil of AIC;
PAFA under Chase; Simon, Menard and
Courtois in Paris. Member: Asso- r
ciee Society Nationale des Beaux-Arts,
Paris, 1912, and Peintres Orientalists
Francais; Societaire Salon d'Automne. ^
Awards: Third medal. Amis des Arts,
Toulon, 1911; silver medal. P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915; Field and Butler prizes,
AIC, 1918. Work: "Procession of
the Redentore, Venice," Art Institute of
Chicago; "Arab Women in the Ceme-
tery Tangier," Luxembourg, Paris; four
paintings owned by French Government
and two by City of Chicago.
RAWSON, Carl W(endell), 637 Kenwood
Parkway, Minnetipolis, Minn.
P.— Born Des Moines, la., Jan. 28, 1884.
Pupil of Cumming Art School; NAD;
Minneapolis School of Art. Mem-
ber: Attic C; Minneapolis AS,
RAWSTHORNE, J. W., 601 Bailey-Farrel
Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
RAY, Man, 49 West 8th St., New York, R
N. Y.
P., S., W. — Born Philadelphia, Aug. 27, R
1890.
RAYMOND, Frank Willoughby, 123 Fifth
Ave., Ne\\ York, N. Y.
E., Engr. — Born Dubuque, la., 1881. Pu-
pil of AI Chicago. Member: Cal.SE;
Chicago SE; Palette and Chisel C.
Work in: Art Institute of Chicago;
Toledo Museum of Art.
RAYMOND, Grace, 933 Mansfield St., ^
Winfleld, Kansas.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
RAYNES, Joseph F., 56 West 17th St., ^
New York, N. Y. (P.)
REA, John L(owra), Plattsburgh, Clin-
ton Co., N. Y.
S., W., L., T. — Born Beekmantown,
Clinton Co., N. Y., Jan. 29, 1882. Pupil
of H. A. MacNeil and James Earle
Fraser.
READ, Adele Von H., 1710 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
READ, E(lmer) Joseph, 249 West Passaic R
Ave., Rutherford, N. J.
P. — Born Howard, Steuben Co., N. Y.,
June 19, 1862. Pupil of College of Fine
Arts, Syracuse Univ.; Fremiet in Paris.
During winter paints in West Indies.
READ, Frank E., 232 Harvard, North,
Seattle, Wash.
P., E., Arch., W. — Born Austinburg, R
Aug. 4, 1862. Pupil of W. M. Hunt.
Member: Seattle Fine Arts Soc. p
READ, Henry, 1311 Pearl St.; h. 1360
Corona St., Denver, Col.
P.,W.,T.,L. — Born Twickenham, Eng-
land, Nov. 16, 1851. Member: Art
Commission of the City and County of
Denver; Nat. Acad. A. (regent); Col.
540
Chpt. AIA (hon.); Denver AA (hon.).
Director, Denver Students' School of
Art. Work in: Denver Art Associa-
tion.
EADIO, Wilfred A., 10 Ellsworth Ter-
race, Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
EAMER, Maude, 264 Summer St., Buf-
falo, N. Y. (P., T.)
EASER, Wilbur (Aaron), 15 Arden
Place, Yonkers, N. Y. ;
P., L.— Born Hickville, O., Dec. 25, 1860.
Pupil of Mark Hopkins Inst, in San
Francisco; Constant and Lefebvre in
Paris. Member: San Francisco Art
Assoc. Awards: Gold and silver
medals, California Exp., 1894; first
Hallgarten prize, NAD 1897. Spe-
cialty, portraits. Work: "Mother and
Daughter," Carnegie Gallery, Pitts-
burgh; "Old Man and Sleeping Child,"
Art Gallery, Des Moines, la.; portrait
of "Senator W. B. Allison," U. S.
Senate Lobby, Washington; "Senator
C. S. Page," The Capitol, Montpelier,
Vt.; "Senator N. B. Scott," The Capi-
tol, Charleston, W. Va.; "Bishop
Lewis," State Historical Society, Des
Moines, la.
EASONER, Mrs. David. See Gladys
Thayer.
EAUGH, F(rank), Oak Cliff, Tex.
P. — Born near Jacksonville, 111., Dec. 29,
1860. Pupil of St. Louis School of Fine
Arts; Julian Academy in Paris under
Doucet. M e m be r : Dallas Art Asso-
ciation (hon.). Work: "Driving the
Herd," Dallas (Tex.) Art Association.
Specialty, Texas cattle and western
landscape.
EBER, Alfred A., 1450 Kelton Ave.,
Dormont, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
H.
5 Madison Ct.
ECCHIA, Richard
Boston, Mass.
S.— Born Quincy, Mass., Nov. 20, 1885.
Studied at Boston Museum of Fine Arts
School; and in Paris and Italy. Mem-
ber: Boston GA; Copley S. Award:
Bronze medal; P.-P Exp., San F., 1915.
Work: Bas-relief portrait of Gov.
Curtis Guild, Boston State House;
"Architecture," figure panel on Boston
Museum; Red Cross panel in Musee de
I'Armee, Gallery Foch, Paris.
ECKLESS, Stanley L(awrence), Lum-
berville, Bucks Co., Pa.
P. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 22,
1892. Pupil of PAFA; and Julian in
Paris. Member: Graphic Sketch
Club, Philadelphia; Paris AAA.
Awards : Cresson Traveling Schol-
arship, PAFA, 1915-1916.
ECTOR. Anne, 444 West 22nd St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
EDERUS, S. F., 18 South Glen Oak Ave.,
Dubuque, la.
P., W., L.— Born Netherlands, July 29,
1854. Pupil of R. Wynkoop, Bridgeport,
Conn. Member: Milwaukee AI; Du-
buque AS. Work in Presbyerian
Church, Nortonville, Kas.
REDFIELD
WHO*S WHO IN ART
REICHMANN
REDFIELD, Edward W(Illis), Centre
Bridge, Bucks Co., Pa.
Ldscp.P. — Born Bridgeville, Del., Dec.
19, 1868. Pupil of PAFA; Bouguereau
and Robert-Fleury in Paris. M e m-
ber: SAA 1903; Nat. Inst. AL; AC
Phila.; Fellowsliip PAFA; Salma. C.
Awards: Medal, AC Phila. 1896;
bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1900; bronze
medal. Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
Temple medal, PAFA 1903; second
Hallgarten prize, NAD 1904; Shaw
Fund prize, SAA 1904; silver medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904; Sesnan gold medal,
PAFA 1905; second medal, C.I.Pitts-
burgh 1905; Webb prize, SAA 1906;
gold medal of honor, PAFA 1907; Fischer
prize and bronze medal, Corcoran AG
1907; first W. A. Clark prize and gold
medal, Corcoran AG 1908; hon. mention,
Paris Salon, 1908; third class medal,
Paris Salon. 1909; second Harris medal,
AIC 1909; gold medal, Buenos Aires
Exp., 1910; Lippincott prize, PAFA 1912;
gold medal, Wash.SA 1913; Palmer gold
medal (51,000), AIC 1913; gold medal
($1,500), CI Pittsburgh 1914; hors con-
cours (jury of awards). P. -P.Exp., San
F., 1915; first prize Wilmington Soc.
Fine Arts, 1916; Carnegie prize, NAD,
1918; Altman prize ($1,000), NAD, 1919;
Stotesbury prize; PAFA, 1920. Work:
"Canal in Winter," "Luxembourg Mu-
seum, Paris; "The Delaware River" and
"Sleighing," Corcoran Gallery, Wash-
ington; "Road to the Village," Cincin-
nati Museum; "Sycamore Hill," Carnegie
Institute, Pittsburgh; "The Ravine,"
Boston Museum; "The Old Elm," Penn-
sylvania Academy, Philadelphia; "Feb-
ruary," Brooklyn Institute Museum;
"The Crest," Herron Art Inst., Indian-
apolis; "Grey Days," Detroit Institute;
"Center Bridge," Art Institvite of
Chicago; "The Laurel Brook," Buffalo
Fine Arts Academy; "River in Winter,"
Minneapolis Institute of Arts; "Snow-
drifts," R. I. School of Design, Provi-
dence; "Overlooking the Valley," Metro-
politan Museum, New York; "The
Frozen River," Brooks Memorial Art
Gallery, Memphis, Tenn.; "The Island,"
National Gallery of Art, Washington;
"The Evening Breeze," "The Island in
Springtime," Cooke Collection, Hono-
lulu; "Winter, Center Bridge," Telfair
Academy, Savannah, Ga.; "Wheat
Fields," Delgado Museum, New Orleans,
La.
REDFIELD, Grace Chapman, 1013 Lin-
den Ave., Wilmette, 111.
P.— M ember: Chicago WCC.
REDFIELD, Heloise Guillou, 121 West
40th St., New York, N. Y. ; h. 211
Upland Way, Wayne, Pa.
Min. P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., 1883.
Pupil of PAFA under Chase and Cecilia
Beaux; Mme. La Forge and Delecluse in
Paris. Member: Am. S. Min. P.; Pa.S.
Min. P. Awards : Hon. mention, Buf-
falo SA; silver medal, P. -P.Exp., San
F., 1915.
REDMOND, Margaret, Cheshan, N. H.
P., C. — Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil of
PAFA; Twachtman in New York; Si-
mon and M6nard in Paris. Member:
Fellowship PAFA; Phila. WCC; Copley
S.; Boston SAC; S.Indp.A. Specialty,
stained glass.
REED, Earl H., 4758 Lake Park Ave,., Chi-
cago, 111.
Etcher.— Born Geneva, 111., July 5, 1863.
Self-taught. Member: Chicago SA.
Work in: Toledo Museum of Art;
Library of Congress, Washington, D. C;
Chicago Art Institute; New York Public
Library; St. Louis Art Museum; Mil-
waukee Art Institute. Author: "Etch-
ing: A Practical Treatise"; "The Voices
of the Dunes and Other Etchings"; "The
Dune Country"; "Sketches in Jacobia";
"Sketches in Duneland" ; "Tales of a
Vanishing River."
REED, Grace Adelaide, 95 Mt. Vernon
St., Boston, Mass.
P., T.— Born Boston, Mass., July 14,
1874. Pupil of Woodbury, Denman
Ross, Francis Hodgekins; Delecluse and
Renard in Paris; Mass. Normal Art
School. Member: Copley S.
REED, Lilian R., Greble Bldg., 1710
Chestnut St.; Philadelphia, Pa.
P., T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil
of Phila. School of Design for Women;
Lathrop and Daingerfleld. Member:
Plastic C; Fellowship PAFA; Phila.
Art Teachers' Assn.; Phila. Alliance.
Award: Georgine Shillard gold medal.
Plastic Club.
REEVS, George M., 35 West 14th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Port. P.— Born Yonkers, N. Y., 1864.
Pupil of Constant, Laurens, Gerome.
Member: Salma. C. ; A. Fund S.
Award : portrait prize, Salma. C,
1906.
REGESTER, Charlotte, 439 West 23rd
St.; summer, 37 Berkley PL, Buffalo,
N. Y.
P., C, T. — Born Baltimore, May 28,
1883. Pupil of Rose Clark; W. M.
Chase; Buffalo ASL; NY. ASL. Mem-
ber: N.A. Women PS; Buffalo SA.
REGISTER, Emmasita. See Mrs. Corson.
REICH, Jacques, New Dorp, S. I., N. Y.
Etcher. — Born in Hungary, Aug. 10,
1852; came to U. S. in 1873. Studied
in Budapest, Paris, New York and at
PAFA. Member: Chicago SE; Calif.
P.M. Work: Pen portraits for Scrib-
ner's "Cyclopedia of Painters and
Paintings" and for Appleton's "Cyclo-
paedia of American Biography"; Mace's
"History of the United States; Cordy's
"History of the United States"; etched
portraits of famous Americans; etch-
ings in Art Institute of Chicago; Metro-
politan Museum of Art; N. Y. City Pub-
lic Library; N. Y. State Libr. ; Cornell
University.
REICHART, Joseph Francis, 428 East
85th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
REICHMANN. Mrs. Josephine Lemos. 1540
East 57th St.; h. 1401 Hyde Park Blvd.,
Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Louisville, Ky.. Mar. 24, 1864.
Pupil of AIC; ASL of N. Y.; C. W. Haw-
thorne. Member: Chicago SA;
Chicago AC; Cordon C.
541
REID
WHO'S WHO IN ART
RETT I G
REID, Albert Turner, 452 Fifth Ave.. New
York, N. Y.; h. 1302 Fillmore St.. To-
I.— Born Concordia, Kan.. Aug. 12. 1873.
Pupil of N. Y. School of Art and ASL
of N. Y. Member: Authors, Artists
and Dramatist Lg., New York. Work:
in magazines and books; "The Leaven-
worth Post" (daily). Owner and pub-
lisher, The Albert T. Reid Cartoon
Syndicate.
REID, H. Logan, 77 West 45th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
REID, Jean Arnot, care of Bankers' Trust
Co., 57th St. and Madison Ave., New
York, N. Y.; h. 420 Palisaae Ave.,
Yonkers, N. Y. ; summer, Struan Farms,
Monterey, Mass.
Min. P.— Born Brooklyn. N. Y., July 22,
1882. Pupil of Robert Brandegee; Am.
School of Min. painting; ASL of N.Y.
Member: N. A. Women PS; A.S.
Min.P.
REID, M(arie) C(hristlne) W(estfe!dt),
Hunter College, 68th St. and Park Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born New York City. Pupil of
J. Alden Weir, Douglas Volk, G. Whar-
ton Edwards and F. Edwin Elwell.
Member: N. A. Women PS; N.Y.
Municipal AS; College AA. Professor
of Art, Hunter College of New York
City.
REID, Robert, care of "The Players," 16
Gramercy Park, New York, N, Y.
P., T.— Born Stockbridge, Mass., July
29, 1862. Pupil of Boston Museum
School; ASL of N. Y.; Boulanger and
Lefebvre in Paris. Member : ANA .
1902, NA 1906; Ten Am.P.; Nat.Inst.A.L.
Awards : Medal, Columbian Exp.,
Chicago, 1893; Clarke prize, NAD 1897;
first Hallgarten prize, NAD 1898; silver
medal for painting and gold medal for
mural decoration, Paris Exp., 1900; sil-
ver medal, Pan-Am.Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; third
W. A. Clark prize ($1,000), Corcoran AG
1909; gold medal, P.-P.Exp., San F..
1915. Work: "The Open Fire" and
"The Japanese Screen," Corcoran
Gallery, Washington; "The Pink Car-
nation," Albright Art Gallery, Buf-
falo; "Sunset Glow," Brooklyn Institute
Museum; "Fleur-de-Lys," Metropolitan
Museum, New York; "Defiant Autumn,"
Herron Art Inst., Indianapolis; also rep-
resented in collections of National Gal-
lery of Art, Washington; Nebraska Art
Association, Lincoln; Art Association,
Richmond, Ind. ; Cincinnati Museum;
Omaha Museum; "The Miniature," De-
troit Institute of Arts; "The Yellow
Flower," Minneapolis Institute of Arts.
Mural decorations: "James Otis Argu-
ing Against the Writs of Assistance,"
"The Boston Tea Party," "Paul Re-
vere's Ride." Massachusetts State House.
Boston; "The Senses" (five panels). Li-
brary of Congress, Washington; "Jus-
tice," frieze in Appellate Court, New
York; "The Martyrdom of St. Paul,"
Paulist Church, New York; "Adoration
of the Magi"; "Light of Education,"
Central High School, Springfield, Mass.;
"Against the Sky," Ft. Worth (Tex.)
Museum; designed and executed win-
dows in H. H. Rogers Memorial
Church, Fair Haven, Mass.
REIFFEL, Charles, Belden Hill Road,
Wilton, Conn.
Ldscp.P.— BoT-n Indianapolis. Ind. Self-
taught . Member: Allied AA; Con-
temporary; Int. Soc. A. L.; Conn. SA;
Salma. C. ; Conn, AFA; Buffalo SA.
Awards: Fellowship prize, Buffalo
SA 1908; Harris silver medal, AIC, 1917;
hon. men.. Conn. AFA, 1920. Work:
"Railway Yards — Winter Evening,"
Corcoran Gallery, Washington.
REIMS, Salvatore, 126 East 75th St., New
York, N. Y. (S.)
REINDEL, William George, Euclid, O.
P.,E. — Born Eraser, Macomb Co., Mich.,
June 25, 1871. Studied in America and
Europe; largely self-taught. Mem-
ber: Cleveland SA; Chicago SA; Chi-
cago SE. Represented in New York
Public Library.
REINHART, Stewart, 45 Washington Sq.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. "Studio Farm,"
Mt. Kisco, N. Y.
P., S., E.— Born in Baltimore, Feb 19,
1897. Pupil of Edward Berge, Maxwell
Miller.
REINKE, Ottilie, 681 Downer Ave., Mil-
waukee, Wis.
P.— M ember: Wis. PS.
REISS, F(ritz) Winold, 4 Christopher St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I., E., T. — Born in Germany. Pupil
of Franz Von Stuck; Royal Academy,
Munich. Member: S.Indp.A. Work:
Appoll's Theater, South Sea Island Ball-
room of Hotel Sherman, Chicago; Res-
taurant Crillon, Restaurant Elysee, New
York City.
RELYEA, Cliarles M., 2447 Morris Ave.;
h. 2323 Valentine Ave., New York, N. Y.
I., P.— Born Albany, N. Y., Apr. 23,
1863. Pupil of PAFA under Thomas
Eakins; F. V. Du Mond in New York.
Member: Salma. C. ; Allied AA. ;
Players' C.
RENOUARD, G. A., 291 Sixth Ave.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y. (P.)
RENWICK, Howard Crosby, 33 West
67th St., New York. N. Y.
P.— M ember: Allied AA.; Salma. C.
RENZETTI, Aurelius, 712 So. 10th St..
Philadelphia. Pa. (S.)
RESLER, George Earl, 1726 Juhet St.; 395
Winslow Ave., St. Paul, Minn.
E. — M ember: Chicago SE. Award:
First prize, 1913, and second prize, 1914,
Minnesota State Art Commission;
bronze medal for etching, St. Paul Inst.,
1918.
RETTIG, John, 2227 Kemper Lane, Wal-
nut Hills, Cincinnati, O.
P. — Born Cincinnati. Pupil of Cincin-
nati Art School, Duveneck and Pott-
hast; Collin, Courtois and Prinet In
Paris. Member: Salma.C; Cincin-
nati AC (hon.); S. Indp. A.
542
RETTIG
WHO'S WHO IN ART
RICE
RETTIG, Martin, 19 Garfield PL, Cin-
cinnati, O.
P. — Born Cincinnati. Pupil of Cincin-
nati Art Academy under Frank Duve-
neck. Member: Cincinnati AC.
REUTERDAHL, Henry, United States
Navy Recruiting Bureau, 320 West 39th
'St., New York, N. Y.
P., I., W. — Born Malmo, Sweden, Aug.
12, 1871. Self-taught. Member:
N. Y. Arch. Lg. 1911; Assoc. U. S.
Naval Inst, and Am. Soc. Naval
Arch. and Engineers; A.Fund S.
Award: Silver medal, P.-P,.Exp., San
F., 1915; Beck Prize, Phila. WCC, 1919.
Work: Ten paintings of the battle-
ship cruise around South America,
U. S. Naval Academy, Annapolis;
numerous sketches and posters in the
Navy Dept., Washington; National
Museum, Washington; Naval War
College, Newport; "Blast Furnaces."
Toledo Art Museum; "Winter in
Weehawken," Kalamazoo (Mich.) Art
Association; Culver Military Acad-
emy. Specialty, naval, marine and
industrial subjects. Writer and lecturer
on naval subjects; war correspondent
during Spanish war and in European
conflict, 1914. Official artist. United
States Navy, during World War, 1917-
1918.
REYNARD, Grant T., Leonia, N. J. (I.)
REYNEAU, Mrs. Paul O., 20 Kirby Ave.,
W., Detroit, Mich. (P.)
REYNOLDS, Frederick (Thomas), 154
East 38th St., New York, N. Y.
E., C, L., T.— Born London, Feb. 19,
1882. Studied in London. Member:
Brooklyn SE; Calif. P.M.; Chicago SE.
REYNOLDS, George, 1645 Wilton PL, Los
Angeles, Cal.
P.— M ember: Calif. AC.
REYNOLDS, Wellington J(arard), 3 E.
Ontario St., Chicago, 111.
Port.P.. T.— Born Chicago, Apr. 9. 1866.
Pupil of Laurens and Constant in Paris;
Royal Academy in Munich. Mem-
ber: Chicago SA; Cliff Dwellers.
Awards: Medal, Marshall Field ex.
1908; medal of honor, Chicago SA 1910.
Work: Portrait of Mr. Hitchcock,
University of Chicago; "The Coquette."
Golden Gate Park Museum, San Fran-
cisco; "A Votre Sante," Piedmont Gal-
lery, Oakland. Cal.
REYNOLDS, Mrs. William H., 11 Hum-
boldt Ave., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
RHEAD, Louis (John), 217 Ocean Ave..
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
I., P. — Born Etruria, Staffordshire, Eng-
land, Nov. 6, 1857; came to U. S. in
1883. Pupil of Edward J. Poynter and
Alphonse Legros in London. Mem-
ber: N. Y. Arch. Lg. 1902; NYWCC.
Awards : Gold medal for posters,
Boston 1895; hon. mention, Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; gold medal for
painting, St. Louis Exp., 1904. Work:
Illustrations for Harper's Juvenile
Classics.
RHETT, Hannah McC(ord), 7 Lamball
St., Charleston, S. C.
P., T.— Born Columbia, S. C, Feb. 28,
1871. Pupil of ASL in New York; Collin
and Laurens in Paris. Member:
ASL of N. Y.; Carolina Art Assoc.
(Assoc). Awards: Bronze and sil-
ver medals, AAS; silver medal, Appala-
chian Exp., 1911.
RHIND, J(ohn) Massey, 208 East 20th St.;
h. 34 Gramercy Park, New York, N. Y.
S. — Born Edinburgh, Scotland, July 9,
1860. Pupil of his father, John Rhind,
R.S.A.; Dalou in Paris; came to U. S.
in 1889. Member: NSS 1893; N.Y.
Arch.Lg. 1894; N.Y.Municipal AS; NAC;
Salma. C. Awards: National schol-
arship, South Kensington, London; gold
medal, St. Louis Exp.. 1904. Work:
Astor door, Trinity Church. New York;
equestrian, "George Washington." New-
ark, N. J.; "Stephen Girard," Philadel-
phia; "Peter Stuyvesant," Jersey City;
"Robert Burns," Pittsburgh; McKin-
ley Memorial, Niles, O.; numerous
decorations for federal and municipal
buildings.
RIBCOWSKY, Dey de, 233 South Broad-
way, Los Angeles, Calif.
Marine P.— Born at Rustchuk, Bul-
garia, Oct. 13, 1880. Studied in Paris,
Florence and Petrograd. Member:
Art Association of Newport; Buenos
Aires Society of Fine Arts. Awards :
Silver medal, Petrograd, 1902; silver
medal, Uruguay Exhibition, Montevideo,
1908. Represented in South American
Museums. Inventor of the Medium
"Reflex."
RICE, Charles H., Sea Bright, N. J.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
RICCI, Ulysses A., 206 East 33rd St., New
York. N. Y.
S.— Member: NSS 1914 (assoc).
RICCIARDI, Cesare A., Art Alliance, 1823
Walnut St.; 831 South Mildred St..
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Italy, June 8, 1892. Pupil oi
PAFA. Member: Fellowship PAFA:
Phila. Sketch C; Phila. Alliancei
Awards: First Wanamaker prize,
1916; hon. mention, Americanization
through art, Phila., 1916.
RICE, Dorothy, See Mrs. Waldo Peirce.
RICE, Emma Duel, 2217 Q St., N. W..
Washington. D. C.
P. — M ember: Wash. WCC.
RICE, Henry W., Fenway Studios, 30
Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Pownal, Me. Pupil of Ross
Turner.
See Mrs. Paul A.
RICE, Jenny Delony.
Meyrowitz.
RICE, Myra M., Newfane, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Buffalo SA.
RICE, William C(larke), 145 East 23rd St.:
h. 645 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.;
summer. Center Lovell, Me.
P., S., L, C, W.. T.— Born Brooklyn,
N. Y., Apr. 19, 1875. Pupil of George
deF. Brush; ASL. of N.Y. Member:
N.Y. Arch. Lg. Work: Mura.l decora-
543
RICE
WHO*S WHO IN ART
RICHARDSON
tion in Apartment Hotel, 7th Ave. and
58th St., New York. Represented in
National Gallery, Washington.
RICE, William M(orton) J(ackson). 15
West 67th St., New York, N. Y.
Port. P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Feb. 18,
1854. Pupil of Beckwith In New York;
Carolus Duran In Paris. Member:
ANA 1900; SAA 1886; Century AsBoa
Award: Bronze medal, Pan-Am.Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901.
RICE, William S., 2083 Rosedale Ave.,
Oakland, Cahf.
P.. I., C, W.. T.— Born June 23, 1873.
Pupil of Phila. School of Industrial Art
and Drexel Inst.. Phila. Member :
Calif. SE; Calif. P.M. San F. AA;
Oakland AA. Work: "The Oakland
Estuary," Calif. State Library; "Wind-
swept," Calif. School of Arts and Crafts.
Specialty, wood block prints, landscape
painting in oils and water colors.
RICH, John H(ubbard), 4823 Sixth Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
P. — Born Boston, Mass., March 5, 1876.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; School of Boston
Museum of Fine Arts. Member: Cal.
AC; Salma.C. Award: Paige travel-
ing scholarship from School of Boston
Museum of Fine Arts, 1905-07; silver
medal San Diego Exp., 1915; Black
prize, Calif AC, 1917; second prize,
Calif. AC. 1916; Ackerman prize, Calif.
AC, 1919; silver medal, Panama-Calif.
Exp., San Diego, 1916.
RICHARD, Henri, 967 Madison Ave.,
Paterson, N. J.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
RICHARD, Jacob, 1301 North Rockwell
St., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born Ukrania, 1887. Pupil of Harry
Wolcott.
RICHARDS, Ella E., 1009 Carnegie Hall,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born in Virginia. 'Studied in Balti-
more, New York and with Lefebvre,
Robert Fleury and Collin In Paris.
Awards : Medal, Omaha Exp., 1899;
bronze medal. Charleston Exp., 1902.
"Work in: The American Society of
Civil Engineers, New York; Bank of
Montclair, N. J.; Norfolk (Va.) National
Bank and Citizen's Bank of Norfolk.
RICHARDS, George IV!(atiier), 452 Fifth
Ave., New York, N. Y. ; summer. New
Canaan, Conn.
P., T.— Born Darien, Conn.. Sept. 3. 1880.
Pupil of Douglas John Connah, Robert
Henri, Edward Penfield. Member:
Salma. C; Whitney Studio C. Illus-
trator for "Century," "Collier's," "Ad-
venture," "McCall's."
RICHARDS, Harriet R(oosevelt), 227
Edwards St., New Haven, Conn.
P., I. — Born Hartford, Conn. Pupil of
Yale School of Fine Arts; Frank Ben-
son in Boston; Howard Pyle in Wil-
mington, Del. Member: Paint and
Clay C. of New Haven. Illustrated:
Holiday editions of books by Louisa
Alcott and W. D. Howells, etc.
RICHARDS, Lee Greene, 125 So. 2d East,
Salt Lake City, Utah.
P.. S., L— Born Salt Lake City, July 27,
1878. Pupil of J. T. Harwood. Laurens
and Bonnat. Member : Salon d'Au-
tomne; Paris AAA; Utah SA (pres.).
Award: Hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1904.
RICHARDS, Lucy Currier (Mrs. F. P.
Wilson). 30 East 57th St.. New York,
N. Y. ; and Silvermine, Norwalk, Conn.
S. — Born Lawrence. Mass. Pupil of
Boston Museum School; Kops in Dres-
den; Eustritz in Berlin; Julian Academy
in Paris. Member: Copley S.; Bos-
ton GA; N. A. Women PS; MacD. C.
RICHARDS, IVIyra R., 1446 North Ala-
bama St., Indianapolis, Ind.
S.. P. — Born Indianapolis. Jan. 31, 1882.
Pupil of Herron Art Institute under
Otis Adams, Rudolf Schwartz and Geo.
Julian Zolnay. Member: Ind. SS.
RICHARDSON, Catherine Priestly, 88
Garden St., Cambridge, Mass. (P.)
RICHARDSON, Clara Virginia, 1503 Mas-
ter St., Philadelphia, Pa.; summer,
"The Sherwood," Portland, Me.
P., E., T.— Born at Philadelphia, April
24, 1855. Pupil of Ferris, Moran, Snell.
Member: Plastic C; Phila. Alli-
ance; Alumnae of the Phila. School of
Design for Women.
RICHARDSON, F(rank) H(enry), Studio
Bldg., 110 Tremont St., Boston; h.
County Road, Ipswich, Mass.
P. — Born Boston, Mass., July 4, 1859.
Pupil of Julian Academy in Paris under
Boulanger and Lefebvre. Member:
Boston AC: Salma.C. 1901. Awards:
Hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1899; bronze
medal, AAS 1902. Work: "Hauling
Seaweed," Boston Art Club; "Breton
Widow at Prayer," Lasell Seminary,
Auburndale, Mass.; "Portrait of Rear
Admiral George F. F. Wilde," Town
Hall, Braintree, Mass.; "Dr. William C.
Collar," Roxbury Latin School, Bos-
ton, Mass.
RICHARDSON, Frederick, Century As-
soc, 7 West 43d St.. New York, N. Y.;
Cliff Dwellers, Chicago.
I., P., T.— Born Chicago, 111., Oct. 26,
1862. Pupil of St. Louis School of Fine
Arts; Doucet and Lefebvre in Paris,
Member: Century Assoc; SI 1905.
RICHARDSON, James B., 330 14th St.,
Washington, D. C.
P. — M ember: S. Wash. A.
RICHARDSON, Margaret F., Fenway
Studios, Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Winnetka, 111. Pupil of De
Camp. Tarbell and Major. Member:
Boston GA. Awards: Harris bronze
medal, AIC, 1911; Maynard portrait
prize, NAD, 1913. Represented in the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts.
RICHARDSON, Marion, 140 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.. E.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Jan. 24.
1877. Pupil of Chase, du Mond, Sen-
seney and others. Member: Calif.
P.M.
544
RICHARDSON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
RISQUE
RICHARDSON, Mrs. Mary Curtis, 1032
Vallejo St., San Francisco, Cal.
P. — Born New York, Apr. 9, 1848.
Pupil of Benoni Irwin, Virgil Williams
and William Sartain. Awards: Nor-
man Dodgre prize. NAD 1887; silver
medal P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915. Work
in: Golden Gate Park Museum, San
Francisco; Music and Art Association,
Pasadena, Cal.
RICHARDSON, Mary N(eal), 309 Fenway
Studios, 30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.;
summer, Canton, Me.
Port. P. — Born Mt. Vernon, Me., Feb. 17,
1859. Pupil of Boston Museum School;
Colarossi Academy and A. Koopman in
Paris. Member: Copley S. 1897.
Work: "Prof. Charles C. Hutchins,"
Walker Art Gallery, Bowdoin College,
Brunswick, Me.
RICHERT, C(harles) H(enry), 10 Linden
St., Arlington Heights, Mass.
P.— Born Boston, Mass., July 7. 1880.
Pupil of De Camp and Major in Boston.
Member: Boston SWCP.
RICHMOND. Agnes M. (Mrs. Winthrop
Turney), 122 East 59th St., New York.
N. Y.
P.— Born Alton. 111. Pupil of ASL of N.
Y., under Brush, Louis Loeb, F. V. Du
Mond; St. Louis 'School of Fine Arts.
Member: N. A. Women PS; Allied
AA. S. Indp. A.; Wash. A.C.
RICHMOND, Almond, Meadville, Pa. (P.)
RICHMOND. Mrs. Evelyn N., 197 Bowen
St., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence WCC.
RICHMOND, Robert C(rawford), 3055 Q
St., N.W., Washington. D. C.
P.— Born Baltimore, Md., June 26, 1867.
RICHTER, Henry L., Long Beach, Calif.
P.— Born Saxony, Oct. 22. 1871. Studied
at AIC and in Munich. Member:
Denver AA. Mural decorations in the
Colorado State Normal School, Gunnison,
RICHTER, Wilmer S(iegfried), 608 Denc-
kla Bldg., 11th and Market Sts., Phila-
delphia, Pa.; h. 39 Pennsylvania Ave.,
Brookline Manor, Del. Co., Pa.
I. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Jan. 20,
1891. Pupil of School of Industrial Art,
Philadelphia.
RICKETSON, Walton, 10 Anthony St.,
New Bedford, Mass.
S.— Born New Bedford, May 27, 1839.
Member: New Bedford AC. Work:
Portrait busts of Louisa M. Alcott.
A. Bronson Alcott. Henry D. Thoreau,
George W. Curtis, R. W. Emerson, and
others, and in Public Libraries, New
Bedford, Mass.; Brown University,
Providence, R. I.; Friends Academy,
New Bedford; Concord (Mass.) Library.
Specialties, intaglios, bas-reliefs and
busts.
RIDDELL, William W., 3211 West 62nd
St., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born Chicago in 1877. Pupil of
AIC, and of Laurens in Paris. Mem-
ber: Palette and Chisel C; Laguna
Beach AA.
RIDDER, Arthur, 200 North Hamhn Ave.
Chicago, 111.
P. — M ember: Chicago SA.
RIDDLE, Alice L., see Mrs. Hans Kindler.
RIDER, Charles Joseph, 160 South Craig
St., Pa.sadena, Calif.; summer, Supai,
Grand Canyon, Arizona.
P.. S.— Born Trenton, N. J.. Jan. 21,
1880. Pupil of W. M. Chase.
RIEPPEL, Edwig, 404 East 52nd St., New
York, N. Y. (S.)
RIESENBERG, Sidney, 739 Palisades
Ave. Yonkers, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI 1913.
RIGBY, Joseph P., Press Publishing Co.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
I. — M ember : Pittsburgh AA.
RIIS, Anna M., care of Art Academy; h.
3325 Burnet Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio.
D., C, T. — Born in Norway. Pupil of
Royal and Imperial School for Art and
Industry, Vienna; Royal Art School of
Christiania. Member : Cincinnati
Woman's AC; Crafters; Cincinnati
Ceramic C.
RILEY, Agnes, 214 Edgecomb Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S. Indp. A.
RILEY, Mary G., 2141 Le Roy PL, Wash-
ington, D. C.
P. — M ember: S. Wash. A.
RING, Alice Blair, 225 East Pasadena
St., Pomona, Calif.
P. — Born Knightville, Mass., May 4,
1869. Pupil of Laurens, Julien Dupr6,
Hitchcock, Mme. La Forge and Melchers
in Paris; ASL of N. Y., and in Wash-
ington. Member: Cleveland Woin-
an's AA; Laguna Beach AA; Pomona
Valley ACA.
RINGIUS, Carl, 62 Vernon St., Hartford,
Conn.; summer. East Gloucester, Mass.
P., C, W.— Born Bastad, Sweden, Dec.
3, 1879. Pupil of Charles Noel Flagg
and Robert B. Brandegee at Hartford.
Member: Conn.AFA; Soc.of Granhic
Art, Stockholm; Boston SAC; Chicago
AG; Hartford AC.
RION, Hanna (Mrs. Frank Ver Beck),
care Curtis Brown, Ltd., 6 Henrietta
St., Covent Garden, London. England.
P., I. — Born Winnsbornugh. S. C.. July
11, 1875. Pupil of Frank Ver Beck.
Author: "Let's Make a Flower Garden,"
"The Garden in the Wilderness," etc.
RIORDAN, G. C, 318 Monmouth St., New-
port. Ky.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati AC.
RIPLEY. Lucy Perkins, 36 West 12th St.,
New York. N. Y.
S.— M ember: N. A. Women ,PS.
Award : Barnett prize, N. A. Women
PS, 1919.
RISQUE, Caroline Everett, 4021 Enright
Ave.. St. Louis, Mo.; and 4 Rue de
Chevreuse, Paris, France.
S.— Born St. Louis, Mo.. 1886. Pupil of
St. IvOuis School of Fine Arts under
Zolnay. Member: St. Louis AG.
Award : Weston prize ($50), St. Louis
AG 1914. Represented in Museum of
New Orleans; St. Louis Artists' Guild.
545
RISWOLD
WHO'S WHO IN ART
ROBINSON
RISWOLD. Gilbert P., 1038 Fine Arts
Bldg-., 410 South Michigan Ave., Chica-
go; h. 742 North Ridgeland Ave., Oak
Park, 111.
S.— Born Sioux Falls,, S. D., Jan. 23,
1881. Pupil of Lorado Taft and Charles
Milligan. Work: "Statue of Stephen
A. Douglas", Springfield, 111.; "Mormon
Pioneer Monument", 'Salt Lake City,
Utah.
RITCHIE, Alexander, 715 Seneca Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
RITMAN, Louis, care of The Macbeth
Gallery, 450 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y. (P.)
RITSCHEL. William, 58 West 57th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Marine P. — Born Nuremberg, Germany,
July 11. 1864. Pupil of F. Kaulbach
and C. Raupp in Munich; came to U. S.
in 1895. Member: ANA 1910, NA
1914: NYWCC; AWCS; Salma.C. 1901;
A. Fund S.; NAC; Kunstverein. Munich.
Awards: Hon. mention, Salma.C;
hon. mention. CI Pittsburgh, 1912; Car-
negie prize, NAD 1913; gold medal and
$1,000, NAC 1914; gold medal, P.-P.Exp..
San F., 1915; gold medal. State Fair,
Sacramento, Calif.. 1916; gold medal,
Phila. AC. 1918. Work: "Rocks and
Breakers." Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts; "Across the Plains, Ari-
zona," Ft. Worth (Tex.) Museum;
"Desert Wanderers," Chicago Art In-
stitute; "Fog and Breakers," Detroit
Art Club; "Rockbound Coast," City
Art Museum, St. Louis; "Evening Tide,
California," Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D. C.
RITTENBERG, Henry R., 222 W. 59th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.. T.— Born Libau. Russia, Oct. 2.
1879. Pupil of W. M. Chase at PAFA;
Ludwig Heterich in Munich. Mem-
ber: ANA; Fellowship PAFA; Phila.
AC; Salma. C; NAC; Allied AA.
A w ar d s : Hon. mention, AC Phila.,
1906; Maynard portrait prize, NAD,
1920. Instructor ASL of N.Y.
H.
Bloomingburg,
RITTER. Charles
N. Y. (P.)
ROBB, Elizabeth B., 24 Herron Ave.,
Emsworth, Pa.
P. — Member: Pittsburgh AA.
Awards : Third prize, AA Pitts-
burgh, 1914; first prize, AA Pittsburgh,
1915.
ROBBINS. Frederick (Goodrich), 2319
Lombard St., San Francisco, Calif.
P., E., T. — Born Oak Park, 111., May 5,
1893. Pupil of Carl N. Werntz, Spencer
Mackev, Lee Randolph. Member:
Calif. PM; Calif. SE.
ROBBINS, John Williams, Farmington,
Conn.
P., E. — Born Windham, Conn., Feb. 16,
1856. Studied in Boston Normal Art
School under Walter Smith, and Cowles
Art School under Emil Carlsen; in life
class under P. F. Vinton; water color
under T. O. Langerfeldt; and ASL of
N.Y. under Brush and Dewing. Work
in N. Y. Pub. Libr. ; Museum of Fine
Arts, Boston; Metropolitan Museum of
Art; Grolier Club, New York; AIC; Con-
gressional Library, Washington; Na-
tional Gallery, Washington. Inventor
of Brulegravure.
ROBERTS, Alice Mumford (Mrs. Robert
Stewart Culin), 296 Sterling PI., Brook-
lyn, New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Phila., Jan. 30, 1875. Pupil of
Joseph De Camp, Carl Newman and
Robert Henri. Member: Fellowship
PAFA. Awards : Mary Smith prize,
PAFA 1906 and 1910; bronze medal,
P.-P.Exp., San F,.. 1915.
ROBERTS, Elizabeth W(entworth), Con-
cord, Mass.; summer, Annisquam, Mass.
P. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., June 10,
1871. Pupil of Elizabeth Bonsall and
H. R. Poore in Philadelphia; Bougue-
reau, Robert-Fleury, Lefebvre and Mer-
son in Paris. Member: PAFA (as-
soc. fellow); Niter. Soc. AL; Province-
town AA; Concord AA; Awards:
Mary Smith prize, PAFA 1889; hon.
mention, Paris Salon, 1892. Work:
"The Boy with the Violin," Pennsyl-
vania Academy, Philadelphia; "The
Madonnas of Marks." Asilo San
Giovanni in Bragora, Venice, Italy;
"Reflections," Public Library, Concord,
Mass.; "Concord: March," Fenway Court,
Boston.
ROBERTS, Milnora, 4505 15th St., N. E.,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
ROBERTS, Mrs. Violet K(ent), 417 Colum-
bia Rd., N. W., Washington, D. C.
P., I., W.— Born The Dalles, Ore., Nov.
22, 1880. Pupil of Benson, Beck, Mosch-
cowitz. Prellwitz. Member: Alumni
Pratt Inst.
ROBESON, Edna Amelia, Bettendorf, la.
Min. P. — Born Davenport, la., Jan. 25,
1887. Pupil of Frank Phoenix and ASL
of N. Y. Member: Pa. S. Min. P.
ROBINS. Hugo. 9 East 14th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
ROBINS, Susan P. B., 95 Mt. Vernon St.,
Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Boston, 1849. Pupil of John
Johnston, Ross Turner and F. Crownin-
shield and Boston Museum School
under Philip Hale. Member: Cop-
ley S, 1894.
ROBINSON, Adah IVI(atilda). 1118 West
13th 'St., Oklahoma City, Okla.
P., W., L.. T. — Born Richmond. Ind.,
July 13, 1882. Pupil of J. E. Bundy,
George Elmer Browne and AIC.
ROBINSON, Alexander, care Morgan,
Harjes & Co., 14 Place Vendome; stu-
dio, 235 Faubourg St. Honore, Paris,
France; care A. H. Burrage, 49 Aid-
worth St.. Boston. Mass.
P., T. — Born Portsmouth, N. H., May
11, 1867. Pupil of Lowell School of De-
sign (Boston Museum of Art); Acad-
emic Julian, Paris, under Ducet and
Constant. Member: NYWCC; Phila.
WCC; Chicago WCC; AWCS; Salma.C;
Societe Nationale des Aquarellistes,
Paris; Cercle d'Art, Tournai and
Bruges, Belgium; United Arts Club,
London. Award : Silver medal, P. -P.
546
ROBINSON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
ROECKER
Exp., San F., 1915. Work: "Church
Interior" and group of 11 pastels, To-
ledo Art Museum; "Falling Leaves,"
Rockford (111.) Art Association; ••■Canal
Venice," Mississippi Art Association,
Jackson; "Jehaun-Ara," Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts; ten paint-
ings and nine aquarelles, Delgado Mu-
seum, New Orleans; "Dordrecht" and
"Spanish Coast," five aquarelles and
twelve drawings, Newcomb Art Gallery,
Tulane Univ., New Orleans; twenty-
seven Italian water colors, Desmond
Fitzgerald Art Gallery, Brookline, Mass.;
"La Dame aux Tulipes" and "Summer,"
Museum d'lxelles; "Autumn, England,"
Moscow (Russia) ; and in collections at
Glasgow, Dundee, London, and Man-
chester (England).
ROBINSON, Alonzo Clark, 6 Rue Au-
mont-Therville; h. 17 Rue Cardinet,
Paris, France.
S.. W.— Born Darien, Conn., Sept. 3,
1S76. Member: 'Soc. Inter. des
Beaux-Arts et des Lettres.
ROBINSON, Boardman, 146 Fourth Ave.,
New Brighton, Staten Island, New
York, N. Y.
I.— Member: SI 1909; P-G.
ROBINSON, Charles W., 28 Armond St.,
Rochester, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
ROBINSON, David, 13 West 29th St., New
York, N. Y. ; h. Silvermine, Conn.
P., I. — Born Warsaw, Poland, July 31,
1886. Studied in America, France and
Germany. Member: SI, 1910; Salma.
C; S.Indp.A.
ROBINSON, Florence V(!ncent), 510
Park Ave., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Boston, Mass., Nov. 18, 1874.
Pupil of Vignal and Harpignies in
Paris. Member: Societe des Aqua-
rellists. Paris; AWCS. Work: In
Harvard University, Cambridge; Cleve-
land School of Art; Government col-
lections of France; "Chateau de Ver-
sailles," Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
ROBINSON, H. L., 1155 Madison Ave.,
Columbus. O.
S., P. — Member: Pen and Pencil C,
Columbus.
ROBINSON, Jean A., 5 Bennett St.,
Charleston, S. C. (P.)
ROBINSON, Kathleen B(everley), (Mrs.
Frank L. Ingels), 6016 Ellis Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
S.. T. — Born Aurora. Ontario, Canada,
1882. Pupil of AIC under Taft. Mem-
ber: Chicago SA. Instructor, AIC.
Award: Shaffer prize ($100), AIC.
1913. Work in: Brooklyn Institute
Museum.
ROBINSON, Oliver D., 105 North Village
Ave., Rockville Centre, L. I., N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
ROBINSON. V>/iII(iam) S., 202 West 74th
St.. New York. N. Y.
P. — Born East Gloucester, Mass., Sept.
In. 1861. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art
School in Boston; Julian Academy in
Paris. Member: ANA 1901. NA
1911; AWCS 1897; NYWCC 1891;
Salma. C. 1897 (life); Lotos C. 1900;
A. Fund S., 1889; NAC; Allied AA,
1919. Awards : Hon. mention Paris
Expo., 1900; hon. mention Pan-Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; Newhouse prize,
Salma. C, 1901; bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; Carnegie prize,
NAD 1910; silver medal, Buenos Aires
Exp.. 1910; silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San
F., 1915; fourth W. A. Clark prize
($500), and hon. mention, Corcoran Gal-
lery, Washington, 1919. Work: "The
Golden Bough," Carnegie Institute,
Pittsburgh; "Golden Days," Art Muse-
um, Dallas, Tex.; "Monhegan Head-
land." National Gallery, Washington,
D. C.
ROBINSON, W(illiam) T., Auditorium
Bldg., Maiden, Mass.
P. — Born Somerville, Mass., Sept. 17,
1852. Pupil of George N. Cass in Bos-
ton; Ecole des Beaux- Arts, Ecole de
Medecine. Gobelin Tapestry Schools,
Bouguereau and Diogene Maillart in
Paris. Member: NAC (life).
ROCHE, M. Paul, 630 77th St., Brooklyn,
New York, N. Y.
E., P., T.— Born Cork, Ireland, Jan. 22,
1885. Member: Brooklyn SE; Salma.
C. Represented in Brooklyn Museum;
Chicago Art Institute; Detroit Institute;
Library of Congress, Wa.shington, D. C.
ROCHON, (IVIarie) Louise, h. 3303 13th
St., Washington, D. C.
L— Born Washington, D. C. Pupil of
Ossip Perelma. Member: Wash. AC.
Work: Fashion drawings for "Even-
ing Star."
ROCKWELL, Evelyn Enola, 38 West 59th
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, York
Harbor, Me.
P.— Born Chicago, 1887. Pupil of
PAFA; ASL of N.Y.; Woodbury, and
Chase. Member : NAC. Specialty,
portraits of children in pastel.
ROCKWELL, Norman, 40 Prospect St.,
New Rochelle, N. Y.
L— Born New York City, Feb. 3, 1894.
Pupil of George Bridgman and Thomas
Fogarty. Member: Guild of Free
Lance Artists; Salma. C.
RODERICK, C(harles) E. D(uncan), May
St., Portland. Me.
P. — Born Nova Scotia. Pupil of Charles
K. Fox. Member: Portland AS.
RODERICK, L(ulu) Z(ita), Newport, R. I.;
h. St. John. N. B., Canada.
P., I., W., T.— Born Nova Scotia. Pupil
of Paul Moschcowitz. Me m b e r : New-
port AA; R. I. Asso. Teachers D. and
M. T.
RODGERS, M. C, 1707 Farmers Bank
Bldg.. Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. A. A.
ROECKER, Hfenry) Leon, 444 East 42d
Place, Hyde Park, Chicago, 111.
P. — Born Burlington, la. Pupil of Acad-
emy of Design in Chicago; Gysis at
Royal Academy in Munich. Member :
Chicago SA: Chicago WCC; "The Cliff
Dwellers," "Cor Ardens." Awards:
Hon. mention. Munich. 1889; Yerkes
prize, AIC 1894: Arche C. prize, AIC
1897; Chicago SA medal. 1909; Carr
prize, AIC 1911.
547
ROGALL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
ROSE
ROGALL, Wilhelmina, 96 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M e m b e r : N. A. Women P. 'S.
ROGERS, Barksdale, Greenwich, Conn.
I., P. — Born Macon, Ga. Pupil of Stein-
len in Paris; also studied in Munich.
Work: Illustrations for "Judge,"
"The New York Sunday World," "Scrib-
ners' Magazine" and "Puck."
ROGERS, Mrs. Eleanor Gale, The Ken-
dis, 1710 West 6th St., Los Angeles, Gal.
P.— M ember: Calif. AC.
ROGERS, Frances, 246 Fulton St., Brook-
lyn, New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
ROGERS, Gretchen W., 210 Fenway Stu-
dios. Boston, Mass.
P. — M ember: Boston GA. Award:
Silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
ROGERS, John A(rthur), Box 506, Day-
tona, Pla.
E., Arch., T. — Born Louisville, Ky., Apr.
12. 1870. Pupil of AIC; Mass. Inst.
Tech.; AIC; Boston Museum.
ROGERS, Louise De Gignllllet, Green-
wich, Conn.
P.,E. — Born Macon, Ga. Pupil of Stein-
len, Paris; Robert Henri, and also stud-
ied in Munich. Member: Brooklyn
SE; Conn. SA. Painted portraits of
Ex-Vice-Pres. Marshall, William Jen-
nings Bryan, Senator Tillman and
others.
ROGERS, William Allen, 640 Madison
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Caricaturist. — Born Springfield, O., May
23, 1854. Member: SI 1904; Century
Assoc. On staff of "New York Herald."
ROHN, Ray, 514 Walnut St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
I. — M ember: SI.
ROLLE, A. H. O., 134 Quincy Place,
Washington, D. C.
P.— Born Minnesota, March 30, 1875.
Pupil of Corcoran School of Art, Wash-
ington, D. C. Member: S.WashA.;
Wash. Landscp. C.
ROLLINS, Warren E., 34 West 51st St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
ROLSHOVEN, Julius, care of Budworth,
424 West 52nd St., New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Detroit, Oct. 28, 1858.
Pupil of Cooper Union, New York;
Hugo Crola at Diisseldorf; Loefftz In
Munich; Frank Duveneck in Florence;
Robert-Fleury in Paris. Member:
Soc, Nat. des Beaux- Arts, Paris;
Secession, Munich; Detroit Fine Arts
Soc. (hon.); International Art Con-
gress; Paris Soc. A and L; Scarab
Club, Detroit; Foreign Arts Club, Flor-
ence; Bene Merensa Societa di Belle
Arte, Florence; Taos 'SA; NAC.
Awards: Second medal, Paris Exp.,
1889; hon. mention, Paris Exp.. 1900;
bronze medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; medals, Munich, Berlin, Brussels
and Chicago; silver medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; Hors Concours, Soci6t6
Franqaise. Paris. Work: "Chioggia
Fishing Girl," and two etchings, Cin-
cinnati Museum; "The Refectory of
San Damaino, Assisi." Detroit Institute,
represented in Minneapolis Museum,
Brooklyn Museum and Union League
Club of Chicago.
ROIVIANO, Nicholas, 313 Race St.; h. 1328
South 9th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P., S., C, W.— Born Montoro, Italy,
Dec. 6, 1889. Pupil of Albert Laessle.
Represented in Pennsylvania Academy
of the Fine Arts; Philadelphia Art Al-
liance; Graphic Sketch Club of Phila-
delphia.
ROIVIANOWSKY, Dimitri, 227 Waverly
PL, New York, N. Y. (P.)
ROMERO, Emilio, Guayama, Porto Rico.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
ROOK, Edward F(rancis), Old Lyme,
Conn.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., 1870. Pupil
of Constant and Laurens in Paris.
Member: ANA 1908; Lotos C;
Lyme A. A. Awards: Temple gold
medal. PAFA 1898; bronze medal, Pan-
Am. Exp. Buffalo, 1901; two silver
medals, St. Louis Exp., 1904; bronze
medal, C.I. Pittsburgh, 1910; silver
medal Buenos Aires Exp., 1910; gold
medal. P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915; third
W. A. Clark prize ($1,000), and
bronze medal, Corcoran Gallery, Wash-
ington, 1919. Work: "Deserted Street
— Moonlight," Pennsylvania Academy,
Philadelphia; "Pearl Cloud.s — Moonlight"
and "Wisteria," Cincinnati Museum;
represented in Boston Art Club and In
Lotos Club, New York, and Portland
Art Museum.
ROOS, Peter, 24 Sacramento St., Cam-
bridge, Mass.
P., T.— Born Sweden, Feb. 22, 1850.
Member: Boston AC. Award :
Medal, Boston, 1874. Specialty, land-
scape.
ROOT. Robert Marshall, Svndicate Bldg.,
Shelbyville, 111.
P., L— Born Shelbyville, 111., Mar. 20,
1863. Pupil of Constant, Laurens and
Lefebvre. Award: State Centennial
Medal. Springfield, 1918. Works;
Historical painting "Lincoln and Doug-
las Debate. 1858". Springfield; "Portrait
Lt. Gov. Barat O'Harra", Lt. Governor's
oflace, Springfield; "The Power, The
Wisdom, The Justice of the Law" in
Atty. General's office, Springfield.
ROSE. George L.. Forest Hall, 1256 Wis-
consin Ave., Washington. D. C; h. 6
Laurel PI., Upper Montclair, N. J.
P.— Born Newport, R. I., Oct. 8, 1861.
Pupil of John La Farge. Member:
Mural P.
ROSE, Guy, 303 North Fair Oaks Ave.,
Pasadena, Cal.
P. — Born San Gabriel, Cal., March 3,
1867. Pupil of Emil Carlsen in San
Francisco; Lefebvre, Constant and
Doucet in Paris. Member: Calif. AC;
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1894; medal, Atlanta Exp., 1895; bronze
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; sil-
ver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915; gold
medal, Panama-Calif. Exp.. San Diego,
1915; prize ($50). Calif. AC, 1916; first
548
ROSELAND
WHO'S WHO IN ART
ROSSE
Black prize, Calif. AC, 1919; Landscape
prize, Sacramento, 1920; first Harrison
prize, Los Angeles AC, 1921.
ROSELAND, Harry, 191 Clinton St.,
Brooklyn; h. 2118 Albermarle Road,
Flatbush. New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Brooklyn, May 12, 1867. Pupil
of J. B. Whittaker in Brooklyn; Beck-
with In New York. Member: Brook-
lyn AC; Salma.C. 1896. Awards:
Gold medal, Brooklyn AC 1888; second
Hallgarten prize, NAD 1898; silver
medal, Boston, 1900; bronze medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902; silver medal,
AAS 1902; gold medal, Boston, 1904;
gold medal, AAS 1907. Specialty, ne-
gro subjects.
ROSEN, Charles, New Hope, Bucks Co.,
Pa.
P. — Born Westmoreland Co., Pa., Apr.
28, 1878. Pupil of NAD and N.Y. School
of Art under Chase, Du Mond and F.
C. Jones. Member: ANA 1912, NA
1917; NAC; Salma. C. Awards: Third
Hallgarten prize, NAD, 1910; first Hall-
garten prize, NAD 1912; Shaw purchase
prize ($500); Salma. C. 1914; hon. men-
tion, CI Pittsburgh, 1914; silver medal,
P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915; Inness gold
medal, NAD, 1916; Altman prize
($1,000), NAD, 1916. Work: "Washed
Out Bottomlands," Minneapolis So-
ciety of Fine Arts; "Late Sunlight,"
Duluth Fine Arts Association; "Frozen
River," Delgado Museum, New Orleans,
La. "Winter Sunlight," Youngstown
Art Museum; "North Haven," City Art
Museum, St. Louis, Mo.
ROSENBERG, H(enry) M., Halifax,
N. S.; h. Dartmouth, N. S.
P. — Born New Brunswick, N. J., Feb.
28, 1858. Pupil of Royal Academy in
Munich; studied in Florence and Ven-
ice. Member: Salma.C. Director,
Victoria School of Art and Design,
Halifax.
ROSENBERG, James N., 27 West 67th St.,
New Y'ork, N. Y.
P.— Born Nov. 20, 1874. Member:
NAC; S.Indp.A.
ROSENBERG. Rosa, 1614 North Frank-
lin St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember : Fellowship PAFA.
ROSENBERG, Samuel, 345 Fifth Ave.;
h. 3211 Elsmore Sq., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Port. P. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., June
28, 1896. Pupil of Collens, Sparks and
Volk. Member : Pittsburgh AA.
Represented in Pittsburgh public
schools.
ROSENFIELD, Hugo, 22 West 74th St.,
New Y^ork, N. Y.
P.— Studied at AIC; ASL of N. Y., and
in Paris.
ROSENFIELD, Lester, 22 West 74th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Minneapolis, Minn., Feb. 1,
1886. Pupil of AIC; ASL of N. Y.;
Royal Academy, Munich.
ROSENKRANZ, Clarence C, 314 Haw-
thorne Road, Duluth, Minn.
P. — Born Hammondsport, N. Y. Pupil
of John Ward Stimson, W. M. Chase
and Walter Shirlaw. Member: Buf-
falo SA; Duluth AA; Minn. State AA.
Awards : First hon. mention 1909,
Fellowship prize, 1911, second hon. men-
lion, 1912, Buffalo Fine Arts Academy;
first prize, Minn. Art Com. 1913. Wo r k :
"New England Winter", Minn. Art So-
ciety, and in Ribbing and Buhl, Minn.,
Public Libraries.
ROSENMEYER, B(ernard) J(acob), Ten-
afly, N. J.
1., P.— Born New York, Jan. 9, 1870.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under Mowbray;
Constant and Laurens in Paris. Mem-
ber: SI 1902. Work in: Carnegie In-
stitute, Pittsburgh; Print Dept. of N. Y.
Public Library.
ROSENSTEIN, A., 146 West 55th St.,
New l^ork, N. Y. (S.)
ROSENTHAL, Albert, 1722 Walnut St..
Philadelphia, Pa.
Port. P., Etcher.— Born Philadelphia,
Jan. 30, 1863. Pupil of his father, Max
Rosenthal, and of PAFA; Ecole des
Beaux-Arts in Paris under G6r0me;
studied in Munich. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA; Charcoal C. Balto.;
Wash. AC; Salma. C. Awards:
Bronze medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
bronze medal, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915.
ROSENTHAL, David, 30 Hulbert Block;
h. 24 Erchenbrecher Ave., Cincinnati, O,
P., I., T.— Born Cincinnati, Feb. 15.
1876. Studied in Munich, Rome, Flor-
ence and Milan. Member: Cincin-
nati AC.
ROSENTHAL, Doris, 216 Third Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Riverside, Calif. Pupil of
Bellows, Dow, and Sloan.
ROSENTHAL, IVI(ichael), 1947 Broadway,
h. 8 Ludlow St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Russia, June 20, 1885. Pupil
of Robert Henri and Homer Boss.
Member: S. Indp. A.
ROSS, Denman W(aldo), 24 Craigie St.,
Cambridge, Mass.
P., W.. L.. T.— Born Cincinnati, O.,
Jan. 10, 1853. Member: Copley S.
1892; Boston SAC (life). Trustee Mu-
seum of Fine Arts, Boston. Lecturer
on "Theory of Design" at Harvard
Univ.
ROSS, Gordon, 25 Plymouth St., Mont-
clair, N. J. (I.)
ROSS, Isabel, 516 Franklin St., Buffalo,
N. Y. (P.)
ROSS, Raymond L., 3210 17th St., N. E.,
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
ROSS, Y., care of J. R. Chesno, 51 West
iOth St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
ROSSE. Hermann, Art Inst, of Chicago,
Chicago. 111.; h. Wade St.. Ravini-i. 111.:
summer, 20 Niewe Uitleg, The Hague,
Holland.
P.. Arch.. C, L., T.— Born The Hague,
Holland. Jan. 1. 1887. Studied in Hol-
land. Member: Kunstkring of The
Hague; Cliff Dwellers, Chicago.
549
ROSSEAU
WHO*S WHO IN ART
RUCKSTULL
Award: Medal of honor, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915. Work: Painting in dome
of the Peace Palace. The Hague; mural
decorations in Salt Lake City Orpheum
Theatre,
ROSSEAU, Percival L(eonard), Grassy
Hill, Lyme, Conn.
P. — Born New Orleans, La., Sept. 21,
1869. Pupil of Lefebvre and Robert -
Fleury in Paris. Member: Lyme
AA; Lotos C. Awards: Hon. men-
tion, Paris Salon, 1900; third class
medal, Paris Salon, 1906.
ROTERS, Carl G., 9 East 10th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
ROTH, Ernest David, care of Salma-
gundi Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
P., E.— Born Stuttgart, Germany, Jan.
17, 1879. Pupil of NAD in New York;
etching under James D. Smillie. Mem-
ber: ANA; NYWCC; Salma. C;
Chicago SE; N. Y. SE; Cal. SE; P.-G;
AWCS; Wash. WCC. Awards: Third
Shaw prize for black and white. Salma.
C, 1911; first Shaw prize for black and
white, Salma. C, 1912; first prize for
architectural subject, Chicago SE, 1914;
Vezin thumb-box prize, Salma. C, 1915;
bronze medal for painting and silver
medal for etching, P. -P. Exp., San F.,
1915; J. Sanford Saltus prize, Salma. C,
1917; first hon. mention, Chicago Art
Inst., 1917; Shaw prize, Salma. C, 1918.
Prints in: New York Public Library;
Boston Museum of Art; Library of Con-
gress, Washington, D.C.; Public Library,
Newark, N. J.; Chicago Art Institute;
Minneapolis Inst, of Art; Uffizi Gallery,
Florence, Italy.
ROTH, Mrs. Ernest, (Elizabeth Macken-
zie), 436 Fort Washington Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
ROTH, F(rederick) G(eorge) R(ichard),
Sherwood Place, Englewood, N. J.
S.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Apr. 28, 1872.
Pupil of Hellmer and Meyerheim in
Vienna. Member: NSS 1900; ANA
1906, NA 1906; N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1902; Nat.
Inst. AL; SAA 1903; Salma. C, 1902;
NSS; New Soc. of A.; Soc. Am. Animal
P. &S. Awards: Silver medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; silver medal, Buenos
Aires Exp., 1910; gold medal, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915. Represented in
Metropolitan Museum. New York and
Detroit Institute of Arts.
ROTH, Herbert, care of "New York
World," New York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI 1912.
ROTH, Robert, 123 Lexington Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
ROTHBORT, Samuel, 1518 Lincoln Place,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
ROTHWELL, Elizabeth L., 435 Atwood
St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh Art Assoc.
Award : Third prize, Pittsburgh AA,
1915.
ROUGERON. Marcel J(u!es), 94 Park
Ave., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Paris, France, Oct. 6, 1875.
Pupil of Julian, Jerome, di Datti, Vibert^.
Member : 'Societe Royale des Art-
istes Beiges. Awards : Officer of
Public Instruction of France, 1900;
Grand Croix of St. Stanislaus, 1904.
ROULAND, Orlando, 130 West 57th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Pleasant Ridge, 111., Dec.
21, 1871. Pupil of Max Thedy in Ger-
many; Julian Academy in Paris under
Laurens and Constant. Member:
Salma. C. 1901; Paris AAA; Phila. AC;
Allied AA; MacD. C; Alliance. Work
in: Yale Univ., New Haven, Conn.;
Trinity College, Cambridge Univ., Eng-
land; University of Texas and State
Capitol, Austin, Tex. ; Historical So-
ciety, St. Paul, Minn.; Wheaton Semi-
nary, Norton, Mass.; Carnegie Insti-
tution, Washington, D. C. ; Engineers'
Club and Society of Mining Engineers,
New York, N. Y. ; City Club, Boston;
Art Museum, Montclair, N. J.; National
Gallery, Washington, D. C. ; Public
Library, Lexington, Ky. ; Amherst Col-
lege; Art Club, Erie, Pa.
ROUST, Mrs. Helma, 455 West 34th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
ROWE, Clarence (Herbert), Cos Cob,
Conn.
I., E. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., May 11,
1878. Pupil of Max Bohm, PAFA, Bou-
guereau and Ferrier in Paris. Mem-
ber: Salma. C; SI; Greenwich SA;
Guild of Free Lance Artists.
ROWELL, Mrs. Fanny, National Arts
Club, 14 Gramercy Pk., New York,
N. Y. ; summer, Mt. Hebron, Berryville,
Va.
P., L„ — Born Princeton, N. J., May 11,
1865. Pupil of J. B. Whittaker in
Brooklyn; Colarossi Academy in Paris;
Trager at Sevres. Member: NAC;
N.Y.Soc.C; N.Y.Municipal AS; Arts C.
of Jersey City; Bridgeport AC (hon.);
Jersey Keramic C. (hon.); Wash. AC.
Awards : Diamond medal for design
in pottery, Nat. Lg. of Mineral Painters
1898. Lecturer, "History of Art,"
"Municipal Art."
ROWEN, George Miles, Silver Springs,
Md.
P. — M ember: S. Wash. A.
RUBINS, H. W.,, 1200 2nd Ave., South,
Minneapolis, Min.
E.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Nov. 25. 1865.
Pupil of AI Chicago. Member: Chi-
cago SE; Minneapolis SFA. Work in:
New York Public Library.
RUCKSTULL, F(rederic) W(ellington).
National Arts Club, 15 Gramercy Pk.,
New York, N. Y.
S'.. L.. W. — Born Breitenbach, Alsace.
May 22, 1853; came to America when
one year old. Pupil of Julian Academy
in Paris under Boulanger and Lefebvre,
and of Rollins Academv under Mercie.
Member: NSS 1893; N. Y. Arch.
Lg. 1894; NAC; Nat. Inst. AL; N. Y.
Municipal AS. Awards : Hon. men-
550
RUDD
WHO'S WHO IN ART
RUZICKA
tion, Paris Salon, 1888; medal, Columbi-
an Exp., Chicago, 1893. Sect. Committee
for erection of Dewey Arch, 1898; chief
of sculpture. St. Louis Exp., 1904.
Work: "Evening," life-size marble,
Metropolitan Museum, New York; eques-
trian statue of "Gen. J. F. Har-
tranft," Harrisburg, Pa.; equestrian
statue of "Gen. Wade Hampton," Co-
lumbia, S. C; "Confederate Monument,"
Baltimore; "Defense of the Flag,"
Little Rock, Ark.; "Women's Monu-
ment," Columbia, S. C; "John C. Cal-
houn," and "U. M. Rose," the Capitol.
Washington; "Solon," "Goethe. Frank-
lin, Macaulay," Library of Congress,
Washington; "Wisdom" and "Force."
Appellate Court. New York; "Three
Partisan Generals Monument," Colum-
bia. S. C; "Confederate Monument,"
Salisbury, N. C. ; "Soldiers' Monument,"
Jamaica, New York City; "Mercury
Teasing Eagle of Jupiter," St. Louis;
Pennsylvania Soldier Monument, Peters-
burg. Va. • "Phoenicia." New York Cus-
toms House, "Minerva," Liberty Monu-
ment, Battlefield of Long Island.
RUDD, Mrs. Emma, 56 Butternut St.,
Lyons, N. Y.
Pi— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
RUDERSDORF, Lillian, 21 East Van
Buren St., Chicago, 111.
P., C, T. — Born Clarkson, Neb., Feb,
5, 1882. Pupil of Univ. of Neb.; AIC.
Member: Omaha AG.
RUDOLPH, iVIrs. Pauline Dohn, Winnetka,
111.
P.— Born Chicago. Pupil of PAFA;
Boulanger, Lefebvre, Lasar and Cou-
ture in Paris. Member: Palette
Club; Cosmopolitan C, Chicago; Chi-
cago SA. Award : First Yerkes
prize. Chicago SA.
RUDY, IVIary Eleanor Robinson, 4516 Lake
Park Ave., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Burlington, la.. May 29, 1861.
Pupil: AIC; A. E. Brooks, Nyholm and
others. Member: Alumni AIC;
Arche C.
RUGGLES, Theo Alice. See Mrs. H. H.
Kitson.
RUMMELL, John, 68 Greenfield St., Buf-
falo, N. Y. ; summer, 75 Granite St.,
Rockport, Mass.
P., W., L., T.— Born Springville, N. Y.,
Aug. 24, 1861. Pupil of L. B. C. Josephs,
Carl Ahrens, and John F. Carlson.
Member: Buffalo SA; Buffalo G. AA.
Awards : First hon. mention, Buffalo
SA, 1917; second hon. mention, Buffalo
SA. 1918 and 1919; Fellowship prize
($50), Buffalo SA, 1921.
RUMMLER, Alex. J., 21 Maple Ave.,
Glenbrook, Conn.
P.— Born Dubuque, la.. July 25, 1867.
Pupil of Laurens in Paris. Member:
Salma.C. 1900.
RUMSEY, Charles Gary, Glen Head, L. I.,
N. Y.
S. — Award: F,ronze medal, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915.
RUMSEY, Evelyn, 320 Delaware Ave.,
Buffalo, N. Y. (P.)
RUNGIUS, Carl, 96 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
I., P. — Born Berlin, Germany, Aug. 18,
1869. Pupil of Paul Meyerheim in Ber-
lin; came to U. S. 1894. Member:
ANA 1913; NA, 1920; Salma. C. ; NAC;
SMPF West; Soc. Am. Animal P. & S.
Specialty, American big game.
RUPPRECHT, Edgar A., 1207 Tower
Bldg., Chicago, 111. (P.)
RUSE, Margaret, Donner Ave., Monessen,
Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
RUSH, Olive, 390 Canon Rd., Santa Fe,
N. M.
P., I. — Bern Fairmount, Ind. Pupil of
ASL of N. Y. under Twachtman and
Mowbray; Howard Pyle at Wilmington;
Richard Miller in Paris. Member:
NYWCC; Wilmington SFA; Santa Fe
Art C. Awards: Hon mention,
Richmond AA. 1919; first prize, Herron ,
Art Inst., 1919. Work : "The Gospel,"
altar panels, St. Andrew's Church. Wil-
mington, Del., Herron Art Institute;
Nathaniel Hawthorne School, Indian-
apolis.
RUSSELL, Charles M(arion), 1219 Fourth
Ave., North Great Falls, Mont.; sum-
mer, Apgar, Lake McDonald, Mont.
P., S.. I., W.— Born St. Louis, Mo., Max.
19, 1865.
RUSSELL, Walter, 1 West 67th St., New
York, N. Y.; and Washington, Conn.
P., W.— Born Boston, May 19, 1871.
Pupil of Albert Munsell and Ernest
Major in Boston; Howard Pyle at Wil-
mington; Laurens in Paris. Specialty,
portraits of children. Author: "The
'Sea Children." "Bending the Twig,"
"The Age of Innocence."
RUSSMANN, Felix, Palos Park, 111.
P.— Born New York City, Aug. 2, 1888.
Pupil of NAD; Munich Royal Academy.
Member: Chicago SA; Washington
AC. Award : Third Hallgarten
prize, NAD, 1918.
RUYL, Louis H., 171 Madison Ave., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Hingham, Mass.
I., E.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y.. Nov. 13,
1870. Member: Guild of Free Lance
Artists, Stowaway Club. Illustrations
for "Cape Cod, Old and New," "Old
Post Road, from Boston to Plymouth."
"From Provincetown to Portsmouth."
RUZICKA, R(udolph), 954 Lexington
Ave., New York, N. Y.; h. Dobbs Ferry,
N. Y.
I., E., Wood Engr. — Born in Bohemia,
June 29, 1883. Pupil: AIC; New York
School of Art. M e m-b e r : P-G.
Work : Illustrated "Fountains of
Papal Rome"; "New York"; "Newark";
examples in Art Institute of Chicago;
Carnegie Institute. Pittsburgh; Metro-
politan Museum. New York; Library of
Congress, Washington; Brooklyn Insti-
tute of Arts and Sciences.
551
RYAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SAINT GAUDENS
RYAN, Douglas, 3 Vandam St., New
York, N. Y. (I.)
RYAN, Edward, 3 Vandam St., New
York, N. Y. (I.)
RYDEN, Henninq, 809 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
S.,D.,P.— Born in Sweden, Jan. 21, 1869.
Pupil of AIC; studied in Berlin and
London. Member: Salma.C. 1908.
Award: Hon. mention, P.-P,.Exp.,
San F., 1915. Work in: American
Numismatic Society.
RYDER, Chauncey F(oster), 27 W. 10th
St., New York, N. Y.; summer, Wilton,
N. H.
P. — Born Danbury, Conn., Feb. 29, 1868.
Pupil of AIC; Julian Academy, Collin
and Laurens in Paris. Member:
ANA 1914; NA 1920; AAVCS; Allied AA;
Chicago WCC; Salma. C. Awards:
Hon. mention, Paris Salon. 1907; silver
medal, P.-P Exp., San F., 1915; Balti-
more WCC prize. Work in: Art
Institute of Chicago; Delgado Museum,
New Orleans, La.; Washington State
Art Association, Seattle, Wash.; Cor-
coran Gallery, Washington, D. C;
Hackley Art Gallery, Muskegon, Mich.;
National Exhibition Association, Toron-
to, Canada; Artists' Club, Denver, Colo.;
Engineers' Club, New York, N. Y.;
Society des Amis des Arts, Douai,
France; City Art Museum, St. Louis;
Butler Art Institute, Youngstown, O. ;
Minneapolis Inst, of Arts: National
Gallery, Wa.shington, D. C; Wilmmgton
SFA; Randolph-Macon Woman's Col-
lege, Lynchburg, Va., Quinnipiac Club,
New Haven, Dayton Museum of Arts.
RYDER, Worth, Berkeley, Calif.
P., E.. W., L., T. — Born Kirkwood, 111.,
Nov. 10, 1884. Award: Silver medal
for etching, P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915.
RYERSON, Margery (Austen), 315 West
57th St.. New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Provincetown, Mass.
p E w. — Born Morristown, N. J., Sept.
15,' 1886. Pupil of Robert Henri and
Charles W. Hawthorne. Member:
Wash. WCC; Brooklyn SE.
RYERSON, Mary Mcllvaine, 53 East 56th
St., New York, N. Y.; summer, Prov-
incetown, Mass. ., .
S., T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil of
Saint Gaudens and Eraser.
RYLAND, Robert K(nlght), 232 West 14th
St., New York, N. Y.; and RussellvIUe,
Ky.
Mural P.. I.— Born Grenada. Miss..
Feb. 10, 1873. Pupil of ASL and NAD
in New York. Member: Mural P. ;
N.Y.Arch.I g. 1910; Salma.C. Awards:
Lazarus European Scholarship, 1902-
1905.
RYMAN, C. M., Miners' Bank, Wilkes-
Barre, Pa. (Min. P.)
RYON, James P.. 28 East 49th St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
SABATINI, Raphael, 1740 South 15th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
S., T. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Nov. 26,
1898. Pupil of Charles Grafly.
SACHS, Joseph, 10 South 18th St.; h. 754
Passyunk Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Shavli, Russia, Sept. 1, 1887.
Pupil: PAFA, Anshutz, Chase and Ken-
dall. Member: Fellowship PAFA;
Phila. Sketch C; Phila. Alliance.
SACKER, Amy M., 739 Boylston St.; h.
64 Charlesgate East, Boston, Mass.
I., C, L., T.— Born Boston, July 17,
1876. Pupil of DeCamp and C. How-
ard Walker. Member: Boston SAC;
Copley S. Award: Bronze medal for
book covers, P. -Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
Art Director in Motion Pictures.
SACKETT, Clara E(lisabeth), 30 Ipswich
St., Boston, Mass.; summer, care Mrs.
Steele MacKaye, Shirley, Mass.
P., T.— Born Westfield, N. Y. Pupil
of ASL of -N. Y.; Aman-Jean and Dele-
cluse in Paris. Member : Buffalo
SA; Buffalo Guild of AA; Copley S.
Award : Prize, Buffalo SA.
SAGE, Cornelia Bentley (Mrs. W. W.
Quinton). Albright Art Gallery; h.
The Trubee, Buffalo, N. Y.
P., W.— Born Buffalo, Oct. 3, 1876.
Pupil of. Buffalo ASL; ASL of N. Y.
under Twachtman, Beckwith. Wiles and
Reid. Member: Buffalo SA (pres.
1911-1917); Buffalo ASL; Am.Assoc.of
Museums; Buffalo Guild of Allied Arts
(hon. pres. 1911-1912); American Scan-
dinavian Society; Boston GA (hon.
assoc); Archaeological Soc. of Am. (2d
v.-pres.); School Art Assoc, (v. -pres.).
Awards : Decoration of L'Officier de
rinstruction Publique, Paris, 1917; Dec-
oration Palme d'Academique, 1917; Cross
of the Legion of Honor, 1921. Di-
rector, Albright Art Gallery since 1910;
and of the School of the Albright Art
Gallery, 1910-1916. Editor, "Academy
Notes."
SAGE, Olive K., 12 South Highland St.,
Hartford, Conn.
P.— M ember: New Haven PCC.
SAHLER, Helen, 226 Central Park, South.
New York. N. Y.
S. — Born Carmel, N. Y. Pupil of ASL
of N. Y.; Enid Yandell and H. A. Mac-
Neil. Member: N. A. Women PS.
SAINT, Lawrence, Bryn Athyn, Pa.; h.
Huntington Valley, Pa.
E., C, W.. L. — Born Sharpsburg, Pa.,
Jan. 29, 1885. Pupil of PAFA. Chase,
Beaux, Poore, Sergeant Kendall and in
Europe. Work in Victoria and Albert
Museum. London; Carnegie Institut*^.
Pittsburgh; Bryn Athyn Church. Bryn
Athyn, Pa. Illustrator of "Stained Glass
of the Middle Ages in England and
France"; author and illustrator of "A
Knight of the Cross."
SAINT CLAIR, Gordon, 26 Tree Studio
Bldg.. East Ontario St.. Chicago, 111. (P.)
SAINT GAUDENS, Annetta Johnson
CMrs. Louis Saint Gaudens), Windsor,
Vt.
S.— Born Flint, O., Sept. 11. ' 1869.
M ember: N. A. AVomen PS; Chi-
cago AG; S. Indn. A.; Columbus A. Lg.
Awards : McMillin prize. N. A. Wom-
en PS 1913: hon. mention. Pan. -Calif.
Exp., San Diego, 1915. Work in Bos-
ton Museum of Art.
552
SAINT GAUDENS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SANGERNEBO
SAINT GAUDENS, Carlotta (Mrs. Homer
Saint Gaudens), Windsor, Vt. ; and 114
East 66th 'St.. New York. N. Y.
M in. P.— Born Rociiester. N. Y.. Oct. 11.
1884. Pupil of PAFA and ASL of N. Y.
under Cliase, Cox and Brusli. Mem-
ber: Am.S.Min.P.; Pa.S.Min.P.; Fel-
lowship PAFA; NAC.
ST. JOHN, J. Allen, Tree Studio Bldg.,
Chicago, 111.
P., I.— Born Chicago, Oct. 1, 1872.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under Mowbray.
Beckwith and Du Mond. Member:
Chicago SA.
ST. JOHN, Lola Alberta, Miltanna Gar-
den, Albany, Ind.
P., C— Born Albany, Ind., July 16, 1879.
Pupil of H. R. MoGinnis; Cincinnati Art
Academy under Nowottny and Meakin;
J. O. Adams and Brandt Steele at
Indianapolis. Member: Indianapolis
A. Assoc; Muncie A. Assoc; Alliance;
Indiana AC. Award : Hon. mention,
Muncie A. Assoc. Work: "October
Morning," Montpelier (Ind.) Library.
SAINT LANNE, Louis, 44 W. 30th St.,
New York, N. Y.
S.— Member : NSS 1907.
ST. LEGER, Isabella, 1115 Amsterdam
Ave., New York, N. Y. (P.)
SALEMME, Antonio, 637 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
SALERNO, Vincent, 119 East 23rd St.,
h. 117 West 116th St., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Sicily, Italy, Feb. 10, 1893.
Pupil of A. S. Calder, H. A. MacNeil.
Work: "Portrait of Justice Hend-
rick," Supreme Court, New York, N. Y.
SALISBURY, Mrs. A(tta) W(est), 75 El-
lenton Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y.
P. — Born Darnestown, Md. Pupil of
Corcoran School of Art, Cullen Yates
and Leon Dabo. Member: N. A.
Women PS; NAC; Wolfe C, New Ro-
chelle AA.
SALMON, Lionel E., 2403 North Union
St., Tacoma, Wash. (P.)
SALTUS, J. Sanford, 47 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
SALVATORE, Victor D., 8 Macdougal
Alle-^ New York. N. Y. ; h. "Swans-
wick." Springfield Centre, Otsego Co.,
N. Y.
S.. P., T.— Born Italy. July 7, 1885.
Pupil of Charles Niehaus and A. Phlm-
ister Proctor. Member: NSS 1913;
A. Aid S. Awards: Bronze medal,
'St. Louis Exp.. 1904- silver medal, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915; Barnett prize, NAD,
1919.
SAMPSON, Alden, 168 East 51st St.; h.
12 West 44th St., New York, N. Y.
P., W.— Born Manchester, Me., Mar. 13,
1853.
SANBORN, C. T., 323 Chnton St., Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
SANBORN, Earl Edward, 162 Washing-
ton St., Wellesley, Hills, Mass.; sum-
mer, Box 33, York Beach, Me.
P., T.— Born Lyme, N. H.. May 21, 1890.
Pupil of Burbank, Tarbell, Benson and
Paxton. Member: Boston AC.
Awards: Paige European Traveling
'Scholarship from the Boston Museum
of Fine Arts, 1914-16.
SANDONA, Matteo, 471 Buena Vista Ave.,
San Francisco, Cal.
P.— Born Schio, Italy, Apr. 15, 1881.
Pupil of Nani and Bianchi. Mem-
ber: San F. AA. Awards : Silver
medal, Lewis and Clark Exp., Portland,
1905; silver medal, Sacramento, 1917.
Member: International Jury of
Awards for Paintings, Panama-Paciflc
Exposition, San Francisco, 1915; Lg. of
N. Y. A.; Bohemian C, San Francisco.
Work: "Portrait of Mary Pickford,"
National Gallery, Washington, D. C;
"Chrysanthemums," Golden Gate Park
Memorial Museum, San Francisco.
SANDS, Anna M., 21st and N Sts., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash.WCC; S. Wash. A.
SANDZEN, Sven BIrger, Bethany Col-
lege, Lindsborg, Kan.
P., E.. T., W.. L.— Born Bildsberg. Swe-
den. Feb. 5, 1871. Pupil of Stockholm
Artists' League under Zorn and Bergh;
Aman-Jean In Paris: came to U. S. in
1894. Professor of aesthetics and paint-
ing, Bethany College, since 1894.
Award: First Moore prize ($100),
Artists of Kansas City and vicinity.
1917. Work in: National Museum,
Stockholm; Lund Museum, Sweden; Li-
brary of Congress, Washington; Chi-
cago Art Institute.
SANELL, Louis, 2509 East 37th St., Kan-
sas City, Mo. (P.)
SANFORD, Edward Field, Jr., 49 West
12th St., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born New York, Apr. 6, 1886. Stud-
ied: ASL of N. Y.; NAD; Julian Acad-
emy in Paris; Royal Academy in Mu-
nich. M em b e r : N.Y.Arch.Lg.; NSS;
Beaux-Arts Inst.; NAC. Work:
"Pegasus," bronze statuette, R. I. Schl.
of Design, Providence; Charles Francis
Adams Memorial, Washington and Leo
University, Lexington. Va.; Commemo-
rative Tablet, Columbia University;
Core Memorial, Norfolk, Va.
SANGER, William, 408 West 20th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Marlborough-
on-Hudson, N. Y.
P.. E. — Born Berlin. Germany, Nov. 12,
1875. Pupil of ASL of N.Y.; Artists
and Artisans Institute of N.Y. Mem-
ber: S.Indp.A.; Lg. of N.Y.A. Repre-
sented In the Hispanic Society of
America, New York.
SANGERNEBO, Emma (Mrs. Alexander
Sangernebo), 5 East Market St.; h. 2272
Adams St., Indianapolis, Ind.
P.— Born in Pittsburgh, Jan. 23, 1877.
Pupil of William Forsyth. Member:
Ind. AC. Work: Figure panels,
Loew's Theatre, Indianapolis.
553
SARG
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SARTAIN
SARG, Tony, 54 West 9th St., New York,
N. Y. ; h. 24 Ivanhoe Terrace, East
Orange, N. J.
P., I., C, W., L.— Born Guatemala, Cen-
tral America, Apl. 24, 1880. Member:
Salma. C; SI. Illustrated "Speaking
of Operations" and "Fiddle D. D." by
Irvin S. Cobb. Creator of Tony Sarg's
Marionettes.
SARGEANT, Geneve Rixford, 577 Duboce
Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
P. — Born San Francisco, July 14, 1868.
Pupil of Emil Carlsen, W. M. Chase,
and Gari Melchers. Member: San
F. AA; Chicago SA. Award: Cahn
prize, AIC 1903. Work: "Suma, A
Japanese Girl", Palace of Fine Arts, San
Francisco.
SARGENT, John S(inger), care of Cop-
ley-Plaza, Boston, Mass.; 33 Tite St.,
Chelsea, S. W., London, England; care
the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Mass.
Port, and Mural P. — Born Florence,
Italy, of American parents, Jan. 12, 1856.
Pupil of Academy of Fine Arts, Florence;
Carolus Duran in Paris. Member:
ANA 1891, NA 1897; Mural P.; Port.P.;
Copley S. (hon.); AIA (hon.); Paris SAP;
Soc.Nat.des Beaux- Arts, Paris; Royal
Academy, London. A. 1894; RA 1897;
Century Assoc, N. Y.; Nat.Inst.AL;
Phila.WCC (hon.); Berlin Academy; In-
stitute de France, 1905. Awards:
Hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1878; second
class medal, Paris Salon, 1881; medal of
honor, Paris Exp., 1889; medal, AC.
Phila. 1890; medal, Columbian Exp.,
Chicago, 1893; Temple gold medal,
PAFA 1894; medal of honor, Paris Exp.,
1900; gold medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; Converse gold medal, PAFA
1903; large gold medal, Berlin, 1903;
grand prize, St. Louis Exp., 1904; gold
medal of honor, Lidge Exp., 1905; gold
medal, Venice, 1907; Beck gold medal,
PAFA 1909; gold medal of honor, Nat.
Inst. Arts and Letters, 1914. Cheva-
lier of the Legion of Honor, France,
1889, Officer 1897; Order of Merit,
Germany, 1909. Work: Mural deco-
rations, Boston Public Libx^ary; "Car-
mencita," Luxembourg Museum, Paris;
"Carnation, Lily, Lily Rose," and "Ellen
Terry as Lady Macbeth," Tate Gallery,
London; "Self-Portrait," Uffizi Gallery,
Florence, Italy; "Portrait of Henry G.
Marquand," "Portrait of W. M. Chase,"
"Gitana," "Padr6 Sebastian," "The
Hermit," "Portrait, Madame X,"
"Marble Quarry at Carrara," and group
of water colors. Metropolitan Museum,
New York; "Portrait of Mrs. Austen,"
Buffalo Fine Arts Academy; "His Stu-
dio," Boston Museum; "Venetian
Water Carriers" and "Countess War-
wick and Son," and 11 water colors,
Worcester (Mass.) Art Museum; "Por-
trait of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Field,"
Pennsylvania Academy, Philadelphia;
eighty-three water colors, Brooklyn In-
stitute Museum; "James Whitcomb
Riley." Art Association, Indianapolis;
"Landscape with Goats" and "The
Weavers," National Gallery, Washing-
ton; "The Fountain" and Portrait of
Mrs. Chas. Gifford Dyer, Art Institute
of Chicago; "Venetian Bead Stringers,"
Fine Arts Academy, Buffalo; "The
Oyster Gatherers of Concale," Corco-
ran Gallery, Washington, D. C.
SARGENT, M(argarett) (W.), 107 West
47th St., New York, N. Y.; h. Wellesley,
Mass.; summer, care Mrs. Moon, Dorset;
Vt.
S. — Born Wellesley, Mass., Aug. 31, 1892.
Pupil of Woodbury and Borglum.
Member: N. A. Women PS.
SARGENT, Walter, North Scituate, Mass.;
and 5717 Kenwood Ave., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born Worcester, Mass., May 7, 1868.
Pupil of Colarossi and Delecluse acad-
emies, L'hermitte and Delance in Paris.
Member: Copley S. 1896; Paris AAA;
Chicago SA. Professor of Art Educa-
tion, University of Chicago.
SARKA, Charles N., 692 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y.; summer. Green Lake.
Fulton Co., N. Y.
Mural P., I.— Born Chicago. 111., Dec. 6.
1879. Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg., 1918
(assoc). Awards: Collaborative
prize, N.Y.Arch. Lg., 1913; first prize for
poster cover, St. Louis Pageant, 1914.
SARTAIN, Emily, 1346 North Broad St..
Philadelpnia, Pa.
P., Mezzotint Engr., T.— Born Philadel-
phia. Pupil of her father, John Sar-
tain; PAFA under Schiissele; Luminals
in PariF. M em b e r : Plastic C. (ex-
pres.); /.fellowship PAFA; Lyceum C,
London, Contemporary and New Cen-
tury C, Philadelphia; Member Jury of
Award, Columbian Exposition, Chicago,
1892. Delegate from U. S. Govt, to
International Congress on Instruction
in Drawing, Paris, 1900; Berne, Switzer-
land, 1904. Principal Philadelphia
School of Design for Women. A w ar d s:
Medal, Centennial Exp., Phila., 1876;
Mary Smith prize, PAFA 1881 and
1883; hon. mention, Pan-Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901.
S.ARTAIN, Harriet, 1823 Walnut St.,; h.
1503 Master St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Ldscp.P., T.— Born Philadelphia. Pupil
of Philadelphia School of Design for
Women and Teachers' College. New
York. Member : Plastic C. (pres.
1913-1916); N. A. Women PS; Phila.
Alliance; Phila. ACG. Fellowship PAFA
(assoc). Dean Phila. School of De-
sign for Women.
SARTAIN, William, 140 West 57th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P., T.. W.— Born Philadelphia. Pa., Nov.
21, 1843. Pupil of PAFA; Bonnat and
Ecole des Beaux- Arts in Paris; studied
also in Italy and Spain. Member :
ANA 1880; SAA 1877. Awards: Sil-
ver medal, Boston, 1881; hon. mention,
PAFA 1887; bronze medal. Pan- Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902; silver medal.
Buenos Ayres Exp., 1910. Work:
"Street in Dinan, Brittany," Corcoran
Gallery, Washington; "Algerian Water
Carriers," National Gallery, Washing-
ton; "Outside Mosque — Algiers" and "A
Chapter from the Koran," Metropolitan
Museum, New York: painting owned by
Argentine Government: "The Nubian
554
SARTELLE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SCHABELITZ
Sheik," Luxembourg Gallery, Paris.
Represented in collections of South
Carolina Art Assoc, and Herron Art
Institute.
SARTELLE, Mildred E., 6 Lughton Road,
Wellesley, Md. (S.)
SATRE, August, 24 Vermont Ave., Provi-
dence, R. I.
P. — M ember : Providence WCC.
SAUNDERS, Clara R(ossman), 3025 P St.,
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC; Wash.SA.
SAUNDERS, Kendall, 47 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P. — Born Templeton, Mass., Sept. 23,
1886. Pupil of Julian Academy under
Laurens in Paris. Member: Salma.
C. ; Paris AAA; Union Internationale
des Beaux-Arts et des Lettres.
SAVAGE, Eugene F., 116 E. 66th St., New
York, N, Y.
P. — A ward: American Academy in
Rome Fellowship, 1912-15. Member:
Mural P.
SAVIER, Helen. See Mrs. F. V. Du
Mond.
SAVILLE, Bruce Wilder, care of Ohio
State University, Hayes Hall, Colum-
bus, O.
S., T. — Born Quincy, Mass., Mar. 16,
1893. Pupil of Mr. and Mrs. Kitson.
Member: Copley S.; Boston AL;
Boston AC. Work: "John Hancock
Statue," Quincy, Mass.; three memo-
rials to civil war veterans, Vicksburg
(Miss.) National Park; Colling wood
Memorial, Kansas City, Mo.; Potter
Memorial, Annapolis; Memorial Angel,
Quincy High School; Memorial tablet
to Unknown Dead of World War,
Quincy; Canadian Infantryman, St.
John's; Victory figure, in collaboration
with Mossman, at Chicopee, Mass. ;
Forrester Memorial, Worcester, Mass.;
Memorial of the 3 wars, at Palmyra,
Me.; Memorial to 104th Infantry, 26th
Div., Westfield, Mass.; World War
Memorial, Upton, Mass.
SAWRIE, Mrs. Mary B., 710 Russell St.,
Nashville, Tenn.; summer, Beersheeba,
Tenn.
Miniature P.— Born Nashville, Tenn.,
Sept. 22, 1879. Pupil of Chase, Vander-
poel, Arthur Dow, F. A. Parsons; and
Julian in Paris.
SAWTELLE, A. Elizabeth, 2102 O St.,
Washington, D. C; summer, Ogunquit,
Me.
P. — Pupil of School of Design for
Women and Drexel Institute, Phila. ;
Corcoran Art School, Washington; In-
gram Summer School, Cornwall, Eng.;
Woodbury. Member: Wash. WCC;
Wash. SA; Providence WCC; Wash. AC.
SAWTELLE, Mary (Mrs. Charles G. Saw-
telle), 2102 O St., Washington, D. C.
P.— Born Washington, Aug. 24, 1872.
Pupil of Corcoran School of Art in
Washington; Delecluse Academy in
Paris; Edwin Scott in Paris; Irving
Wiles in New York. Member:
Wash. WCC; Wash.SA; Society Indp.A.
SAWYER, Edith, Ovington Bldg., 246
Fulton St., Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.;
summer, Columbia, Conn.
P. — Born South Coventry, Conn. Pupil
of ASL of N. Y. Member: Pa. S.
Min. P.; Brooklyn S. Min. P.; Brooklyn
AG.
SAWYER, Edward W(arren), 2 Broad-
field Rd., Folkestone, England.
S.— Born Chicago, 111., March 17, 1876.
Pupil of Verlet, Fremiet and Rodin in
Paris. Awards: Bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp.. 1904; silver medal. Inter.
Exp., Ghent, 1913; hon. mention, Salon
des Artistes Frangais, 1914; bronze med-
al for medals, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
Work in Luxembourg, Paris; Ameri-
can Numismatic Society, New York;
IT. S. Mint. Philadelphia; Art Institute
of Chicago; Mass. Historical Society.
Specialty, medals.
SAWYER, Helen Alton, 44 Argyle Ter-
race, Yonkers, N. Y.
P.— Born Washington D. C. Pupil of
Johansen and Hawthorne; NAD. Mem-
ber: Yonkers AA.
SAWYER, Wells M., 44 Argyle Terrace,
Yonkers, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Iowa, Jan. 31, 1863. Pupil
of AIC; Wash. ASL; Corcoran Art
School; J. O. Anderson and Howard
Helmick. Member: Wash. SA.,
Yonkers AA; Salma. C.
SAX, Carol M., Art Dept., University of
Kentucky, Lexington, Ky.
Des., T. — M ember: Charcoal C.
SAXTON, John G(ordon), Seaford, Long
Island, N. Y.
Ldscp.P.— Born Troy, N. Y., 1860.
Pupil of Lefebvre, Merson and Robert-
Fleury in Paris. Member: Lotos C.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Exp.,
1900; hon. mention, Pan-Am. Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; bronze medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904.
SCARPITTA, G. S. Cartaino, 561 Madison
Ave., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Palermo, Italy, Feb. 28, 1887;
settled in New York in 1910. Studied
at Instituto di Belli Arti, Palermo,
and in Rome. Member: NSS; Allied
AA; N. Y. Arch. Lg. ; N. Y. Numismatic
Society; decorated by Japanese and
Cuban governments. Awards :
Barnett prize, NAD, 1914; second men-
tion, collaborative competition, N. Y.
Arch. Lg., 1913. Work in Milwaukee
Art Institute.
New
, . ... East 17th St.
Brooklvn, N. Y.
S.— Born in Wisconsin, Feb. 22, 1869.
Pupil of Shirlaw, Cox, Beckwith, Saint
Gaudens. Member: NSS; Arch. Lg.
of N.Y. Work: Statue of General
Ord, Vicksburg National Military Park;
Glendale Monument and Ridgewood
Monument, Brooklyn, N. Y.
SCHABELITZ, R(udolph) F(rederick), 854
West 181st St.. New York, N. Y.
I. — Born Stapleton. S. I., N. Y.. June
10, 1884. Pupil of Carl Marr in Munich,
and others. Member: SI; Salma.
C; Guild of Free Lance Artists.
SCHAFF, Anton, 1931 Broadway,
York, N. Y.; h. 397 East 17t
555
SCHAEFER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SCHMITT
SCHAEFER, William G., 95 Madison
Ave., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
SCHALL, Frederick P., North Pelham,
N. Y. (P.)
SCHAMBERG, Morton L(Ivlngston), 1822
Chestnut St.; h. Hotel Lorraine, Broad
and Fairmount Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Oct. 15, 1881.
Pupil of Wm. M. Chase. Member:
S.Indp.A.
SCHELL, Dorothy Root, Middle City
Bldg., 5027 Newhall St., Germantown,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Plastic C.
SCHELL, F. Cresson, 5215 Archer St.,
Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
I., W.— Born Philadelphia, May 3, 1857.
Pupil of Thomas Eakins and Thomas
P. Anshutz. Member: Artists' Aid
Soc; Fellowship PAFA; Phila. Alliance;
Phila. Sketch C.
SCHELL, Gus G., 780 So. 6th St., Colum-
bus, O.
Scenic P. — M e m be r : Pen and Pencil
C, Columbus.
SCHENCK, Edwin. 1007 St. Paul St., Bal-
timore, Md.
P. — M ember: Charcoal C.
SCHEVILL, W(llliam) V., 44 West 77th
St., New York, N. Y.
Port. P.— Born Cincinnati, O., March 2,
1864. Pupil of Lofftz, LIndenschmitt
and Gysis in Munich. Member:
Century Assoc; Salma.C; Kuenstler
Genossenschaft Award : Bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904. Work:
"In Love," Cincinnati Museum, Cincin-
nati; portrait sketch. Prince Henry of
Prussia, Herron Art Institute, Indian-
apolis.
SCHICK, Elma H., 225 South 38th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
SCHICK, Fred G(eorge), 546 Main St.;
h. 42 Rohr St.. Buffalo, N. Y.
P., I.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Jan. 31,
1893. Pupil of Wilcox and M. B. Cox.
Member: Buffalo AC.
SCHIFFER, Ethel Bennett (Mrs. W. B.
Schiffer), 357 Elm St., New Haven,
Conn.
I.,E.,Engr. — Born Brooklyn, New York,
March 10, 1879. Pupil of Yale School
of Fine Arts; ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: New Haven PCC; S. Indp. A.;
N. A. Women PS.
SCHILLE, Alice, 1166 Bryden Road, Co-
lumbus, O.
P. — Born Columbus. Pupil of Colum-
bus Art School; ASL of N. Y. and N.Y.
School of Art under Chase and Cox;
Prinet, Collin, Courtois and Colarossl
Academy in Paris. Member: AWCS
(assoc); NYWCC; Boston WCC; N. A.
Women PS; Chicago WCC; Phila. WCC.
Awards: Corcoran prize, Washington
WCC 1908; N.Y. Woman's AC prize, 1908
and 1909; participant Fine Art Bldg.
prize, SWA 1913; gold medal for water
colors, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915; Phila.
water color prize, PAFA 1915; first prize
($200, Columbus AL, 1919; Stevens prize.
Columbus Art Lg., 1920. Work:
"The Melon Market," Herron Art In-
stitute, Indianapolis; "Mother and
Child," Art Club, Philadelphia; "The
Market Place," Columbus (O.) Gallery
of Fine Arts.
SCHILLING, A(rthur) O(scar), 93 North
St., Rochester, N. Y.
P., I., W. — Born in Germany, May 14,
1882. Studied in Chicago, Buffalo, Roch-
ester, and Germany. Member: Buf-
falo AC; Buffalo SA; Rochester AC.
SCHLADERMUNDT, Herman T., Law-
rence Park, Bronxville, N. Y.
Mural P. — Born Milwaukee, Wis., Oct.
4, 1863. Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1893;
Mural P. (ex-sec). Awards : Allied
Arts prize, Arch.Lg. ; medal, Columbian
Exp., Chicago, 1893. Work: Mural
decorations in Flagler Memorial Church.
St. Augustine, Fla. ; Emigrants Indus-
trial Bank, New York; Mosaic vaults,
Congressional Library, Washington;
Grand Jury Room, Court House, New-
ark, N. J.; Automobile Club of America,
New York; Museum of Thomas F.
Ryan. New York.
SCHLEGELL, Gustav von, St. Louis
School of Fine Arts; h. McMillan Hall,
Washington Univ., St. Louis, Mo.; sum-
mer, 1921 Carrol St., St. Paul, Minn.
P., T.— Born St. Louis, Sept. 16, 1877.
Pupil of Robert Koehler in Minneapolis;
Carl Marr in Munich; Laurent and
Laurens in Paris. Member: 2x4
Soc. Work in: St. Louis Artists'
Guild.
SCHLESINGER, Louis, 51 West 10th St..
New York, N. Y.
S.— M ember: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1913 (as-
soc).
SCHMIDT, Curt, 601 West End Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
SCHMIDT, Karl, 47 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.,T. — Born Worcester, Mass., Jan. 11,
1890. Self-taught. Member: Salma.
C.
SCHMIDT, O., 3139 Belgrade St., Phila-
delphia, Pa. (L)
SCHMIDT, O. F., 61 Poplar St., Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
I.— M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
SCHMIDT, Theodore B. W., Box 21, R. 1,
Monroe, Wis. (P.)
SCHMITT, Albert F(elix), 194 Brattle
St., Cambridge, Mass.
P., T.— Born Boston, 1873. Member:
Copley S.; AWCS; Boston GA; Salma.
C; Boston AC. Award: Silver med-
al. P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915. W o r k i n:
City Art Museum, 'St. Louis; R. I.
School of Design, Providence; Museum
of Fine Arts, Boston.
SCHMITT, Carl, R. D. 43, Norwalk. Conn.
P.. E.— Born Trumbull Co., O., May 6,
1889. Pupil of NAD under Carlsen; and
in Florence, Italy. M e m b e - : Union
Internationale des Beaux-Arts. Paris.
Work: "The Mill," Butler Art In-
stitute, Youngstown, O.
556
SCHMITZ
WHO'S WHO IIS ART
SCHULER
SCHMITZ, Elizabeth Terris, 115 So. 33d
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
SCHNAKENBERG, Henry Ernest, 64
West 9th S't.; h. 601 West End Ave.. New
York, N. Y. ; summer, New Brighton,
S. I., N. Y.
P., E.— Born New Brighton, N. Y., Sept.
14. 1892. Pupil of Kenneth Hayes
Miller. Member: ASL of N. Y. ;
S. Indp. A.
SCHNEIDER, Arthur, 939 Eighth Ave,.,
New York, N. Y.
P., I.— M e m ber : AWCS; NYWCC;
Salma.C. 1906. Awards : Morgan
prize, Salma.C. 1906; Inness prize, Sal-
ma.C, 1907; Isidor prize (.$100). Salma.C.
1912; Evans prize ($300), AWCS 1913.
SCHNEIDER, Otto J., 1259 Thorndale
Ave., Cliicago, 111.
P., I., Etcher.— Born Atlanta, 111., 1875.
Member: Chicago SA; Chicago SE.
Work: Etching in Art Institute of
Chicago; Toledo Museum of Art.
SCHNEIDER, Theodore, 280 Dartmouth
St., Boston, Mass.
P. — M ember: Boston AC.
SCHOEN, James D., 1344 Wilkins Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M e m ber: S. Indp. A.
SCHOENFELD, Flora I., care of The Art
Institute, Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Lanark, 111. Member: Chi-
cago SA; Chicago WCC; Chicago AC;
S. Indp. A.; N. A. Women PS; Arts
Cordon.
SCHOENFELD, Lucille, 912 Steiner St..
San Francisco, Calif. (S.)
SCHOFER, Carl T., Harris and Barr Ave.,
Crafton, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA,
SCHOFIELD, W(alter) Elmer, 119 East
19th St., New York, N. Y.
Ldscp.P. — Born Philadelphia, Sept. 9,
1867. Pupil of PAFA; Bouguereau, Fer-
rier, Doucet and Aman-Jean in Paris.
Member: SAA 1904; ANA 1902, NA
1907; Nat.Inst.A.L.; ACPhila. ; Fellow-
ship PAFA; Century Assoc; NAC;
Salma.C; R.S.British Artists; Chelsea
Arts Club, London. Awards: Hon.
mention, ACPhila. 1898; Webb prize,
SAA 1900; hon. mention, Paris Exp.,
1900; hon. mention, CIPittsburgh, 1900;
first Hallgarten prize, NAD 1901; silver
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
Sesnan gold medal, PAFA 1903; gold
medal of honor ($1,500), CIPittsburgh,
1904; silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
Inness gold medal, NAD 1911; gold
medal and $1,000. NAC 1913; Temple
sold medal, PAFA 1914; medal of honor,
P. -P. Exp., San Fran., 1915; Altman
prize ($1,000), NAD, 1920. Work:
"Sand Dunes nearLelant," Metropolitan
Museum, New York; "Morning After
Snow," Corcoran Gallery, Washington;
"Midwinter Thaw, Morning," and
"Landing Stage, Boulogne," Cincin-
nati Museum; "Across the River," Car-
negie Institute, Pittsburgh; "Autumn in
Brittany," Albright Art Gallery, Buf-
falo; "Winter," Pennsylvania Academy,
Philadelphia; "Old Mills on the Somme,"
557
Herron Art Inst., Indianapolis; "The
White Frost," Memorial Gallery, Roches-
ter, N. Y.; "The Coffer Dam," Art In-
stitute of Chicago; "The Spring Thaw,"
National Arts Club, New York; "The
Rapids," Brooklyn Museum.
SCHONHARDT, Henri, 21 Audubon Ave.,
Providence, R. I.
S., P., T.— Born Providence, April 24,
1877. Pupil of Julian Academy under
Puech, Dubois and Verlet; Ecole des
Arts Decoratifs under David and Chevi-
nard. Member: Providence AC.
Award : Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1908. Work: "Elisha Dyer Memo-
rial," St. Stevens Church, Provi-
dence; "Henry Harrison Young Memo-
rial," City Hall Park, Providence;
"Clytie" and "Cadmus," R.I. School of
Design Museum, Providence; "Soldiers'
and Sailors' Monument," Bristol, R. I.;
"Col. Sissons Monument," Little Comp-
ton, R. I.
SCHOOK, F. De Forest, Lombard, 111.
P.. T.— Born in Michigan, 1872. Pupil of
Ai Chicago; H. O. Tanner, Menard and
Simon in Paris. Member: Chicago
■SA; Chicago WCC; Chicago AG. In-
structor of illustration and composition,
Chicago Art Institute.
SCHOONOVER, Frank E(arle), 1616
Rodney St.; h. 2003 Bayard Ave,, Wil-
mington, Del.; summer. Bushkill, Pa.
1., P.— Born Oxford, N. J., Aug. 19, 1877.
Pupil of Drexel Inst., Philadelphia,
under Howard Pyle. Member: SI
1905; Fellowship PAFA (assoc). Spe-
cialty, American Indians and Canadian
trappers.
SCHOULER, Willard C, 173 Pleasant St.,
Arlington, Mass.; Canaan, N. H.
P.— Born Arlington, Nov. 6, 1852. Pu-
pil of Henry Day and W^illiam Rimmer.
Member: Boston AC. Work:
"Indians of Arizona," in Museum of
Fine Arts, Boston. Specialty, Western
and Arabian scenes.
SCHRADER, Dorothy A. V., 914 East-
wood Ave., Chicago, 111.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
SCHRAM, A(braham) J(ohn), 937 M St.,
N. W., Washington, D. C
P.— Born Grand Rapids, Mich., July 27,
1891. Pupil of Corcoran School of Art,
Washington, D. C Member: S.
Wash. A.
SCHROFF, Alfred Hermann, 969 11th
Ave.; h. 1043 Alden St., Eugene, Ore.
P., C— Born Springfield, Mass., Dec. 26,
1863. Member: Boston AC; Boston
Arch. C; Boston SAC; Laguna Beach
AA. Award : Medal for stained
glass, Columbian Exposition, Chicago,
1893. Instructor of Fine Arts, Univers-
ity of Oregon; Summer School, Uni-
versity of California.
SCHULENBERG, Adele. See Mrs. C. K.
Gleeson.
SCHULER, Hans, 5 East Lafayette Ave.,
Baltimore, Md.
S. — Born Alsace-Lorraine. Germany,
May 25, 1874. Pupil of Verlet in
Paris. Member: NSS 1908; Charcoal
C. Awards: Rinehart scholarship in
SCHULMAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SCOFIELD
sculpture, Baltimore, 1900; third class
medal, Paris Salon 1901; silver medal,
St. I.ouis Exp., 1904; Avery prize, N.Y.
Arch. I. g. 1915. Work: "Ariadne,"
Walters Gallery, Baltimore; "Johns
Hopkins Monument," Baltimore.
SCHULMAN, A. G., 24 East 59th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.. T. — Born Konigsberg, Germany, Jan.
5. 1881. Pupil of S. J. Woolf and NAD
in New York. Instructor, College of the
City of New York.
SCHULTZ, George F., 4003 Greenview
Ave., Chicago, 111.
Ldscp.P.— Born Chicago, April 17, 1869.
Award : Tuthill prize, AIC, 1918.
Work : "By the Sea," Union League
Club, Chicago; "Among the Birches,"
Cliff Dwellers, Chicago; "Twilight
Shadows," Arche Club, Chicago; "Au-
tumn Weather," City of Chicago Col-
lection.
SCHULTZ, Harry, 834 East 155th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M em b e r : S.Indp.A.
SCHULTZ, Ralph T., 746 St. Nicholas
Ave., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
SCHULTZ, Susette, 6415 Overbrook Ave.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
SCHUSTER, Donna N., 1229 West 37th
Drive, Dos Angeles. Calif.
P. — Pupil of AIC, Tarbell, and Chase.
M e m I) e r • Calif. AC; S. Indp. A.;
Calif. AC; West Coast Arts. Awards:
Gold medal, Minn. State Art Ex., 1913;
prize for painting ($100) Minn. State
Art Ex., 1914; silver medal. North-
western exhibition, St. Paul Inst., 1915;
silver medal for water colors, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915; silver medal, Pan.-
Calif. Exp., San Diego, 1915; first prize
for water colors. Phoenix, Arizona,
1918 and 1919; hon. mention, Wis. PS.
1919; first prize for oil painting, Phoenix,
Ariz., 1920.
SCHWAB, Edith Fisher (Mrs. C. Schwab),
310 Prospect St., New Haven, Corn.
P.— Born Cincinnati, C, Jan. 28, 1862.
Member: N. A. Women PS; New
Haven PCC.
SCHWAB, Eloise M (artinez), 549 West
113th St., New York, N. Y.
P., E. — Born Habana, Cuba, July 4,
1894. Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller.
Studied in Paris. Member: Alli-
ance.
SCHWANKOVSKY, Frederick J., Jr.,
1231 West 76th St., Los Angeles, Calif.
P., I., L., T.— Born Detroit, Mich., Jan.
21, 1885. Pupil of PAFA and ASL of
N. Y. Member: Calif. AC. Re-
search work for Metro Picture Corpora-
tion; head of Art Dept., Manual Arts
High School, Los Angeles.
SCHWARCZ, D(orothea) R., (Mrs. Ed-
ward S. Greenbaum), 272 West 90th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Brooklyn, June 17, 1893. Pupil
of Kenneth Hayes Miller, G. W. Haw-
thorne, Jonas Lie and R. S. Bredin.
Member: N. A. Women PS; Lg. of
N. Y. A.
SCHWARM, Wesley A., 130 East 19th
St., Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Lafayette, Ind., Dec. 9, 1883.
Pupil of Pratt Institute and Henri.
Member: S.Indp.A.
SCHWARTZ, Andrew (Thomas), 246 Ful-
ton St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Mural P. — Born Louisville, Ky., Jan. 20,
1867. Pupil of Duveneck in Cincin-
nati; ASL of N. Y. under Mowbray.
Member: Mural P.; N.Y. Arch. Lg.
1904; AWCS; Circolo Artistica of Rome;
Union Inter.des Beaux-Arts et des Let-
tres, Paris; Allied AA. ; Salma.C.
Award: Lazarus scholarship to Italy,
1899-1902. Work: "Christ, the Good
Shepherd," Baptist Church, South Lon-
donderry, _ Vt.; and in Cincinnati Art
Museum and Utica Public Library.
SCHWARTZ, Charles, 236 So. Harris
Ave., Columbus, O.
P. — M ember : Pen and Pencil C, Co-
lumbus.
SCHWARTZ, Elizabeth, 3337 North 17th
St.; h. 34 So. 17th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Member: N. A. Women PS;
Plastic C; NYWCC.
SCHWARTZKOPF, Earl C, care of
Willys-Overland Co., Toledo, Ohio.
P., I., C— Born in Ohio, May 26, 1888.
M e m b er: Toledo Tile Club.
SCHWARZ, Amy. Middle City Bldg., Phil-
adelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
SCHWEIZER, J. Otto, 2215 West Ve-
nango St., Philadelphia, Pa.
S. — Born in Zurich, Switzerland, Mar.
27, 1863. Pupil of Tuiller in Paris;
Royal Academy, Dresden; Schilling in
Dresden; Art School, Zurich; and in
Italy. Member: NSS. Works:
"Gen. Muhlenberg," and "James B.
Nicholson," Philadelphia: "Gen, Steu-
ben," Utica, N. Y., and Valley Forge,
Pa. ; Abraham Lincoln and Generals
Humphrey, Geary, Hays, Pleasanton,
Gregg, Pa. State Memorial; Gen. Wells
Monument for State of Vermont, at
Gettysburg, Pa.; Molly Pitcher Monu-
ment for State of Pennsylvania at Car-
lisle, Pa.; statue and relief work, "Lin-
coln," for the Union League of Phila-
delphia; "Senator Clay," Marietta, Ga. ;
Joseph Johns, fountain, Johnstown,
Pa.; Robert Schumann, Jersey City;
Melchior Muhlenberg with heroic size
relief groups, Germantown, Pa.; Adj.
Gen. Stewart, Capitol, Harrisburg, Pa.;
equestrian statue of Major Gen. F. W.
von Steuben, Milwaukee, Wis.
SCOFIELD, Edna, 1620 30th St., San
Diego, Calif.
P.— M ember: Calif. AC.
SCOFIELD, William Bacon, Chase Bldg.,
42 Front St.; h. Worcester Club, Wor-
cester, Mass.
■S.— Born Hartford, Conn., Feb. 8, 1864.
Pupil of Gutzon Borglum. Work:
"Good and Bad Spirit," bronze, Worces-
ter Art Museum. Author of "Verses,"
and "Poems of the War"; "A Forgotten
Idyl"; "Sketches in Verse and Clay."
558
SCOTT
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SEARS
SCOTT, Anna Page, 1212 Locust St.,
Dubuque, la.
P., C, W., L., T.— Born Dubuque, la.
Pupil of Anshutz, Arthur Dow and of
the Colarossi Academy, Paris. Mem-
ber: Alumni AIC; Fellowship PAFA.
Work : "The Shores of the Pacific",
Carnegie Stout Public Library, Dubuque.
Author, "Art in its Relation to Indus-
try", etc.
SCOTT, Charles T(homas), 320 So. Broad
St.. Philadelphia, Pa.; h. Churchville,
Bucks Co., Pa.
P„ S., C, T,— Born in Chester Co., Pa.,
Dec. 4, 1876. Pupil of School of In-
dustrial Art of the Pennsylvania Mu-
seum. Member: Eastern Art Teach-
ers' Assoc. ; "Alumni Assoc. Philadelphia
School of Industrial Art. Instructor in
charge Depart, of Decorative Sculpture
Constructive Design and Pottery, Penn-
sylvania Museum School of Industrial
Art.
SCOTT, Colin (Alexander), College St.,
South Hadley, Mass.; summer, Prov-
incetown, Mass.
P., T. — Born Ottawa, Canada, Feb. 11,
1861. Member: Providence AA.
SCOTT, Edith A., 102 Fenway Studios,
Boston; h. 220 Forest St., Medford,
Mass.
P., T. — Born Faulkner, Mass. Pupil of
Tarbell, Benson and Hale. Member:
Copley S.
SCOTT, Jeannette, 1111 East Genesee St.,
Syracuse, N. Y.
P., T. — Born Kincardine, Ont., Canada,
Sept. 26, 1864. Pupil of PAFA and
Phila. School of Design for Women, and
studied in Paris. Member: College
AA; Alliance. Work in: Syracuse
Museum of Fine Arts. Professor of
painting, 'Syracuse Univ. since 1895;
head of dept. since 1902.
SCOTT, John G(reen), 652 East Broad
St., Tamaque, Pa.
I. — Born Buck Mountain, Pa., Nov. 15,
1887. Pupil of Pa. School of Ind. Art.
SCOTT, Katharine H(all), Mason City,
Iowa.
Port, and Min, P. — Born Burlington, la.,
Apr. 19, 1871. Pupil of AIC, Vanderpoel
and Chase, Chicago School of Industrial
Art. Member: Alumni AIC; ASL
of Chicago; Chicago AG; Western Arts
Asso.; W. D. and M. T. Teacher.
Works : "Portrait Judge Newman,"
Des Moines County Court House, Public
Library, Burlington, la.; "Portrait
T. W. Barhydt," Merchants' National
Bank, and Parsons College, Fairfield,
la. Instructor Art Dept., 111. State Nor-
mal University, Normal, 111.
SCOTT, William Edouard, 3160 Indiana
Ave., Chicago, 111.; h. 1124 North Senate
Ave.. Indianapolis. Ind.
P. — Born Indianapolis, 1884. Pupil of
AIC: Julian and Colarossi Academies,
Paris; H. O. Tanner in France.
Award : Municipal Art. Lg. Traveling
Scholarship. Represented by mural
decorations in Chicago, Indianapolis
and Evanston, 111.; Herron Art Inst.,
Indianapolis; Fort Wayne (Ind.) Court
House; Lafayette (Ind.) Court House;
Springfield, 111., Court House; one paint-
ing owned by the Argentine Govern-
ment.
SCOTT, William J., 206 West 13th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
SCOVEL, Florence. See Mrs. Shinn.
SCRYMSER, Christabel, 34 Lewis Place,
Rockville Center, N. Y. (P.)
SCUDDER, (Alice) Raymond, 1631 Oc-
tavia St., New Orleans, La.
P., C. — Born New Orleans, La. Pupil
of Newcomb Art School; N. Y. School
of Applied Design; Chase and Mora.
Member: New Orleans AA.
SCUDDER, Janet, care of Morgan Harjes,
Place Vendome, Paris, France; 46
Washington Mews, New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Terre Haute, Ind., Oct. 27,
1873. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy
under Rebisso; Taft in Chicago; Mac-
monnies in Paris. Member: NSS
1904; N. A. Women PS; NAC. Awards:
Medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago. 1893;
hon. mention. Sun Dial Competition,
New York, 1898; bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; hon. mention, Paris
Salon, 1911; sculpture prize. N.A. Wom-
en PS 1914; silver medal, P. -P. Exp., San
F., 1915. First American woman to have
work bought for the Luxembourg, Paris.
Work : Seal for the Association of the
Bar of the City of New York; "Japanese
Art," fagade of Brooklyn Institute Mu-
seum; "Frog Fountain," Metropolitan
Museum. New York; "Fighting Boy
Fountain," Art Institute. Chicago, 111.;
three medallions in gold and three in
silver. Art Association, Indianapolis,
Ind.; portrait medallions in Congres-
sional Library, Washington; Metropoli-
tan Museum, New York; Musoe du T iix-
embourg, Paris; medal of Indiana Cen-
tennial, Minneapolis Institute; "Medal,"
R. I. School of Design, Providence;
"Tortoise Fountain," Peabody Institute,
Baltimore.
SCULLY, Mary M. M. (Mrs. Henry R.
Scully), 201 South Lexington Ave., East
End. Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— Born Pittsburgh, Sept. 3, 1853.
Pupil of Pittsburgh School of Design for
Women. Member: Alumnae Asso.
Pittsburgh School of Design for Women;
Pittsburgh AA.
SEARLE, Alice T., 241 Fenimore St.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
Min. P. —Born Troy, N. Y., Feb. 8, 1869.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Colarossi Acad-
emy and Mme. Debillemo.;t-Chardon in
Paris. Member: Brooklyn A. Guild.
Award: Bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904.
SEARS, Sarah C(hoate) (Mrs. J. Mont-
gomery Sears), 12 Arlington St., Bos-
ton, Mass.
P.— Born Cambridge. Mass., May 5, 1858.
Pupil of Ross Turner, Joseph De Camp,
Dennis M. Bunker, Edmund C. Tarbell
and George de Forest Brush. M e m-
ber: NYWCC; Copley S. 1891; NAC;
559
SEARS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SEVERANCE
Phila.WCC; Boston WCC; Boston SAC
(life.) Awards: Evans prize, AWCS
1893; medal, Columbian Exp., Chicago,
1893; hon. mention, Paris Exp., 1900;
bronze medal for water color, Pan-Am.
Exp.. Buffalo. 1901; silver medal for
water color, Charleston Exp.. 1902; sil-
ver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
SEARS, Taber, 96 Fifth Ave.; h. 784 Park
Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Mural P. — Born Boston, Mass., 1870.
Pupil of Boston Museum School; Julian
Academy in Paris under Constant,
Laurens and Merson. Member:
N.Y.Arch.Lg-. 1899; NYWCC; AWCS;
Mural P.; A. Aid S.; N.Y.Municipal AS;
Century Assoc; MacD.C. Award:
Bronze medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
Work: "Spirit of Niagara," Buffalo
Historical Soc; "New York Among the
Nations." N. Y. City Hall; stained glass
windows, Presbyterian Church, Plain-
field, N. J.; painting, altar-pieces,
Chapel of the Intercession and Grace
Church Choir School, New York City;
altar-piece. Trinity Church, Buffalo,
N. Y.; reredos paintings. First Presby-
terian Church; and in Chemical Na-
tional Bank, New York, N. Y.
SEATON, C. H., Glencarlyn, Va.
P.— Born Monson, Mass., Aug. 25, 1865.
Self-taught. Member: S. Wash. A.;
Wash. Landscp. C.
SEAWELL, H(enry) W(ashington). 1617
California St., San Francisco, Calif.
P., I., T. — Born San Francisco. Pupil
of Laurens and Constant in Paris.
Member: Paris AAA; Bohemian C,
San Francisco.
SEE. Ella E., 83 So. Fitzhugh St., Roches-
ter, N. Y.
P., T.— M ember: Rochester AC.
SEEBOLD, Marie M. See Mrs. A.
Molinary.
SEIDEL. Emory P., McClurg Bldg., Chi-
cago, 111. (P.)
SEIDENECK, George J(oseph), Tree
Studio Bldg., 4 East Ohio St., Chicago,
111.
P.— Born Chicago, 111., Feb. 4, 1885. Pu-
pil of Walter Thor and von Marr.
Member: Chicago AC; Chicago AG;
Chicago SA; Chicago Palette and Chisel
C. Work: "Portrait of Judge Sea-
man," Federal Building, Chicago.
SEIPP, Alice, 188 Claremont Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P., I.— Born New York, N. Y., Mar.
7, 1889. Pupil of Douglas Volk, B. W.
Clinedinst and Jane Peterson. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; NYWCC;
PBC.
SELDEN, Miss Dixie, 715 Race St.; h.
?^46 Bedford Ave., Cincinnati, O.
P.. I. — Born Cincinnati, O. Pupil of
Cincinnati Art Academy under Duve-
neck; W. M. Chase; H. B. Snell.
Member: Cincinnati Woman's AC;
N. A. Women PS; Cincinnati MacD. S.
SELLERS. Mary (or Minnie), 6216 Howe
St.. Pittsburgh. Pa.
P.— Born Pittsburgh, Nov. 23, 1869. Pu-
pil of Alexander Robinson and of Au-
gust Hennicott in Holland. Mem-
ber: Associated Artists of Pittsburgh;
N. A. Women PS.
SENAT, Prosper L., Ye Old Tavern,
Annisquam, Mass.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
SENEGAL, Ralph L., Three Rivers, Mass.
P., I. — Born Bolton, Canada, Aug. 3,
1883. Pupil of NAD. Member:
Springfield AC; Connecticut SA; Spring-
field AL.
SENSENEY, George, 55 New South St.,
Northampton, Mass; 1207 Tower Bldg.,
Chicago, 111.
P., Etcher.— Born Wheeling, W. Va.,
Oct. 11, 1874. Pupil of Corcoran Art
School in Washington under Howard
Helmick; Laurens and Constant in
Paris. Member: Chicago SE; Salma.
C; Soc.des Graveurs en Couleurs.
Award : Silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San
F., 1915. Work in: Library of Con-
gress, Washington, D. C.
SENTERI. Florio, 1529 59th St., Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
SERRAO, Mrs. Luella Varney, 1875 East
81st St., Cleveland, O.
S.— Born Angola, N. Y., Aug. 11, 1865.
Work: "An Archbishop of Odessa,"
Roman Catholic Cathedral, Odessa,
Russia; "Bust of Senator Rice," State
Capitol of Minnesota; "Bust of Arch-
bishop Wigger," Seaton Hall, Newark,
N. J.; busts of Mark Twain and Mr.
Brett, Cleveland Public Library; "Mon-
ument of Archbishop Rappe," Catholic
Cathedral, Cleveland, O.
SERVER, J(ohn) William, 43 South 18th
St., Philadelphia, Pa.; summer, care of
American Express Co., Paris, France.
P., T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., May 21,
1882. Pupil of Deigendesch, Chase and
Coiarbssi. Member: Phila. ASL.;
TSquareC, Phila.
SETON, Ernest Thompson, Greenwich,
Conn.
I., W., L.— Born South Shields. Eng-
land, Aug. 14, 1860. Pupil of G4r(*>me.
Bouguereau, Ferrier and Mosler in Paris.
Specialty, animals. Author and illus-
trator: "Art Anatomy of Animals,"
"Wild Animals I Have Known," "The
Biography of a Grizzly," "Animal He-
roes," "The Book of Woodcraft." etc.
Head of Bov Scout movement in Amer-
ica until 1915; Chief of Woodcraft
League.
SEVERANCE, Julia G(rldley), 68 South
Professor St., Oberlin, O.
S., E., T.— Born Oberlin, O., Jan. 11,
1877. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: Cleveland Woman's AC. Work:
"Rice Memorial Tablet," Oberlin Con-
servatory of Music, Oberlin College, O. ;
etching in Print Dept.. Library of Con-
gress, \Vashington, D. C; Cobb Memo-
rial Tablet, Warner Hall, Oberlin, O.;
Leffingwell Tablet, St. Mary's School,
Knoxville, 111.
560
SEW ELL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SHARPE
SEWELL (Lydia) A(manda), Brewster
(Mrs. Robert V. V. Sewell), 15 West
67th St., New York, N. Y. ; "Fleetwood,"
Oyster Bay, L. I., N. Y.
P.— Born North Elba, Essex Co., N. Y.,
Feb. 24, 1859. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.
under Chase; Julian Academy under
Robert-FIeury and Carolus Duran in
Paris. Member: ANA 1903; N. A.
Women PS; Cosmopolitan C. Awards:
Dodge prize, NAD 1888; bronze medal,
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; bronze
medal, Pan-Am. Exp.. Buffalo. 1901; sil-
ver medal. Charleston Exp., 1902; Clarke
prize, NAD 1903; bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904.
SEWELL, Helen Moore, Prospect Bldg.,
Prospect St.; 52 Heights Road, Ridge-
wood, N. J.; summer, Burnt Hill, N. Y.
P. — Born Mare Island, Cal., June 27,
1896. Pupil of Frederick Baker, Otto
Beck, Max Herrmann, and C. W. Haw-
thorne. Member : Alliance; NYWCC.
SEWELL, Robert V(an) V(orst), 15 West
67th St., New York, N. Y. ; "Fleetwood,"
Oyster Bay, L. I., N. Y.
Mural P. — Born New York, N. Y ,
3 860. Pupil of Lefebvre and Boulanger
in Paris. Member: ANA 1901; N.Y.
Arch.Lg. 1899; Mural P.; Century
Assoc; Union League C. ; Lotos C.
Awards : First Hallgarten prize,
NAD 1889; silver medal, Boston, 1891;
silver medal, Pan-Am. Exp.. Buffalo,
1901; silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
Work: "The Canterbury Pilgrims,"
Georgian Court, Lakewood, N. J.;
"Psyche," St. Regis Hotel, New York;
"A Silver Sea," Sweat Memorial, Port-
land. Me.
SEYDEL, Victor L. A., 86 Haven Ave..
New York, N. Y.; Terrace Park. O.
P. — Member: Cincinnati AC; Sal-
ma. C.
SEYFFERT, Helen F. (Mrs. Leopold G.
Seyffert), 1730 Chestnut St., Phila., Pa.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
SEYFFERT, Leopold, 1730 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — Born Colorado Springs. Colo.
Member: ANA 1916; Phila. AC;
Allied AA; Pittsburgh AA; Port. P.;
Salma. C Awards: Fellowship
prize ($100), PAFA, 1913; hon. mention,
CI Pittsburgh, 1913; gold medal, Phila.
AC, 1915; silver medal, P. -P. Exp., San
F.. 1915; Beck gold medal. PAFA. 1918;
Altman prize ($500), NAD, 1918; first
Hallgarten prize, NAD, 1918; Temple
gold medal, PAFA, 1921; Proctor prize,
NAD, 1921.
SEYMOUR, Ralph Fletcher, 410 Michigan
Blvd., Chicago, 111.; h. Ravinia, Lake
County, 111.
L, E., T.— Born Milan, 111., Mar. 18,
1876. Pupil of Nowottny and Meakin
in Cincinnati. Studied in Paris. Mem-
ber: Chicago SI. Work: Etching
in Chicago Art Inst. ; Milwaukee Art
Inst.; Los Angeles Museum of Fine
Arts. Instructor, decorative illustra-
tion, Chicago Art Institute, 1909-1918.
K., 2260 Park Ave.,
Cincinnati Woman's
561
SEYMOUR, Ralph Russell, care Phoenix
National Bank, Hartford, Conn.
P. — M ember: Conn. AFA.
SEYMS, Katherlne, 181 Collins St., Hart-
ford, Conn.
P. — M ember: Conn. AFA.
SHAFER, L. A., 232 Liberty Ave., New
Rochelle, N. Y.
P., E., I.— Born Genesco, III., Nov. 17,
1866. Pupil AI Chicago. Member: SI 1911.
Illustrator of "The Shock of Battle,"
by Vaux; "The Road to Glory," by
Powell.
SHAFFER, Lucy
Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember:
AC.
SHAND, Helen, Naberth, Pa.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
SHANNON, Howard J(ohnson), 73 Union
Ave., Jamaica, Queens Borough, New
York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Jamaica, N. Y., May 80,
1876. Pupil of Pratt Institute under
Herbert Adams and F. V. Du Mond.
Illustrated nature and science sections,
Century Dictionary; Zoological Soc.
Bulletins; writer and Illustrator of sci-
ence articles in "St. Nicholas," "Har-
per's Magazine," "Scientific Monthly"
and "Journal of the American Museum
of Natural History."
SHARMAN, John, Winchester, Mass.
P. — M ember: Phila. AC.
SHARP, J(oseph) H(enry), winter, Crow
Agency, Montana; summer. Taos, N.
M. ; permanent, care of Art Museum,
Cincinnati, O.
P., L, T.— Born Bridgeport, O., Sept. 27,
1859. Pupil of Royal Academy in Mu-
nich and under Marr; Julian Acad. In
Paris under Laurens and Benjamin-
Constant; Verlat in Antwerp; Duve-
neck in Spain. Member: Cincin-
nati AC; Calif. AC; Salma.C; Chicago
AG; Taos Soc. of Artists; Calif.P.M.
Ten years on faculty, Cincinnati Art
Academy. Awards: Silver medal,
. Dept. of Ethnology, Pan-Am. Exp.. Buf-
falo, 1901; first portrait prize, Cincin-
nati AC 1901; gold medal, Pan.-Cal.-
Exp., San Diego, 1915. Specialtv, types
of Indians. Work: "Harvest Dance-
Pueblo Indians," "Old Dog— Crow In-
dian Chief." and "Strikes His Enemy
Pretty," Cincinnati Mus.; "Chief Flat
Iron," Herron Art Inst., Indianapolis;
"The Great Sleep." and nearly one hun-
dred portraits of Indians and Indian pic-
tures, University of California; eleven
Indian portraits, Smithsonian Institu-
tion, Washington; "1920 Ration Day on
the Reservation," "A Young Chief's
Mission," Butler Art Inst.; "The Stoic,"
Museum of Santa Fe.
SHARP, W. A., 114 North Spring St.,
Los Angeles, Cal.
P.— M ember: Cal. AC.
SHARPE, H. Percy, 315 2nd Ave., North,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
SHARPE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SHERMAN
SHARPE. Julia Graydon, 1314 North Dela-
ware St.; 1704 North Pennsylvania St.,
Indianapolis, Ind.; summer, Idylwilde,
Harbor Springs, Mich.
P., D.^ — Born Indianapolis, Ind. Pupil
of ASL of N. Y.; W. M. Chase, Indiana
School of Art; J. Otis Adams; William
Forsyth; H. Siddons Mowbray; Saint
Gaudens. Member: ASL of N. Y. ;
Indiana SA.
SHATTUCK, A(aron) D(raper), Granby,
Conn.
Ldscp.P. — Born Francestown, N. H.,
March 9, 1832. Pupil of Alexander Ran-
som in Boston; NAD in New York.
Member: ANA 1856, NA 1861.
Work: "Down in the Meadows," Al-
bright Art Gallery, Buffalo, N. Y.
SHAVER, J. R., 131 West 23d St.. New
York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Evening Shade, Ark., Mar.
27. 1867. Pupil St. Louis School of Fine
Arts. Member: SI 1910. Weekly
illustrations in "Life." Author of
"Little Shavers," a book of numerous
drawings of child life.
SHAW, Russell H., 155 Cypress St., Prov-
idence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
SHAW, Sydney Dale, 432 West 34th St.,
New York, N. Y.; h. 1824 Morton Ave.,
Pasadena, Cal.
P., C. — Born Walkley, England, Aug.
16, 1879. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Acad-
emie Colarossi and Ecole des Beaux-
Arts in Paris. Member: Calif. AC;
AWCS. A w a r u s : Silver medal, Pan-
Calif. Exp., San Diego, 1915; hon. men-
tion, Los Angeles, 1916; Hudnut prize,
AWCS, New York. 1917.
SHEAFER, Frances B(urwell) (,Mrs.
Samuel Waxman), 46 Avon Hill St.,
Cambridge, Mass.
P.. C. W. — Born in Pennsylvania. Pupil
of PAFA; Phila. School of Design for
Women, and William Sartain. Mem-
ber: Plastic C; Copley S. Award:
Special silver medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904.
SHEAFER, Frank W., 3900 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Pottsville, Pa., April 1, 1867.
Pupil of PAFA.
SHEAN, Charles M., 51 West 10th St.,
Manhattan; h. 75 Van Buren St., Brook-
lyn, New York, N. Y.
Mural P.— Born Brooklyn. Pupil of ASL
in New York; Cabanel in Paris. M e m-
ber: Mural P.; N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1887;
Salma.C. Award : Bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904.
SHEELER, Charles R., Jr., 33 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, Doyles-
town, Bucks Co., Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, July 16, 1883.
Pupil of PAFA under Chase.
SHEERER, Mary G., 1404 Broadway,
South, New Orleans, La. ; summer,
Ogunquit, Me.
P., C, T. — Born Covington, Ky. Pupil
of Cincinnati Art Academy; PAFA;
ASL of N. Y. M e m b e r : N. O. AA;
La. Art Teachers' A; New Orleans
Arts and Crafts C.
SHEFFER, Glen C, 59 East Van Buren
St.; h. 737 North Michigan Blvd., Chi-
cago, 111.
I. — Born Angola, Ind., in 1881. Pupil
of AIC and Chicago Academy of Fine
Arts. Member: Palette and Chisel
C.
SHELDEN, C. G., 1431 Grand Ave., Ev-
eritt. Wash. (P.)
SHELDON, Walter G., 49 Westminster
St., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
SHELTON, George F., 33 West 21st St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: AWCS.
SHELTON, William H., 47 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
SHEPHERD, Chester George, 731 Ply-
mouth Ct.; h. 1258 Columbia Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.
I. — Born Lathrop, Mich., in 1894. Pupil
of AIC. Member: Palette and
Chisel C; Alumni Asso. of AIC.
SHEPHERD, Clinton, Leonia, N. J.
I. — M ember: SI.
SHEPHERD, J. C, 611 Lincoln Arcade,
1947 Broadway, New York, N. Y. (I.)
SHERIDAN, Frank J., Jr., care of Sheri-
dan, Shawhan and Sheridan, 30 East
34th St., New York, N. Y.
I. — M e m b e r : SI.
SHERIDAN, John E., 119 East 34th St.;
30 East 34th St., New York. N. Y.
I.— Member: SI 1912; Salma. C.
SHERIFF, Daisy, 526 Herron Ave., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
SHERINYAN, Elizabeth, 1 Francis St.,
Worcester, Mass.; summer, Claremont,
N. H.
P., C, T. — Born in Armenia. Pupil of
Hale, H. D. Murphy, Major, Greenwood,
Worcester Museum School and Mass.
Normal Art School. Member: Wor-
cester Art Students' Club; Claremont
(N. H.) AC, Hartford ACC.
SHERIVIAN, C. H., 45 East 59th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma.C.
SHERMAN, Ella Bennett. (Mrs. John
Sherman), 500 Powers Bl., Rochester,
N. Y. ; 2700 Connecticut Ave., Washing-
ton, D. C.
P.— Born New York, N. Y. Pupil of
Douglas Volk. W. M. Chase, and Robert
Henri. Member: Wash. WCC;
Wash. S.A.
SHERMAN, Gail. See Mrs. H. W. Cor-
bett.
SHERMAN, Harry K., Butler, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
562
SHERMAN
WHO^S WHO IN ART
SHRADY
SHERMAN, Heyman, 15 East 14th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
SHERMAN. Stowell B., 7 Thomas St.,
Providence, R, I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
SHERWOOD, Mary Clare, All Saints Col-
lege. Vicksburg, Miss.
P., I., T.— Born Lyons, May 18, 1868.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under Weir,
Chase and Cox; Conrad Fehr and Curt
Hermanns in Berlin; F. Edwin Scott
in I'aris. Member: N. A. Women
PS.
SHERWOOD, Rosina Emmet (Mrs. Ar-
thur M. Sherwood), 77 East 89th St.,
New York, N. Y.; summer, "Skene
Wood," Westport, on Lake Champlain,
N. Y.
P.— Born New York, Dec. 13, 1854. Pu-
pil of Chase in New York; Julian
Academy in Paris. Member: SAA
1886; ANA 1906; NYWCC; AWCS
Awards : Silver medal for drawing,
Paris Exp., 1889; medal. Columbian
Exp., Chicago, 1893; bronze medals for
water color and for drawings, Pan -Am.
Exr)., Buffalo. 1901; silver medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904.
SHERWOOD, Ruth, Art Institute of Chi-
cago; h. 3146 Lake Park Ave., Chicago,
111.; summer, Chautauqua, N. Y.
S., T.— Born Chicago, 111., Dec. 21, 1889.
Pupil of Mulligan and Polasek.
SHERWOOD, William (Anderson), 33
Rue Rembrandt, Antwerp, Belgium.
P., E.— Born Baltimore, Md., Feb. 13,
1875. Member: Societe Royale des
Beaux- Arts Beige; Societ6 Royale des
Aqua-Fortists de Belgique; Chicago
SE. Work: Etchings owned by Queen
of Belgium; etchings in Royal Library
at Brussels, Musee Plantin-Moretus,
Antwerp, and Library of Congress at
Washington; Cleveland Public Library;
Detroit Public Library, Worcester Free
Library.
SHILLARD-SMITH, Georglne Wetherill
(Mrs. C. Shillard-Smith), Edgewater
Park. N. J.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
SHILLING, Alexander, 939 Eighth Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. Leonia, N. J.
Ldscp.P., Etcher. — Born Chicago, 111.
Pupil of G. S. Collis. Member:
AWCS; N.Y.Etching C; Salma.C. 1887;
Awards : Gold medal. ACPhila. 1901;
silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; Shaw
etching prize, Salma.C. 1913. Repre-
sented by painting in Metropolitan
Museum of Art.
SHIMIZU, Toshi, 46 West 15th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M e m b e r : S.Indp.A.
SHINN. Everett, Catskill, N. Y.
Mural P. — Born Woodstown, N. J., Nov.
6, 1876. Pupil of PAFA. Award :
Bronze medal, Charleston Exp., 1902.
Work: Mural decorations for Belasco
Theatre, New York; "Steel Wire In-
dustry," and "Pottery Industry," Coun-
cil Chamber, City Hall, Newark, N. J.;
Painting, "London Music Hall," Metro-
politan Museum of Art. Director and
designer of Art Sets, Goldwyn Moving
Picture Co.
SHINN, Florence Scovel, 136 East 49th
■St.. New York. N. Y.
I.— Born Camden, N. J. Pupil of PAFA.
Illustrated "Lovey Mary," "Mrs. Wigga
of the Cabbage Patch," "Coniston,"
etc.
SHIRAS, George E., Los Gatos, Cal.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
SHIRK, Jeannette C, Glenshaw, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
SHISLER, Clare Shepard, 1605 East Madi-
son St., Seattle, Wash.
Min. P.— M ember: Pa. S. Min, P.
SHONNARD, Eugenie F(rederica), 108 W.
54th St., New York, N. Y.
S., P., T.— Born Yonkers, N. Y., Apr.
29, 1886. Pupil of Bourdelle and Rodin.
Member: Alliance.
SHORE, Henry B(rengle), 28 East 21st
St.; h. 40 West 59th St., New York,
N. Y.
E., Arch. — Born Baltimore, Md., Oct. 1,
1862. Pupil of Preissig, W. R. Ware,
R. M. Hunt, and Satterlee. Member:
N. Y. Arch. Lg.; Chicago SE; Brooklvn
SE. Etchings in New York Public
Library.
SHORE, Henrietta M., 152 West 57th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, 1960 High-
land Ave., Hollywood, Cal.
P., T. — Born Toronto, Canada. Pupil
of Henri, Chase, Hayes Miller in New
York; studied in London. Member:
S. Indp. A; Lg. of N. Y. A; N. A.
Women PS. Awards : Silver medal.
Pan. -Cal. Exp., San Diego, 1915; silver
medal, Panama-Cal. Exp., San Diego,
1916. Work : "Negro Woman and
Children," National GaUery of Canada.
Ottawa.
SHOREY. George H., 31 West 55th St.,
New York. N. Y. : h. Grantwood, N. J.;
summer. Burnt Hills, N. Y.
P., I., T.— Born Hoosick Falls, N. Y.,
Sept. 9, 1870. Pupil of Walter Shirlaw.
Director. Artist-Artisan Institute, 1898-
1903. Work: Illustrations: "Cathedral
of St. John the Divine"; "New York
Parks"; "Old Kingston," etc.; "The As-
cension," mural painting in Trinity
JDpiscopal Church, Grantwood. N. J.
Director, Art Denartment, Browning
School. New York, N. Y.
SHRADER, E(dwin) Roscoe, 1927 High-
land Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
P., I., L., T.— Born Quincy, 111., Dec. 14,
1879. Pupil of AIG and Howard Pyle.
Member: Calif. AC.
SHRADY, Henry M(erw!n), Elmsford,
N. Y.
S.— Born New York. N. Y.. Oct. 24.
1871. Pupil of Columbia University.
Member : ANA 1909; NSS 1902; N. Y.
Arch. Lg. 1902; Nat. Inst. AL. Work :
Equestrian. "Washington," Brooklyn,
New York; "Grant Memorial." Wash-
563
SHRAMM
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SILVERBERG
Ington; equestrian, "William the Si-
lent," for Holland Society: "Gen. Wil-
liams." Detroit; "Gen. Lee," Charlottes-
ville, Va; "Jay Cooke," Duluth, Minn.
SHRAMM, Paul H., 671 Auburn Ave.,
Buffalo, N. Y.
S., P., I., C, T,.— Born Heidenheim, Ger-
many. Dec. 22, 1867. Pupil of Claudinso,
Schrandolph and Jacob Grunenwald in
Stuttgart; MacNeil at Pratt Inst.,
Brooklyn. Member: N.Y. Soc. C.
Specialty, jewelry.
SHROPSHIRE, George E., 70 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
SHRYOCK, Lucy W., 439 So. Rebecca St..
Pittsburgh. Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
SHULL, Delia F., 18a East 34th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
SHULZ, Ada Walter (Mrs. Adolph R.
Shulz), Nashville, Brown Co., Ind.
P., T.— Born Terre Haute, Ind., Oct. 21.
1870. Pupil of AIC; Vitti Academy in
Paris. Member: Chicago SA; Wis.
PS; Chicago AG; Chicago Cordon C.
Work: "Motherhood," Milwaukee Art
Institute; "Mother and Child," Art In-
stitute of Chicago. Specialty, children.
SHULZ, Adolph R(obert), Nashville,
Brown Co., Ind.
Ldscp.P., T.— Born Delavan, Wis., June
12, 1869. Pupil of AIC; ASL of N. Y.;
Julian Academy in Paris under Le-
febvre. Constant and Laurens. Mem-
ber: Chicago SA; Chicago AG;
Wis. PS. Awards : Young Fort-
nightly prize, AIC 1900; Grower prize,
AIC 1908; Municipal A. Lg. purchase,
AIC 1904; Milwaukee Art Inst, medal,
1918. Work: "Frost and Fog," Art
Institute of Chicago.
SHURTLEFF, Elizabeth, 2 Christopher
St., New York N. Y.
P., C— Born Ooncord, N. H., Sept. 3,
1890. Pupil Boston Museum School of
Fine Arts
SHUSTER, William Howard, Camino
del Monte Sol, Sante Fe, N. M.
P., E., C. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Nov.
26, 1893. Pupil of J. William Server,
John Sloan. Member: S.Indp.A.;
Los Cinco Pintores; Santa Fe Arts Club.
SHUTTLEWORTH, Claire, 370 Elmwood
Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. ; summer, "Mingle-
streams," Chippawa, Ont., Canada.
P., T.— Born Buffalo. Pupil of Buffalo
ASL; Du Mond and Bridgman; Merson,
Collin and Leroy in Paris. Member:
Buffalo SA; N. A. Women PS. Award:
Fellowship prize, Buffalo SA. 1910.
Work: "The Horse Shoe Falls from
Table Rock," Arnot Art Gallery, El-
mira, N. Y.
SICHEL, Harold M., 424 West 20th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
SIEBERN, E., 99 Sixth Ave., New York,
N. Y. (P.)
SIEBERT, Anne W. S., 182 West 10th
Ave.. Columbus. O. (Min. P.)
SIEBERT, Edward S(elmar), 37 East
Ave., Rochester, N. Y.
P., E., T.— Born Washington, D. C,
July 1, 1856. Pupil of Baur in Weimar,
Carl Hoff in Karlsruhe, William von
Diez in Munich. Award: Hon. men-
tion and one prize, Rochester, N. Y.
Work: "Flute Player," Corcoran Gal-
lery of Art, Washington, D. C.
SIEMSEN, Frederick F., 23 West 12th
St., New York, N. Y. (L)
SIEVERS, F(rederick) William, Forest
Hill, Richmond, Va.
S.— Born Fort Wayne, Ind., Oct. 26,
1872. Studied in Richmond, Va.; Royal
Academy of Fine Arts in Rome under
Ferrari; and Julian Academy in Paris.
Work: Equestrian statute of Gen.
Lee and group at Gettysburg, Pa.;
equestrian statute of Stonewall Jack-
son, Richmond, Va.
SIEVERS, Mrs. Lucille Scott, 66 Gris-
wold St., Delaware, Ohio.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
SILEIKA, Jonas, Juodagoniu K. Lekeciu
v., Pastas Sakiai, Lithuania.
P., T.— Born Lithuania, June 25, 1883.
Studied at AIC and Royal Academy,
Munich. Member: Chicago SA; Art
Society of Lithuania. Award : Joseph
N. Eisendrath prize, AIC, 1920. Work:
"My Home," Gallery of Vilna, Lithu-
ania. Specialty, portraits and land-
scapes.
SILSBEE, Martha, 82 Chestnut St., Bos-
ton, Mass.; h. Monadnock, N. H.
P.— Born Salem, Mass, Nov., 1858.
Member: Boston WCC.
SILVA, William P., Carmel-by-the-Sea,
Calif.
P. — Born Savannah, Ga. Pupil of Ju-
lian Academy in Paris under Laurens
and Royer; Chauncey Ryder at Eta-
ples, France. Member: S. Wash. A.:
Miss. AA. Awards : Silver medal,
Appalachian Exp., Knoxville, 1913; sil-
ver medal, Pan.-Cal.Exp., San Diego,
1915; gold medal, Mississippi Art Asso-
ciation, 1916; second prize, Calif. State
Fair. Sacramento, 1920. Work: "Pines
of "Picardy," Carnegie Public Library,
Chattanooga. Tenn. : "Pine and Its
Shadow," Gibbes Gallery, Charleston,
S. C. ; "Fog Coming In — Ogunquit," and
ten sketches around Fort Worth, Fort
Worth (Tex.) Art Association; "Ponlars
at Twilight," Brooks Memorial Mus.,
Memphis. Tenn.; "Foggy Day. Ogun-
quit," Delgado Museum, New Orleans,
La.; "A Street in Carmel," Public Li-
brary, Palo Alto, Cal.; "Afternoon,
Venice," Huntington Club, Savannah,
Ga. ; "Into the Mist," Janesville vWis.)
Art League; "Springtime in the South,"
Mississippi Art Gallery, Jackson, Miss.
SILVERBERG. E. Myer, 58 West 57th
St.; h. 71 East 92nd St., New York.
N. Y.
Port. P. — Born in Russia, May 10.
1876. Studied in Royal Academy of
Fine Arts, Munich. Member: Pitts-
burgh AA. Work in High Schools
and other public institutions, Pittsburgh,
564
SILVERMAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SKINNER
SILVERMAN, Adolph, 2044 Pacific St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
SIMBOLI, Raymond, 163 Reiter St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
SIMKINS, Martha, Woodstock. N. Y.
P.— Born Texas. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.
and Chase. Member: N. A. Women
PS; PBC.
SIMMONS, Edward, 16 Gramercy Park,
New York, N. Y.
Mural P., C. — Born Concord, Mass., Oct.
27, 1852. Pupil of Boulanger and I>e-
febvre in Paris. Member: Ten
Am. P.; Nat. Inst. AL. Awards: Hon.
mention, Paris Salon, 1882; bronze
medal, Paiis Exp., 1889; gold medal,
Pan- Am. "Exp.. Buffalo, 1901; collabora-
tive prize. N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1912. Work:
"The Battle of Concord" and "Restora-
tion of Battle Flags," Massachusetts
State House, Boston; "The Muses,"
nine panels. Library of Congress, Wash-
ington; "Justice," "The Fates" and
"Liberty. Fnual:"ty, Fraternity." Crim-
inal Court, New York; four pendentives,
dome, Minnesota State Capitol, St.
Paul; decorations in Capitol, Pierre, S.
Dak.; and in Court House, Mercer, Pa.;
Astor Gallery, Astoria, New York;
Court House, Des Moines, la.; Appellate
Court, New York; Memorial Hall, Har-
vard College.
SIMMONS, F. Ronald, 65 Prospect St.,
Providence. R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence WCC.
SIMMONS, Will. 1.37 East 57th St., New
York, N. Y.; Roxbury, Conn.
P., I.. E., S.— Born Elche, Spain, June
4, 1884. Pupil of Julian Academy,
Lefebvre and Alexander Harrison In
Paris. Member: Chicago SE; P-G;
Brooklyn SE. Represented in New
York Public Library.
SIMON, Eugene J., 665 East 242nd St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Woodstock,
N. Y.
P.— Born in Hungary, May 8. 1889.
Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller. M e m-
b e r : S.Indp.A.; Foodstock AA.
SIMON, Marie Ethalind, 1235 South 58tli
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
SIMONS, Amory C(offin), 207 East 17th
St., New York. N. Y.
S.— Born Charleston, S. C, 1869. Pupil
of PAFA; Dampt and Puech in Paris,
Member: Paris AAA. Awards:
Hon. mention, Paris Exp., 1900; hon.
mention, Pan- Am. Exp., Buffalo. 1901;
silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; hon.
mention. Paris Salon. 1906; hon. men-
tion, P.-P.Exp., San F.. 1915.
SIMPSON, C. Helen. 939 8th Ave..
New York. N. Y.; h. Greenacre Ave.,
Hartsdale, N. Y.
P.— Member: N. Y. WCC; N. A.
Women PS.
SIMPSON, Mrs. Clara D(avidson), 3 Park
St., Norwalk, Conn.
P.. I. — Born St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 16,
1874. Pupil of ASL and Dow in New
York; Blanche and Mucha In Paris.
Member: N. A. Women PS; Conn.
AFA; Conn. SA. Work in : Art Mu-
seum, Rockford, 111.
SIMPSON, Mrs. Edna Huestis. 211 South
Parsons Ave., Flushing. N. Y.
Mln.P.— Born Troy. N. Y.. Nov. 26. 1882.
Pupil of Emma Willard Art School;
Cornell Univ.: ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: Pa.Soc.Min.P.
SIMPSON, M(axwell) Stewart, 431 Madi-
son Ave., Elizabeth, N. .T.
P.. E.— Born Elizabeth, N. J., Sept. 11,
1896.
SIMPSON, Samuel, Jolland, Conn.
P., W., L., T.— Born Centerville. Mich.,
Nov. 24, 1868. Pupil of ASL of N. T.
SIMS. Ralph. Delphi, Ind.
S.— M ember: Ind. SS.
SINCLAIR, Gerrit V. (W.), 333 Third
St., Milwaukee. Wis.
P., T. — Born Grand Haven, Mich., May
1, 1890. Pupil of Chicago Art Institute.
SINDELAR, Thomas A., 15 Maiden Lane,
New York, N. Y. ; h. Elmhurst, L. I..
N. Y.
T. — Born Cleveland. O.. Feb. 3. 1867.
Pupil of Carl Hecker, Alphonse M.
Mucha. Member: Salma.C. 1898;
Lotos C; A. Fund S.
SINGER, William H.. Jr., 104 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
P — Born Pittsburgh. Pa.. .July 5. 1868.
Member: Pittsburgh AS; Allied AA;
ANA 1916; St. Lucas Soc. of Art, Am-
sterdam. Holland. Awards: Silver
medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915: Cahn
hon. mention, AIC. 1916. Represented
in the Portland Museum and in the
Hispanic Museum, New York City.
SINGERMAN, Gertrude Sterne. 1222
Summit Ave., Seattle, Wash. (P.)
SKELTON, Leslie J(ames), 1225 North
Teion St.. Colorado Springs. Colo.
Ldscp.P., I. — Born Montreal. CaTiada.
April 27. 1848. Pupil of Twill In Paris.
Member: Colorado Springs AS.
Work in National Art Gallery of Can-
ada, Ottawa. Canada; Perkins Art Gal-
lery. Colorado College.
SKEMP. Mrs. Olive H., 702 Arthur Ave..
Scottdale, Pa.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.; Pittsburgh,
Pa.
SKIDMORE, Lewis Palmer, 214 Clermont
Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. ; summer, Port
Jefferson, L. L, N. Y.
P., E., T.— Born Bridgeport. Conn.,
Sept. 3. 1877. Pupil of J. H. Niemeyer;
Laurens and Bonnat in Paris. Mem-
ber: Brooklvn SA; Brooklyn WCC;
New- Haven PCC.
SKIDMORE. Thornton D., 548 West 188th
St., New York. N. Y.
I.— Me m b er : SI 1914.
SKINNER. Dewitt A. 146 Arbordale Ave..
Rochester, N. Y.
P.— Born Gates, N. Y., Jan. 4, 1880.
Pupil of Aim6 Leon Meyvis.
SKINNER, Orin E., 188 Federal St., Roch-
ester, N. Y.
P. — M ember : Rochester AC.
565
SKONVERE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SMALL
SKONVERE, Harold, 707— 11th Ave.,
Astoria, L. I., N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
SKOOG, Karl F(redrick), 34 Boylston St.,
Cambridge, Mass.
P., S.— Born Sweden, Nov. 3, 1878. Pu-
pil of Bela L. Pratt. Member: Conn.
AFA. Awards : Prize, Rochester,
N. Y., 1908; hon. mention, AIC, 1912;
hon. mention. Conn. A PA, 1915, 1918;
first prize, AIC, 1918; hon. mention,
Chicago SE, 1920. Work: Bust of
John Ericsson in K. of P. Bldg., Brock-
ton, Mass. ; bronze tablet in Home for
Aged Swedish People, West Newton,
Mass. ; Perry Monument, Forest Dale
Cemetery, relief, J. A. Powers, Elks
Bldg., Maiden, Mass.; medallion, R. W.
Emerson, Museum of Numismatic So-
ciety, New York.
SLADE, C. Arnold, Rue d'Assas, Paris,
France; Provincetown, Mass.
P.— Born Acushnet, Mass., Aug. 2, 1882.
Pupil of F. V. Du Mond, Laurens,
Schomer and Bachet. Member: Phila.
AC; Paris AA; Allied A. of London;
Grand Rapids AC; Springfield (111.) AC;
New Bedford AA; Phila. Sketch C.
Work: "Sardine Boats, Brittany,"
Springfield (111.) Art Club; "Venice,"
Philadelphia Art Club; "The Reapers,"
Attleboro (Mass.) Public Collection;
"Village of Etaples," Fenway Court
Collection; "Sea Waifs," New Bedford
(Mass.) Public Library; "Vender of Co-
coa Water," Milwaukee Art Institute;
"Christ on the Mountain," Bethany
Church, Philadelphia, Pa.
SLADE, Cora L. (Mrs. Abbott E. Slade),
863 High St., Fall River, Mass,
P. — Pupil of Robert S. Dunning. M e m-
ber: Providence AC; Boston AG;
Newport AA; Fall River AC.
SLAFTER, Theodore S., Readville, Mass.
P.— Member: Copley S. 1890; Boston
AC.
SLATER, Edwin C(rowther), 118 East
59th St., New York, N. Y. ; h. 1040 Pel-
hamdale Ave., Pelham Manor, N. Y.
P., C— Born New Jersey, Dec. 22, 1884.
Pupil of William Chase, Cecilia Beaux,
Thomas P. Anshutz, Hugh Brecken-
ridge, Birge Harrison, Charles Grafly,
Herman D. Murphy, Henry R. Poore.
Member: Salma. C; Copley S.;
Fellowship PAFA.
SLEETH, L. MacD. (Mrs. Francis V.
Sleeth), Dawson Terrace, Rural Route
No. 1, Va.; h. Cathedral School for
Girls, Washington, D. C.
P., S., T. — Born Croton, Iowa, Oct. 24,
1864. Pupil of Whistler, MacMonnies
and Emil Carlsen. Member: San
F. AA; Wash. WCC. Work: Por-
trait busts in marble of "Brig. Gen'l
John M. Wilson," Corcoran Gallery of
Art; "Martha Washington," Memorial
Continental Hall, and "Rt Rev. Bishop
Henry T. Satterlee," Cathedral Foun-
dation, all in Washington, D. C.
SLEETH, R. L., Jr., 301 South Lang Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
SLOAN, J(ames) Blanding, 17 East 14th
St., New York, N. Y.; h. 120 North
15th St., Corsicana, Tex.
P., L, E., C, W., T.— Born Corsicana,
Sept. 19, 1886. Pupil of Chicago Acad-
emy of Fine Arts; B. J. O. Norfeldt;
George Senseney. Member : Chicago
SE.
SLOAN, John, 88 Washington PI., New
York, N. Y.
P., I., Etcher. — Born Lock Haven, Pa.,
Aug. 2, 1871. Member: P-G.; S. Indp.
A. Awards: Honorable mention, CI
Pittsburgh, 1905; bronze medal for
etching, P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915.
Work in: New York Public Library;
Newark (N. J.) Public Library: Cincin-
nati Museum of Art; Carnegie Insti-
tute. Pittsburgh, Metropolitan Museum
of Art.
SLOAN, Marianna, 524 Walnut SL, Phil-
adelphia, Pa.; h. 44 Queen Lane, Ger-
mantown, Pa.
Ldscp.P., Mural P. — Born Lock Haven.
Pa. Pupil of Robert Henri and Elliott
Daingerfield in Philadelphia. Mem-
ber: NYWCC; Fellowship PAFA
1916; S.Indp.A. Award: Bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904. Work:
"Landscape," St. Louis Club; "Rocky
Beach," Pennsylvania Academy of the
Fine Arts, Philadelphia; mural decora-
tions. Church of the Annunciation. Phil-
adelphia; mural decoration, St. Thomas
Church, Whitemarsh, Pa.
SLOAN E, George, 162 Newbury St., Bos-
ton, Mass.
P.— M ember: Providence AC.
SLOMAN, Joseph, 300 Fifth St., Union
Hill, N. J.
P., S., I., C— Born Philadelphia, Pa.,
Dec. 30. 1879. Pupil of Howard Pyle,
B. W. Clinedinst and Clifford Grayson.
Works : Art Dome, Town Hall, West
New York, N. J.; "Martin Luther",
Church of St. John. West New York. N.
J., stained glass memorial in Hoboken,
N. J., Temple; work in Synagogue at
Athens, Ga. ; Public Library, Hoboken,
N. J.
SLOPER, Norma (Wright), 104 Lake
St., New Britain, Conn.
P. — Born New Haven, Conn., Jan. 12,
1892. Pupil of A. E. Jones; Lucien
Simon and Rene Menard in Paris.
Member: Soc. Conn. P.; Conn.
AFA.
SLOTNICK, Mack, 107 West 47th St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
SLUSSER, J(ean) Paul, 344 East 57th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. Wheaton, 111.
P.. C, T.^ — Born Wauseon, O.. Dec. 15,
1886. Pupil of Paxton, Hale and Carlson.
Member: Chicago SA.
SLUTZ, Helen Beatrice, 7320 Paxton Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Cleveland, O., Apr. 15, 1886.
Pupil of Cleveland School of Art.
Member: Chicago S.Min.P.; Chicago
AC; Cleveland Woman's AC.
SMALL, F. W., 464 74th St., Brooklyn,
N. Y. (L)
566
SMALL
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SMITH
SMALL, Hazel, 769 Lincoln St., Denver,
Colo.
P.,T. — M ember: Denver AA,
SMALLEY, Janet, 223 East Washington
Sq., Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
SMEDLEY, Will Larymore, Chautauqua-
on-the-Lake, N. Y.
P., I., W., L.— Born in Ohio, 1871. Self
taught.
SMILLIE, George F(rederlck Cumming),
1961 Biltmore St., N. W., Washington,
D. C.
Engr.— Born New York, N. Y., Nov. 22,
1854. Pupil of NAD and of his uncle,
James D. Smillie, in Am. Bank Note Co.
Principal engraver, U. S. Bureau of
Engraving since 1894; chief work, the
so-called "picture notes" {%2 and |5
silver certificates of 1895); back of $100
Federal Reserve notes; large portraits
of Presidents Grant, McKinley, Roose-
velt, Taft and Wilson.
SMILLIE, Helen (Nellie) Sheldon Jacobs
(Mrs. George H. Smillie), 156 East 36th
St., New York, N. Y.; h. Bronxville,
N. Y.
P.— Born New York, Sept. 14, 1854. Pu-
pil of J. O. Eaton and James D. Smillie.
Member: AWCS.
SMITH, Albert Alexander, 23 Blvd. des
Batignolles, Paris, France.
P., E.— Born New York, N. Y., Sept.
17, 1896. Pupil of NAD.
SMITH, Albert A., 229 East 75th St.,
New Y'ork, N. Y. (P.)
SMITH, Albert D(elmont), 58 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.; summer, East
Hampton, L. I., N. Y.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., Feb. 14,
1886. Pupil of DuMond and Chase.
SMITH, Albert E., "Chenyledge," Cos
Cob, Conn.
P., I., C. — Born Waterbury, Conn., Aug.
15, 1862. Pupil of Yale School of Fine
Arts.
SMITH, Alice R. Huger, 8 Atlantic St.;
h. 69 Church St., Charleston, S. C.
P., Engr., E. — Born Charleston, S. C,
July, 1876.
SMITH. Alfred E., 294 Boylston St., Bos-
ton, Mass.; h. 18 Middle St., Concord,
Mass.; summer, Riverview, Gloucester,
Mass.
Port. P. — Born Lynn, Mass., May 27,
1863. Pupil of Boston Museum School;
Julian Academy in Paris under Bou-
langer, Lefebvre, Constant and Doucet.
Member: Copley S.
SMITH, Anita M(iller), Shady, Ulster Co.,
N. Y.; h. 123 East 53rd St., New York,
N. Y.
P.. C. — Born Torresdale, Pa., Oct. 20,
1893. Pupil of Carlson and N. Y. ASL.
Member: N. A. Women PS; Al-
liance; ASL of N. Y.; Lg. of N. Y. A.;
Provincetown AA; Woodstock AA.
Work: "Houses in the Dunes,"
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts.
SMITH, Anne Fry, 106 Oakdale Ave.,
Glenside, Pa.
P. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Jan. 25,
1890, Pupil of Fred Wagner. Mem
ber: • Plastic C; Phila. Alliance.
Work: "The Covered Bridge," Pa.
State College.
SMITH, Belle Patterson, 720 21st St.,
N. W., Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
SMITH, Charles Moore, 172 Elm Ave., Mt.
Vernon. N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma.C.
SMITH, Mrs. C. W., 1129 E. Colorado
Blvd., Glendale, Calif. (P.)
SMITH, Dan, care of "N. Y. World," New
York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI 1912.
SMITH, De Cost, 146 West 55th St.; h.
144 West 73d St., New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Salma.C. 1891.
SMITH, Duncan, 42 Washington Sq., New
York. N. Y.
Mural P.. I.. T. — Born in Virginia, Oct.
21. 1877. Pupil of Brush. Blum, Cox,
Twachtman, De Camp. Member:
Mural P.; Alumni Am. Academy In
Rome; Salma. C. Instructor, ASL of
N. Y., 1913-14.
SMITH, E. Galusha, (Mrs. William Haw-
ley Smith), 2039 Knoxville Ave., Peoria,
111.
P., T.— Born Morris, 111., Oct. 24, 1849.
Pupil of Chataine, Margaret Pullman,
F. C. Peyraud. Member: Peoria
AL; Peoria AA. Awards: Two first
prizes, Fine Arts Dept., National Imple-
ment Asso., 1920. Work in Shirley-
Savoy Hotel, Denver, Colo.
SMITH, (Edward) Gregory, Old Lyme,
Conn.
P. — Born Grand Rapids, Mich., May 2,
1880. Member: Salma.C.
SMITH, Eileen A., 159 North Sandusky
St., Delaware, Ohio.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
SMITH, Eliza Lloyd, Bluemont, Va.
P.— Born Urbana, Ohio, July 21, 1872.
Pupil of Corcoran Art School, Washing-
ton, D. C. Member: Wash. WCC.
SMITH, E(lmer) Boyd, Wilton, Conn.
L— Born St. John, N. B.. Canada,
May 31. 1860. Member: Boston AC.
Author and illustrator: "The Story of
Noah's Ark"; "The Chicken World";
"Pochontas and Captain John Smith";
"The Story of Our Country," etc.
SMITH, Emma J., 2000 Sixteenth St.,
Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
SMITH, Ernest Browning, 247 So. Bixel
St., Los Angeles, Cal.
P.— Born Brimfield, Mass., Nov. 30, 1868.
Member: Cal. AC.
SMITH, F. Carl, 3 Westmoreland PL,
Pasadena, Cal.
Port. P. — Born Cincinnati, O., Sept. 7,
1868. Pupil of Bouguereau, Ferrier and
Constant in Paris. Member: S.
Wash. A.; Wash. WCC; Paris AAA;
Calif. AC; Pasadena Fine Arts C.
Award: Hon. mention for water
color, AAS 1902. Work: "Mrs.
Charles W, Fairbanks" and "Mrs. John
Ewing Walker," D. A. R. Continental
567
SMITH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SMITH
Hall, Washington; Former speaker
"Joseph Cannon," Public Library, Min-
neapolis; "Samuel P. Langley," Alle-
gheny (Pa.) Observatory; "Governor
Shafroth," The Capitol, Denver; por-
traits of Gov. Willis of Ohio in Capitol,
Columbus, and Speaker Clark, The Cap-
itol, Washington, D. C.
SMITH, F(rancis) Berkeley, 16 Place de
la Madeleine, Paris. France.
1., W.— Born Astoria, L. I., N. Y., Aug.
24, 1868; son of F. Hopkinson Smith.
Studied architecture at Columbia Univ.
and practiced until 1896. Author and
illustrator: "The Real Latin Quarter,"
"Budapest, the City of the Magyars,"
etc.
SMITH, Francis Drexel. 531 North Cas-
cade Ave., Colorado Springs, Colo.
P. — Born Chicago, 111. Member: Colo.
Springs AS; Denver AA.
SMITH, Mrs. Francis S. See Ingham.
SMITH, George W(ashington), 17 Mesa
Rd., Santa Barbara, Calif.
P., Arch. — Born East Liberty, Pa., Feb.
22, 1879. Studied in Paris and Rome;
Harvard Fine Arts School. Member:
Paris AAA; NACj Calif. AC.
SMITH. Gladys Keyser, 5219 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
SMITH, Harriet F(rances), 120 Glenville
Ave., Allston, Mass.
P.— Born Worcester, July 28, 1873.
Pupil of Mass. Normal Art School, Den-
man W. Ross, E. W. D. Hamilton,
Henry B. Snell, C. H. Woodbury, Philip
Hale. Member: Worcester Art
Students C; Copley S.; Eastern Art
Assoc; NYWCC.
SMITH, Harry Knox, 601 West 151st
St., New York, N. Y.
P., C— Born Philadelphia, Apr. 24, 1879.
Pupil of PAFA; ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1910.
SMITH, Holmes, Washington University;
h. 5440 Maple Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
P., T., W.. L.— Born Keighley, England,
May 9, 1863. Member: St. Louis
AG (pres. 1911-12); College AA (pres.
1912-14); 2 X 4 S. Professor of drawing
and history of art, Washington Univ.,
St.r Louis. Specialty, water colors.
SMITH, Hope, 165 Hope St., Providence,
R. I.
P.— Born Providence, R. I., May 10,
1879. Pupil of Woodbury, Chase, Wm.
C. Loring. Member : Prov. AC.
SMITH, Howard, Fenway Studios. 30
Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.; summer,
Rockport, Mass.
P., I., T.— Born West Windham, N. H..
April 27, 1885. Pupil of Howard Pvle
and E. C. Tarbell. Member: ANA,
1921; AWCS; Boston GA. Awards:
Paige Traveling Scholarship School of
the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston;
bronze medal for painting, P. -P. Exp.,
San F., 1915; first Hallgarten prize,
NAD, 1917; Isidor Medal, 1921. Work:
"Portrait of Col. ^W. H. Osborn,"
Treasury Bldg., Washington. Instructor,
Rhode Island School of Design.
SMITH, Ira J., 1201 Chamber of Com-
merce Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
SMITH, Isabel E. (Mrs. F. Carl Smith),
3 Westmoreland PJ., Pasadena, Cahf.
Min.P. — Born Smith's Landing, near
Cincinnati, O. Pupil of L'hermitte, De-
lance and Callot in Paris. Member:
Paris Woman's AC; Pasadena Fine
Arts C.
SMITH, Ishmael, 260 Riverside Drive,
New York, N. Y.
P., 'S., I. — Born Barcelona, Spain, July
16, 1886. Member: Salma. C.
Works: Monument to Pablo Torull,
Caja de Ahorros de Sabadell, Cata-
lunya; Portrait of Mila Y Fontanals,
Institut des estudie Catalans; Portrait
of Alphonse Maseras and group in
sculpture. Museum of Barcelona, Spain.
SMITH, J. Andre, 411 West End Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
E., P.— Member: Salma. C; P-G.
Award: Gold medal for etching, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915.
SMITH, J. Francis. 342 North Main St.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
P.— M ember: Calif. AC.
SMITH, Jack W., 602 South Alvarado St.,
Los Angeles, Cal.
P.— Born Paterson, N. J.. 1873. Studied
at Cincinnati Art Academy and AIC.
Member: Calif. A.C; Calif. WCS.
Awards : Silver medal, San Diego
Exp., 1915; bronze medal, San Diego
Exp., 1916; silver medals, Sacramento
Exp., 1917 and 1918; first prize, Los
Angeles Liberty Exp., 1918; Black prize,
Calif. A. C, 1919; gold and bronze
medals, Sacramento Exp., 1919; second
prize, Phoenix, Ariz., Exp., 1920.
SMITH, Jessie Willcox, "Cogshill," Allen
Lane, Philadelphia, Pa.
I., P.— Born Philadelphia. Pupil of
PAFA; Drexel Inst, under Howard Pyle.
Member: Plastic C; Phlla.WCC;
Fellowship PAFA; SI 1904 (assoc);
NYWCC. Awards : Bronze medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902; Mary Smith
prize, PAFA 1903; silver medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; Beck prize, Phlla.
WCC 1911; silver medal, water colors,
P. -P.Exp., San F., 1915. Specialty,
paintings and illustrations of children.
SMITH, Jo-seph Lindon. 102 Chestnut St.,
Boston, Mass.; summer. Dublin, N. H.
P., L., T.— Born Pawtucket, R. I.,
Oct. 11, 1863. Pupil of Boston Museum
School under Crowninshield and Grund-
mann; Julian Academy in Paris under
Boulanger and Lefebvre. Member:
Mural P.; Boston SAC; Copley S. 1882;
Century Assoc. Award : Beck prize,
Phila. WCC 1905. Work: Mural
paintings in Boston Public Library and
Horticultural Hall, Philadelphia. Made
copies in Italy, Egypt, Turkey. Mexico,
Guatamala, Java, India, China and
Japan for Museums. Represented in
Corcoran Gallery and Smithsonian In-
stitution, Washington; Chicago Art In-
stitute; Boston Museum; Harvard Uni-
versity; Rhode Island School of Design;
Gardner Collection, Boston.
568
SMITH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SHELL
SMITH, Judson, Birmingham, Mich. (P.)
SMITH, J. Calvert, 880 West 181st St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Me m b e r : Salma. C; Guild of
Free Lance Artists.
SMITH, Marcella (Claudia Heber), 3
Porthmeor Studios. St. Ives, Cc-n-
wall, England; h. 1320 New Hampshire
Ave., Washington, D. C.
P., T. — Born East Molesey, Surrey,
England, Mar. 6, 1887. Pupil of Dele-
cluse in Paris; Fred Milner at Royal
British Academy in London; Corcoran
School of Art, Washington; Phila. School
of Design. Member: A. R. B, A.
S. Wash. A.
SMITH, Oliver Phelps, 550 East Lincoln
Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y.; summer Con-
necticut Valley, Middlesex Co., Conn.
P.— Born Hartford, Conn., Dec. 18, 1867.
Pupil of NAD. Member: NYWCC.
Specialty, stained glass and mural dec-
oration.
SMITH, Rosamond Lombard, 405 Fenway
Studios, 30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.
P.— M ember: Boston GA. Award:
Bronze medal. P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
SMITH, Sarah K., 343 Washington Ave.,
Wheaton, 111.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
SMITH, Sarah R., 122 East 59th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
SMITH, Sherman, 723 Liberty Ave., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
SMITH, Sibley C, 107 Westminster St.,
Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence AC.
SMITH, Twigg, 122 Bates St., Honolulu,
Hawaii.
P.— Born Nelson, New Zealand, Nov. 2,
1882. Pupil of AIC; Harry M. Walcott.
Member: Hawaiian SA; Chicago
ASL.
SMITH, W(alter) Granville, 96 Fifth Ave.;
h. 211 East 11th St., New York, N. Y.;
and Bellport, L. I., N. Y.
P., I.— Born S. Granville, N. Y., Jan.
26. 1870. Pupil of Walter Satterlee and
ASL of N. Y.; studied in Europe.
Member: ANA 1908, NA 1915; AWCS;
Salma.C. 1898. Awards: Third Hall-
garten prize, NAD 1900; bronze medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902; Evans prize,
AWCS 1905; first prize, Worcester. 1906;
hon. mention, C.I.Pittsburgh, 1907; In-
ness gold medal, NAD 1908; bronze
medal, Buenos Aires Exp., 1910; Vezln
prize. Salma.C. 1911: Shaw purchase
prize ($500), Salma.C. 1913; Hudnut
prize ($200), AWCS, 1916; Isidor prize,
Salma. C, 1918. Work: "Grey Day,"
Smithsonian Institution, Washington,
D. C.
SMITH, W. Linford, 5029 Amberson Place,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., Dec. 31, 1869.
Pupil of Chris Walters. Member:
Pittsburgh AA.
SMITH, William H., 21 Lincoln St., Hart-
ford, Conn.
P.— M ember: Conn. AFA.
SMITH, Wuanita, 1823 Walnut St.. Phila-
delphia, Pa.
I.— Born Philadelphia, Jan. 1, 1866.
Pupil of PAFA; Phila. School of Design
for Women and Howard Pyle. M e m -
be r : Plastic Cr; Fellowship PAFA;
Alliance. Award: Hon. mention,
Wilmington AA. Illustrated: "The Four
Corner Series," "The Admiral's Grand-
daughter," "Grimm's Fairy Tales," etc.
SMYTH, S(amuel) Gordon, 1430 S. Penn.
Sq.; h. 1216 E. 18th St., Philadelphia,
Pa.; summer, Conshohocken, Pa.
P., I., C. — Born Holmesburg, Philadel-
phia, Pa., Nov. 21, 1891. Pupil of Harry
Lachman, Walter H. Everett. Work:
Series of historical paintings, in Na-
tional Shawmut Bank, Boston; illustra-
tions for "Saturday Evening Post,"
"Collier's," "Everybody's."
SMYTH E, Eugene L., care of Tilden
Thurber Co., Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember : Providence AC.
SNAPP, Frank, care of George Baker,
The Charles E. Johnson Co., State Lake
Bldg., Chicago, 111.
I.— M ember: SI 1910.
SNEAD, Louise W(lllls) (Mrs. Harry
Vairin Snead), "Ye Olde King's High-
way," Noroton, Conn.
Min.P., I.. W.. L.— Born Charleston,
S. C. Pupil of Chase; ASL of N. Y.
under Theodora Thayer. Awards :
Hon. mention, Charleston Exp., 1902;
prize for seal for a South Carolina city
in 1915; first prize for miniatures at
Mineola, L. I., 1911 and 1912. Lectures
on Oriental rugs and point lace. Author
and illustrator of "History of Stamford,
Conn."; "Silver and Gold," for Stam-
ford Trust Co. Illustrator of "Suburban
Life of Stamford" for Stamford Cham-
ber of Commerce, 1919.
SNELL, Florence Francis (Mrs. Henry
B. Snell), 253 West 42d St.. New York,
N. Y.
P. — Born London, England. Pupil of
ASL of N. Y. Member: NYWCC;
AWCS (assoc. '• N. A. Women PS; NAC.
Awards : McMillin landscape prize,
N. A. Women PS, 1913; NAC prize, N.
A. Women PS. 1915.
SNELL, Henry B(ayley), 253 West 42d
St.. New York, N. Y.
Marine P., T.— Born Richmond. Eng-
land, Sept. 29, 1858. Pupil of ASL of
N. Y. Member: NYWCC (pres.);
AWCS; ANA 1902; NA 1906; SAA 1905;
Salma.C. 1903; Lotos C; Fellowship
PAFA 1916 (assoc); NAC. Awards:
Gold medal, ACPhila. 1896; first prize,
Nashville Exp., 1897; hon. mention,
Paris Exp., 1900; silver medal, Pan-
Am. Exp.. Buffalo. 1901; silver medal. St.
Louis Exp.. 1904; first prize ($300).
Worcester Museum, 1905; Beal prize,
NYWCC 1905; silver medal for oil paint-
ing and gold medal for water colors,
P. -P. Exp., San F.. 1915; hon. mention,
Phila. AC, 1916; Shaw Purchase Prize,
Salma. C, 1918. Assistant director
of Fine Arts, U. S. Comm.. Paris Exp..
1000. Work: "The Citadel at Quebec."
Albright Art Gallery. Buffalo; "En-
569
SNYDER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SOUTHWICK
trance to the Harbor of Polperro,"
Worcester Museum; "Nightfall," Her-
ron Art Institute, Indianapolis; "Lake
Como," Metropolitan Mus., New York.
SNYDER, Annie F., 305 Hazelwood Ter-
race, Rochester, N. Y.
P. — M ember : Rochester AC.
SNYDER, Corydon G., 1161 South Ridge-
land Ave., Oak Park, 111.
P., S., I., E., W., T.— Born Atchison,
Kan., Feb. 24, 1879. Author of course
in fashion illustration published by Fed-
eral Schools of Minneapolis; "Modern
Advertising Arrangement," pub. by
Myer Booth College, Chicago; "Re-
touching Not Difficult. "
SODERSTON, Herman, 840 Chapel St.;
h. 464 Whallay St., New Haven, Conn.
P.— Born Sweden, July 12, 1862. Pupil
of Royal Academy of Fine Arts, Stock-
holm. Member: New Haven PCC;
S. Indp. A. Represented in Memorial
Hall, Hartford; Sheffield Scientific Hall,
New Haven, Conn.
SOHIER, Alice Ruggles, Concord, Mass.
P.— Born Quincy, Mass., Oct. 21, 1880.
Studied in Buffalo; School of Boston
Museum of Fine Arts under Tarbell;
and in Europe. Member: Boston
GA. Award : Bronze medal, P. -P.
Exp., San F., 1915.
SOKOLSKY, Sulamith, 2103 Vyse Ave.,
Bronx, New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, July 22, 1889. Pu-
pil of Cooper Union and NAD.
SOLLOIVI, Vincent P., 4504 Fifth Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
SOLOMON, Harry, 39 West 67th St.;
summer, 47 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
P. — Born San Francisco, June 5, 1873.
Studied in Paris. Member: Salma.
C. Work : "Portrait of Dr. Ben-
nett Mitchell," Capitol Bldg., Des
Moines; also at Morningside University,
Sioux City.
SOLOMONS, Aline E.. 1604 K St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
P. — Born New York. Pupil of Wash-
ington ASL.
SOMEREST, Frances M., 117 East 27th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
SOMMER, Julius G., 461 Fourth Ave.,
"To-day's Magazine," New York, N. Y.
P. I. — M ember: AT Graphic A.
SONN, Albert H., 282 Parker St., Newark,
N. J.
P., I.— Born Newark, N. J., Feb. 7, 1867.
Pupil of Cooper Institute and NAD.
Member: Salma. C, 1900; AWCS;
A. Fund S; NYWCC.
SON NECK, S., 23 East 26th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
SONNICHSEN, Yngvar, P. O. Box 813;
h. 1441 Lakeside Dr., Seattle, Wash.
P., I., E., T. — Born Christiania, Nor-
way, March 9, 1875. Studied in Ant-
werp, Brussels; at Julian's under
Bouguereau and Constant in Paris.
Member: Board of Fine Arts, Chris-
tiania, Norway; Seattle Fine Arts Soc.
Awards : 1st prize. International
Exhibition, St. John, N. B., Canada,
1906; Gold and Silver Medals, Alaska-
Yukon-Pacific Exp., Seattle, 1909; hon.
mention, Northwest Artists' Annual
Exp., Seattle, 1920. Decorations for
Norway Hall, Seattle; portraits in
municipal^ galleries of Christiania, Ar-
endal, and Laurvik, Norway; Free
Mason's Lodge, St. John, N. B., Can-
ada; Elk's Club, Seattle, A\rash.; Nor-
wegian Club, Brooklyn, N. Y.
SOPER, J(ames) H(amlin) Gardner, 12
Gramercy Park, New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Flint, Mich., July 17, 1877.
Award : Bronze Medal, Louisiana
Purchase Exp., St. Louis, 1904.
SORENSON-DIEMAN, Clara Leonard,
1800 Second Ave., Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
S., L., T. — Born Indianapolis, Ind., Nov.
29, 1877. Pupil of Lorado Taft, Victor
Brenner. Member: Chicago SA;
Indiana Soc. of Artists; Alumnae Chi-
cago Art Institute. Work: "Memo-
rial Tablet," Shortridge High School,
Indianapolis; Memorial Tablet, Y. M.
C. A., Cedar Rapids; Memorial Tablet,
Art Association, Cedar Rapids.
SOTER, John, 211 4th Ave., North, Seat-
tle, Wash. (P.)
SOTTEK, Frank, 381 South Detroit Ave.,
Toledo, O.
P., I., E., W.— Born Toledo, O., Oct.
10, 1874. Member: Artklan; Toledo
Federation of Art Societies.
SOTTER, Elizabeth, 113 Allen Ave., Pitts-
burgh, Pa,
P. — M ember : Pittsburgh AA.
SOTTER, George W., Holicong, Bucks
Pa.
P., C— Born Pittsburgh, Sept. 25, 1879.
Pupil of Chase, Anshutz, Redfield.
Member: Pittsburgh AA. Awards:
Silver medal, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915;
first prize, Pittsburgh Asso. Artists,
1917; art society prize, Pittsburgh Asso.
Artists, 1920; hon. mention. Conn. AFA,
1921. Works: "The Hill Road,"
Reading Museum; "Pennsylvania Coun-
try," State College, State College, Pa.
SOUTHWICK, Albert A., 47 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
SOUTHWICK, Jeanie Lea, 6 Home St.,
Worcester, Mass.
P., T., W., L. — Born Worcester. Pupil
of Shurtleff, Ross Turner, Woodbury
and Chase; Carmine Academy in Paris.
Member: Worcester Art Museum;
Art Students C. (hon.). Lecturer on
Arts and Crafts of Japan, Java, etc.
Specialty, water colors.
SOUTHWICK, Katherine, 224 West 11th
St., New York. N. Y. ; summer, 646
Church St.. Stevens Point, Wis.
P., I., T. — Born Buxton, Me., Jan 9,
1887. Pupil of Chicago Academy of
FA; AIC; PAFA. Member: Fellow-
ship PAFA. -V. w a r d s : Cresson travel-
ing scholarship, PAFA. 1911-1913.
570
S PACKMAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SPENCER
SPACKMAN, Cyril (Saunders), 63 Bal-
foui" Road, Highbury. New Park, Lon-
don, England.
P., E., Arch. — Born Cleveland, Ohio;
Aug. 15, 1887. Pupil of Henry A. Keller
in Cleveland; Kings College Architect-
ural Studio, London. Member:
R.S.B.A.; R.M.S.; South Wales AS;
Chicago SE; S. Canadian P.-E.; Print
Soc. (Eng-.); Fine Art Trade Guild;
British WCS. Represented in Cleve-
land Museum; Chicago Art Institute;
Chicago SE; and British WCS. De-
signed medal of Masonic Million Me-
morial.
SPADER, W. E., 32 Union Sq., New York.
N. Y.; 261 Clifton PI.. Brooklyn, New
York, N. Y. (P., I.)
SPAETH, Marie Houghton, 32 Edgehill
St., Princeton, N. J.
P. — Born Hanover, N. H. Pupil of PA
FA; Pa. School of Design; studied in
Spain, France and Italy. Member:
Plastic C. Specialty, portraits of chil-
dren. Work: "Apennine Village,"
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts.
SPAFARD, Myra B., 447 Hulbert Ave.,
Detroit, Mich.; and Manchester, Mich.
P., T. — Born Manchester. Pupil of
ASL., Teachers College, and Mrs, E.
M. Scott in New York. Member:
N. A. ^Vomen PS.
SPALDING, Elisabeth, 853 Washington
St., Denver, Colo.
Ldscp.P.— Born Erie, Pa. Pupil of ASL
of N. Y. ; PAFA. Member: Denver
AA; Wash. WCC; NYWCC; Erie AC;
Providence WCC. Awards : First
prize, Erie Art C, 1900; C. E. Kremer
prize for water color, AIC, 1921. Work:
"The Docks — Erie" and "Rain," Erie
(Pa.) Art Club; "Twilight 'Shower, Man-
oach," Denver Art Association.
SPALLER, Gertrude, 6332 Glenwood Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
P. — M ember: Chicago SA.
SPANUTH, Lillian, 114 East 91st Street,
New York, N. Y.
P., C. — Born in New York City. Pupil
of Cooper Institute, NAD (under Emil
Carlsen)). Member: Whitney Studio
Club; Wolfe Club; S.Indp.A.
SPARHAWK-JONES, Elizabeth, 1104
Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M e m 6 e r : Fellowship PAFA.
Awards: Mary Smith prize, PAFA
1908 and 1912; honorable mention, CI
Pittsburgh, 1909; Mary Smith prize,
PAFA 1912. Work: "Shop Girls," Art
Institute of Chicago.
SPARKS, Arthur W., 5539 Beeler St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — Member: Pittsburgh A A. Awards:
Second prize, Pittsburgh AA 1913; bronze
medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
SPARKS, H. L., National Park Bank, 214
Broadway, New York, N. Y.
I. — M ember: SI.
SPARKS, Will, 163 Sutter St., Room 408,
San Francisco, Cal.
P., E., W., L. — Born St. Louis, Mo.,
Feb. 7, 1862. Pupil of St. Louis School
FA, and Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: Bohemian C, San F.
Work: Murals: "The Beginning,"
Memorial Chapel, Pacific Grove, Cal.;
"The Home," Bohemian Club, San F.;
"Delores," Plaza Hotel, San F. ; "Cy-
presses," Plaza Hotel, San F. ; "Stormy
Day." Golden Gate Park Museum, San
Francisco; oil paintings: "A Christmas
Allegory." Bohemian Club, San F. ;
"Soledad Mission," Toledo Art Museum;
"The Rocket," Minneapolis Art Museum;
a portrait in St. Louis Museum.
SPAULDING, Henry P(lympton). 110
Tremont St., Boston; h. 32 Salisbury
Road, Brookline, Mass. ; summer. Grape-
vine Road, East Gloucester, Mass.
P. — Born Cambridge, Mass., Sept, 18,
1868. Pupil of Ross Turner and Blum-
mers. Member: Boston AC; Copley
•S.
SPEAKMAN, Anna (Mrs. T. Henry
Speakman), 524 Walnut St., Philadel-
phia, Pa.
I. — Member: Fellowship PAFA;
Plastic C: N. A. Women PS.
SPEAR, Arthur P(rince), Fenway Studios,
30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.; h. 156
Winchester St., Brookline, Mass.
P.— Born Washington, D. C, 1879.
Pupil of Laurens in Paris. Member:
ANA; St. Botolph C; Allied AA; Boston
GA. Award: Silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915.
SPEER, Will W., 1400 Pennsylvania Ave.,
N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa,
P, — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
8PEICHER, Eugene E., 253 West 42d St.,
New York, N. Y., and Woodstock, N. Y.
P.— Born Buffalo, N. Y„ Apr. 5, 1888.
Studied in Buffalo, New York and
Europe. Member: ANA 1912; Port.
P.; NAC; Contemporary. Awards:
Proctor prize, NAD, 1911; Isidor portrait
prize, Salma. C, 1913; third Hallgarten
prize, NAD, 1914; first Hallgarten prize,
NAD, 1915; silver medal, P.-P. Exp.,
San F., 1915; Beck gold medal, PAFA,
1920; third class medal, Carnegie In-
stitute, 1921. Work: "Morning
Light," Metropolitan Museum, New
York; "Mountain Landscape," Art
League, Galveston, Tex.; "Portrait of
an Old Lady" Decatur (111.) Museum.
SPENCER, Edna Isbester, Studio Bldg.,
110 Tremont St., Boston, Mass.; h. 17
Linden Ave., Belmont, Mass.; summer,
Spencerian Farm, Norwell, Mass.
P., S., I.— Born St. John, N. B., Canada,
Nov. 12, 1883. Pupil of Bela Pratt,
Robert Aitken.
SPENCER, Elizabeth C, care of Guaranty
Trust Co., Fifth Ave. and 43rd St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
SPENCER, Guy Raymond, 1922 Locust
St., Omaha, Neb.
Cartoonist. — Born Jasper Co., Mo., Sept,
1, 1878. On staff Omaha "World-
Herald" since 1899, and Lincoln "Com-
moner" 1902-1910.
571
SPENCER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SPRINGER
SPENCER, Howard B(onnell), 1947
Broadway; h. 1292 Madison Ave., New
York, N. Y.; summer, Sound Beach,
Conn.
P.— Born Plainfield, N. J. Pupil of F.
V. DuMond and Walt Kuhn, Mem-
ber: Lg-. of N.Y.A.
SPENCER, Hugh, Chester, Conn.
I., C— Born St. Cloud, Minn., July 19,
1887. Pupil of Charles S. Chapman,
Harvey Dunn, Arthur Covey. Mem-
ber: N.Y. Soc. C; Boston SAC;
Detroit SAC; Phila. Alliance.
SPENCER, J. S., Deep River, Conn.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
SPENCER, Margaret F(ulton) (Mrs. Rob-
ert Spencer), New Hope, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Sept. 26, 1882.
Pupil of Robert Spencer,
SPENCER, Mary, 1062A Sterling Place,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
P., T. — Born Fitchburg, Mass. Pupil
of Herbert Adams, Henry B. Snell, Ar-
thur Dow, and Richard Miller; Pratt
Institute. Member: N. A. Women
PS; Alliance; Brooklyn SA; Brooklyn
WCC.
SPENCER, Mary, 3612 Woodbridge Place,
Cincinnati, O.
P.— Born Springfield. O.. 1835. Pupil of
C. T. Webber in Cincinnati. Member:
Cincinnati Woman's AC. Work:
"Fruit," Cincinnati Museum.
SPENCER, Robert, New Hope, Bucks
Co., Pa.
P.— Born Harvard, Neb., Dec. 1, 1879.
Pupil of Chase, Du Mond, Henri and
Garber. Member: ANA 1914; NA
1920; Salma. C; NAC (life); Allied AA;
Lg. of N. Y. A. Awards: Second
Hallgarten prize, NAD 1913; hon. men-
tion, Phila. A.C. 1913; Sesnan gold
medal, PAFA 1914; Inness gold medal,
NAD 1914; Boston AC medal and pur-
chase prize ($1,000), 1915; gold medal,
P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915; Norman Wait
Harris bronze medal, AIC, 1919; Altman
prize ($500), NAD, 1920 and 1921;
Members' Purchase Prize, Salma. C,
1921; Mrs. W^illiam K. Dupont prize
($100), Wilmington SFA, 1921. Work:
"Repairing the Bridge," Metropolitan
Museum, New York; "The Two Shores."
Boston Art Club; "Along the Canal,
New Hope," Detroit Institute of Arts:
"The Huckster Cart," Art Institute of
Chicago; "Melting Snow," National
Arts Club, New York; "The Red Boat,"
Corcoran Gallery, Washington; "The
White Mill," Pittsburgh Athletic Asso. ;
"One o'clock," "Salmagundi Club; "The
Courtyard," Brooks Memorial Art Gal-
lery, Memphis, Tenn. ; "Across the
River," National Academy of Design.
SPERLING, George J., 34 Climax St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
SPERO, M. J.. 15 West 67th St., New
York, N. Y. (I., P.)
SPICER-SIMSON. Theodore, 57 West
57th St., New York, N. Y.; 3 rue Cam-
pagne Premiere, Paris, France.
P.. S. — Born Havre, France, June 25,
1871. Member: Assoc. Soc. Nat.
des Beaux-Arts, 1901; Century Assoc;
NSS, 1911. Awards : Highest award
for medals, Brussels Exp., 1911; and
Ghent Exp., 1915; bronze medal for
medals, P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915.
Work in: Metropolitan Museum, and
Numismatic Museum, New York; Chi-
cago Art Institute; Detroit Inst.; Minne-
apolis Museum of Art; City Museum of
Art, St. Louis; the Luxembourg, Paris;
Victoria and Albert Museum, London; in
Holland, Belgium. Germany and Aus-
tria-Hungary.
SPICUZZA, Francesco J., 432 Broadway;
h. 500 31st Ave., Milwaukee, Wis.
P.— Born in Sicily, July 23, 1883. Mem-
ber: NYWCC; Painter Group of the
Middle West. Awards : Bronze
medal, St. Paul Inst., 1915; silver medal,
St. Paul Inst., 1917; Snyder prize, Wis.
PS, 1919. Represented ia. S't. Paul
(Minn.) Inst.; Milwaukee (Wis.) Art.
Inst.
SPIERS, Harry, 150 Cedar St., Dedham,
Mass.
P. — Born Selsea, Sussex, England, Oct.
15, 1869. Pupil of Julian Academie in
Paris. Member: Boston SWCP.
Work: "As the Sunlight Bursts,"
Boston Museum of Fine Arts; "At the
Trough" and "Passing of an Autumn
Day," Ontario Government Gallery,
Toronto.
SPIN ETTA, Fred, 150 West 35th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
SPINGARN, Amy (Mrs. J. E. Spingarn),
9 West 73rd St., New York, N. Y.;
summer, America, N. Y.
P.— Born in New York, Jan. 29, 1883.
Pupil of K. H. Miller. Member:
S.Indp.A.
SPOFFORD, Edward W., 114 East 13th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
SPRA*DLING, Frank, Buttermere and
Westra Sts., Interlaken, N. J. (I.)
SPRAGUE, Amelia, 344 West Ave., Buf-
falo, N. Y. (P., T.)
SPRAGUE-SMITH, isabelle Dwight (Mrs.
Charles Sprague-Smith), The Veltin
School, 160 West 74th St.; h. 29 West
68th St., New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Born Clinton, N. Y., Nov. 11, 1861.,
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; studied in PariSi
Member: Barnard C; MacD.C. Prin-
cipal, Veltin School since 1900.
SPREEN, Fred A., 55 South 7th St., S. S.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
SPRENKLE, A. G., 435 Penn Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
SPRINGER, Carl, Punta Gorda, Fla.
P.— Born Fultonhain. O., Nov. 4, 1874.
Member: ASL of N. Y.; Pen and
Pencil C. of Columbus. Award : First
prize Columbus Art League, 1920. Rep-
resented in Columbus Gallery of Fine
Arts.
SPRINGER, Eva, The Dresden, Wash-
ington, D. C. ; h. East Las Vegas, N. M.
P. — Born Cimarron, N. M. Pupil of W.
572
SPROUT
WHO'S WHO IN ART
STANSON
H. Foote, and Richard Miller in New
York; Delecluse and Mme. La Forge
in Paris. Member: Wash. WCG;
S. Wash. A.
SPROUT, Donald A., Picture Rocks, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
SQUIRE, Maud H(unt), 34 Rue St. Louis,
\'ernon, Eure, France.
I,, Etcher, P. — Born Cincinnati, O. Pu-
pil of Cincinnati AC. Member: NY
WCC; Chicago SE; Soci6t6 du Salon
d'AutCmne and Society des Dessinateurs
Humoristes, Paris. Work: "Concar-
neau Fisherman" and "At the Well."
Herron Art Inst., Indianapolis; South
Kensington Museum. London; Corcoran
Gallery. Washington, D. C.
SQUIRES, C. Clyde. 51 West 37th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer. Little
Neck, L. L, N. Y.
I.— Born Salt Lake City, Aug. 29, 1882.
Pupil of Henri, Miller, DuMond, Mora
and Pyle. Member: Guild of Free
Lance A.; SI 1911.
STACEY, Anna Lee (Mrs. John F. Sta-
cey), Studio Bldg., Ohio and State Sts.,
Chicago, 111.
P. — Born Glasgow, Mo. Pupil of AIC.
Member: Chicago SA; Chicago WCC.
Awards : Young Fortnightly prize,
AIC 1902; Cahn prize, AIC 1902; $200
prize. Field Exhibition, 1907; Carr land-
scape prize, Chicago SA 1912; Logan
bronze medal, AIC, 1921. Work:
"A Spanking Breeze," Chicago Woman's
Club; "Moonlight in the Guidecca —
Venice," Kenwood Club, Chicago; "Tro-
phies of the Fields," Union League
Club, Chicago; Chicago Art Commis-
sion purchase, 1914.
STACEY, J. George, Geneva, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
STACEY, John F., Studio Bldg., Ohio and
State Sts., Chicago, 111.
P., T.— Born Biddeford, Me., 1859.
Pupil of Mass. Normal School in Bos-
ton; Boulanger, Lefebvre and Julian
Academy in Paris. Member: Chi-
cago SA; Cliff Dwellers. Awards:
Bronze medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; $100
prize. Field Exhibition, 1907; bronze
medal, Buenos Aires, 1910; Grower
prize, AIC 1911. Work: "Church
Spires of a New England Village," Mu-
seum of Fine Arts, Santiago, Chile;
"Across the Hills," Union League Club,
Chicago; "Valley of the Darro, Gra-
nada, Spain," Herron Art Institute, In-
dianapolis, Ind.
STACK, Charles J., 314 45th St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
STACKPOLE, Ralph, 712 Montgomery St.;
h. 314 Filbert St., San Francisco, Calif.
S., E., C, T. — Born WiUiams, Ore.,
May 1, 1885. Pupil of Arthur Putnam
and G. Piazzoni and Ecole des Beaux-
Arts, Paris. Member: Calif. SE.
Awards : Hon mention, P. -P., Exp.,
San F., 1915; gold medal, 'San F. AA.
1918. Work : "Portrait bust of Prof.
Hilgard". Univ. of California; "Portrait
bust of Prof. Fliigel." Stanford Univer-
sity, Calif.- "Portrait bust of Judge
Seawell", City Hall, San Francisco.
STADELMAN, Henryette Leech, 1616
Rodney St.; h. 1313 Gilpin Ave., Wil-
mington, Del.
P., T. — Born Brownsville, Pa., Dec. 5,
1891. Pupil of Hugh Breckenridge and
PAFA. Member: Plastic C. ; Wil-
mington SFA; Fellowship PAFA.
STAFFORD, B. E. -D., Vanadium Bldg.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA,
STAFFORD, P. S(cott), 1947 Broadway;
h. 162 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
Pupil of Robert Henri. Member :
Pen and Pencil C. of Columbus, O.
STAGG. Jessie A., 1215 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y. (S.)
STAHL, M. Louise, Ohio University,
Athens, O.
P.— Born Cincinnati, O. Pupil of Cin-
cinnati Art Academy under Meakin and
Nowottny; ASL of N. Y. under Volk,
Mowbray and Blum; also of Chase in
N. Y. and Spain, and Hawthorne and
Webster in Provincetown, Mass. M e m-
b e r : Cincinnati Woman's AC; Prov-
incetown AA.
STAHR, Fred C, care of Academy In
Rome Alumni, 101 Park Avenue, New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Alumni Academy in
Rome; Mural P. Award: Lazarus
scholarship. 1911-14.
STAHR, Paul C, 362 Audubon Ave., New
York. N. Y.; summer, Long Beach, West
End. L. I., N. Y.
I.— Born New York, N. Y., Aug. 8, 1883.
Pupil of John Ward and NAD. Mem-
ber: SI; Authors' League of America;
Guild of Free Lance A. Work: Illus-
trations for "Life," "Colliers' Weekly,"
"American Magazine," "Harpers' Ba-
zaar" and "Woman's Home Companion.
Illustrated "The Horner," "The Mask,"
"The Sear," etc.
STAMATO, Frank, 1316 South Warnock
St., Philadelphia, Pa. (S.)
STANFIELD, Marion Baar, 150 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
STANCE, Emiie, North Hackensack,
N. J.
P. — M ember: Salma.C. 1903,
STANLAWS, Penrhyn (Penrhvn Stanley
Adamson), 1 West 67th St., New York,
N. Y.
I., P. — Pupil of Julian Academy and
of Benjamin-Constant and Laurens in
Paris. Member: SI 1913.
STANLEY, Frederic, 57 Lawton St., New
Rochelle, N. Y. (P., I.)
STANLEY, Jane C. Mahon (Mrs. Louis
Crandall Stanley), 49 Seward Ave., De-
troit, Mich.
P.— Born Detroit, July 21, 1863. Pupil
of Chas. Sanderson, S. P. Triscott and H.
A. Hallett. Member: Detroit Soc.
of Women Painters.
STANSON, George C(urtin), 5653 La Ml-
rada Ave., Los Angeles, Cal.; summer,
Santa Fe, N. M.
P., S. — Born Brisout, France, Apr. 2,
573
STANTON
WHO'S WHO tN ART
STEELE
1885. Member: Archaeological Inst,
of Am.; Cal. AC. Work: Four mu-
rals in the Biological Museum of the
Univ. of Cal., La Jolla, Cal.; "After
the Rain" (mural), in Golden Gate
Park Museum, San F. ; "On the Trail,"
Museum of Archaeology, Santa Fe, N. M.
STANTON, Elizabeth C(ady), Gains-
borough Studios, 222 West 59th St. ; h. 45
West 11th 'St., New York, N. Y.; sum-
mer, Silver Beach, North Falmouth,
JVTq gg
p., t'.— Born New York, N. Y., Dec. 31,
1894. Pupil of F. Luis Mora, Geo.
Bridgeman and Cecilia Beaux.
STANTON, Gideon Townsend, 822 Com-
mon St., New Orleans, La,
, P.— Born Morris, Minn., July 14, 1885.
Member : New Orleans Art Assoc.
Award : Silver medal, New Orleans
Art Assoc. 1911.
STANTON, Lucy May, 552 Cobb St.,
Athens, Ga. ; 82 Chestnut St., Boston,
Mass.; summer, Ogunquit, Me.
Port.P., T.— Born Atlanta, Ga., May 22,
1875. Pupil of Colarossi Academy,
Simon, Blanche, Gandara and A. Koop-
man in Paris. Member : Pa.S.Min.P.;
Am. S. Min. P.; N. A. Women PS.;
Wash. WCC; Boston GA. Award:
Medal of honor, PAFA, 1917. Repre-
sented by oil painting in Capitol, Wash-
ington, D. C.
STANWOOD, Gertrude, 1015 Cathedral
St., Baltimore, Md.; summer. Folly
Cove, Lanesville, Gloucester, Mass.
P., T. — Born West Newbury, Mass.,
Mar. 2, 1874. Pupil of Joseph De Camp,
Ernest Major and Lasar. Member:
S.Indp.A.
STARK, Otto, 1722 N. Delaware St., In-
dianapolis, Ind.
P., I., C. — Born Indianapolis, Jan. 29,
1859. Pupil of Lefebvre, Boulanger and
Cormon in Paris. Member: Inter.
Soc. A,L. Award : First Holcomb
prize, Herron Art Inst. 1915. In charge
of Art Dept., Manual Training High
School, and art department. Technical
High School; instructor, Herron Art
School, Indianapolis. Ind. Work:
"Two Boys," and "The Indian Trail,"
Herron Art Inst., Indianapolis; "River,
Valley and Hill," Cincinnati Art Mu-
seum; mural decoration, City Hospital,
Indianapolis- and mural decorations in
the public schools of Indianapolis; "Por-
trait of Gen. George Rogers Clark." In-
diana State House.
STARKWEATHER. William E. B.. 47
Washington Sq.. S., New York, N. Y.
P., W.— Born Edinburgh, Scotland, 1879.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.;Colarossi Acad-
emy in Paris; Sorolla in Madrid, fol-
lowed by three years' study in Italy.
Member: New Haven PCC; His-
panic S. of America (cor.); AWCS;
Salma. C, NYWCC. Author of "Paint-
ings and Drawings by Francisco Goya
in the Collection of the Hispanic Society
of America, 1916."
STARR, Loraine Webster, Hope House,
Easton, Md. (P.)
STARR, Sidney, 256 West 85th St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Lawrence, L. I.,
N. Y.
P. — Born Kingston-upon-Hull, York-*
shire, England, June 10, 1857. Pupil of
Poynter, Legros. Award : Bronze
medal. Universal Exp., Paris, 1889.
Work: Mural decorations, Grace
Chapel, New York City; 24 figures in
Congressional Library, Washington,
D. C.
STAUBEL, William, 59 St. Clair Ave.,
Rutherford, N. J.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
STEA, Caesar, 189 East 115th St.; h. 245
East 118th St., New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Bari, Italy, Aug. 17, 1893.
Pupil of Herman MacNeil, Victor Sal-
vatore. Award : Medal from Beaux-
Arts for relief in Educational Bldg.,
San. F., 1915.
STEADIVIAN. iVIrs. IVIarcia Hunt, Mission-
ary Ridge, Chattanooga, Tenn.
P. — Member: Cincinnati Woman's AC.
STEARNS, Neiison (Mrs. Traphagen
Stearns), 138 Joralemon St., Brooklyn,
New York. N. Y.
S. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
STEBBINS, Roland S(tewart), 192 Dart-
mouth St., Boston, Mass; 52 Cummings
Rd., Brookline, Mass.
P., I., C, T.— Born Boston, Mass., May
22, 1883. Pupil of De Camp in Boston.
Hachl in Munich. Member : Boston
AC. Illustrator of "At the King's
Pleasure".
Brandt (Theodore), 811 East
Woodruff Place, Indianapolis,
STEELE,
Drive,
Ind.
P., Arch. — Born Battle Creek, Mich., Nov.
16, 1870. Pupil of his father, T. C.
Steele; Aman-Jean in Paris. Mem-
ber: Indianapolis Arch. Assoc. ; In-
diana AC. Instructor, Herron Art Inst.
Frederic Dorr, care of The
16 Gramercy Park; New York,
STEELE,
Players,
N. Y.
I. — Born Marquette, Mich., Aug. 6, 1873.
Pupil of NAD and ASL in New York.
Member: SI 1902. Award : Bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904. Illustrated:
"The Consul," by Richard Harding
Davis; "Wards of Liberty," by Myra
Kelly,; books for Mark Twain, F. R.
Stockton, R. Kipling, Arnold Bennett,
B. Tarkington, etc.
STEELE, T(heodore) C(lenfient), Bloom-
ington, Ind.
P.— Born Owen Co., Ind., Dec. 11, 1847.
Pupil of Royal Academy in Munich
under Benczur and Loefftz. Mem-
ber: ANA 1914. Awards: Hon-
orable mention, Paris Exp., 1900;
Fine Arts Corporation prize, SWA,
1910. Work: "Gordon Hill," Cincin-
nati Museum; "Oaks at Vernon," "Por-
trait of Rev. N. A. Hyde," "The River,
"Winter Sunlight," Herron Art Insti-
tute, Indianapolis; "Landscape." St.
Louis Museum; "Whitewater Valley,"
Richmond (Ind.) Art Association.
574
STEELE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
STEVENS
STEELE, Mrs. Z. De L., New Milford,
Conn.
P., I. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
STEELE, Zulma, Woodstock, Ulster Co.,
N. Y.
P.— Born Appleton, Wis., July 7, 1881.
Pupil of Pratt Institute, Brooklyn; ASL
of N. Y. Member: N. A. Women
PS; Wash. AC; S. Indp. A.
STEICHEN, Eduard J., care of Knoedler,
556 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Milwaukee. Wis., 1879.
Member: Photo Secession; Salon
d'Automne, Paris. Work: "Nocturne,
Temple d'Amour," Metropolitan Mu-
seum, New York; "Across Marshes,"
Toledo Museum; mural decorations for
the Luxembourg, Paris; Chief of Photo-
"ranhic Section, Air 'Service, A. E. F.,
in World War.
STEIN, Modest, 7 West 47th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
STEINBERG, N. P., 1231 North Maple-
wood Ave., Chicago, 111.
Port. P. — Born in Arabia in 1894. Pupil
of AIC. Member: Palette and
Chisel C.
STELLAR, Hermine J(osephine). 1508
East Marquette Rd., Chicago, 111.
P. — Born in Austria. Pupil of AIC;
Sorolla in Spain. Member: S. Indp.
A. Award: Traveling scholarship
from Tuesday Art and Travel Club, 1911.
STENGEL, G. J., Philipsburg Bldg.,
446 Warburton Ave., Yonkers, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma C.
STENGEL, Hans, 48 West 90th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — Born Sheboygan, Wis., Feb., 1895.
Member: S. Indp. A.
STEPHAN, Elmer A., 234 Main St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
STEPHENS, Alice Barber (Mrs. Charles
H. Stephens), Moylan, Pa.
I., Wood Engr., T. — Born near Salem,
N. J., July 1, 1858. Pupil of PAFA;
Phila. School of Design for Women;
Julian and Colarossi academies in
Paris. Member: Plastic C: FpIIow-
ship PAFA. Awards : Mary Smith
prize, PAFA 3 890; bronze medal, Atlanta
Exp., 1895; gold medal, London, 1902.
Numerous illustrations for "Harper's"
and "Century," and wood engravings
for "Scribner's."
STEPHENS, Miss C. J., 12 Mulkey Bldg.,
Portland, Oregon. (P.)
STEPHENS. George Frank, Arden, Del.
S.. C— Born Rahwav, N. J., Dec. 28,
1859. Pupil of PAFA. Member:
Fellowship PAFA; Phila.Sketch C;
ACPhila.; NAC.
STEPHENS, Owen, Moylan, Pa.
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
STERBA, Antonin, 1549 East 57th St.;
h. 6329 Stewart Ave., Chicago, 111.
P., T.- — Born Hermanec. Moravia. Feb.
11, 1875. Pupil AIC; of Laurens and
Constant in Paris. Member: Chi-
cago SA; Chicago WCC; Chicago AC;
Chicago AG. Instructor at AIC.
STERCHI, Eda (Elizabeth) 214 Fair St.,
OIney, III.
P.— Born Olney, 111., May 24, 1885. Pu-
pil of AIC; Lucien Simon, M6nard and
Prinet in Paris. Member: Chicago
SA; Chicago AC.
STERLING, Mrs. Lindsey Morris, Edge-
water, N. J.; summer, Jay, Essex Co.
(Adirondack Mts.), N. Y.
S. — Born Mauch-Chunk, Pa., Nov. 8,
1876. Pupil of George Brewster and
Jas. Eraser; Bourdelle in Paris. Mem-
ber: NSS; N. A. Women PS; New
Haven PCC; Allied AA. Awards:
Bronze medal. P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915;
prize, N. A. Women PS, 1916.
STERN, Ethel Louise, 735 West Delavan
Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
P., E., T.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Dec.
5, 1880. Pupil of ASL of Buffalo, and
ASL of N.Y.
STERN, Mildred B. See Mrs. M. B.
Miller.
STERNE, Maurice, care of Duncan School,
Tarrytown, N. Y.
P., E., S.— Born at Libau, Russia, 1877;
came to New York at age of 12. Pu-
pil of NAD and other schools in New
York. Traveled extensively in Europe;
special study of the people of Bali,
one of the East Indian Islands. Work
in: Carnegie Institute. Pittsburgh; R. I.
School of Design Providence; Metro-
politan Museum, New York; Boston Mu-
seum of Fine Arts; Kaiser Friedrich
Museum, Berlin.
STERNER, Albert, 1 Lexington Ave.; h.
145 East 36th St., New York. N. Y.
P., I., T. — Born London, England,
March 8, 1863, of American parents.
Studied at Birmingham, England; pupil
of Julian Academy in Paris under Bou-
langer, Lefebvre and G^rome. Mem-
ber: ANA 1910; AWCS; SI 1901 (pres.
1907-9); N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1913 (assoc): Lo-
tos C; P-G. Awards: Hon. men-
tion, Paris Salon, 1891; bronze medal,
Paris Exp., 1900; silver medal for
water color and bronze medal for draw-
ings, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; gold
medal, Munich, 1905. Illustrated: "Prue
and I," by George W. Curtis; "Fen-
wick's Career," by Mrs. Ward, etc.
Work: "Portrait of Martin Birn-
baum," Carnegie Inst.. Pittsburgh; "The
Blue Stocking." Metropolitan Museum,
New York; "The Gray Cape," Toronto
Museum of Fine Arts.
STERNFELS, Edna, 11 Claremont PL,
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
STETSON, Katherine Beecher, 223 South
Catalina Ave.. Pasadena, Calif.
P., S., T. — Born Providence, R. I., Mar.
23, 1885. Pupil of da Pozzo, Sabate,
Noel and Breck in Rome; PAFA under
Chase, Kendall and Beaux. Mem-
ber: McDowell Memorial Assn.; Chi-
cago GA; Fine Arts Club, Pasadena.
STETTHEIMER, Florine, 80 West 40th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
STEVENS, Beatrice, Pomfret, Conn.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., Sept., 1876.
575
STEVENS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
STITT
STEVENS, Dalton, 13 West 29th St.,
New York. N. Y. ; h. Metuchen, N. J.
I. — Born Goochland Co.. Va., Dec. 6,
1878. Pupil of AIC; Blanche and Cot-
tet in Paris. Member: SI.
STEVENS, Dorothy, 2 Spadina Gardens;
145 West Wellington 'St., Toronto.
Canada.
E., P.— Born Toronto, 1888. Pupil of
Slade School in London. Member:
Chicago SE; P-G. Award: Silver
medal for etching. P.-P. Exp., San P..
1915.
STEVENS, E. D., 13 West 29th St., New
York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI 1910.
STEVENS, Edith Barretto. See Mrs.
Parsons.
STEVENS, Esther (Mrs. Walter T. Bar-
ney), Pt. Loma, San Diego, Calif.
P. — Born Indianapolis, Ind., January 6.
1885. Pupil of Robert Henri; ASL. of
N. Y.
STEVENS, George W(ashington), Mu-
seum of Art; h. Scott Place, Toledo, O.
P., W„ L.— Born Utica, N. Y., Jan. 16,
1866. Pupil of J. Francis Murphy In New
York. Member: Salma. C; Asso.
Museum Directors. Director, Toledo Mu-
seum of Art since 1903.
STEVENS, Helen B. (Mrs. T. W. Ste-
vens), 5542 Pocussett St., Pittsburgh,
Pa
Etcher.— Born Chicago, Feb. 8. 1878.
Pupil of AIC; Frank Brangwyn In
England. Member: Chicago SE.
Award: Bronze medal, P. -P.Exp.,
San F., 1915. Instructor in etching and
Assistant Curator of Prints, Art Insti-
tute of Chicago, 1909-1912.
STEVENS, John Calvin, 187 Middle St.;
h. 31 Craigie St., Portland, Me.
P , A. — Born Boston, Mass., Oct. 8,
1855. Member: AIA; Boston S.
Arch.; N. Y. Arch. Lg.; Portland SA;
Salma. C.
STEVENS, Marion, 1628 16th St., Wash-
ington, D. C.
P. — M ember: Wash.SA.
STEVENS, Thomas Wood, 5542 Pocussett
St.. Pittsburgh, Pa.
Mural P., Etcher, W.— Born Daysville,
111 Jan. 26, 1880. Pupil of Armour Inst.
of Tech.. Chicago; Frank Brangwyn in
London; Sorolla y Bastida. Mem-
ber: Chicago SE (ex-pres.); Pitts-
burgh AA. Professor in charge of drama,
Carnegie Inst, of Tech., Pittsburgh.
STEVENS, Wdlllam) D(odge), 13 West
29th St., New York, N. Y.; h. Me-
tuchen N J.
I— Born Tidioute, Pa., Sept. 13, 1870.
Pupil of AIC under Vanderpoel and
Grover. Member: SI 1903. Aw a r d :
First prize, SI 1903.
STEVENS, Will Henry, Newcomb School
of Art, Tulane University, New Orleans,
P D Potter — Born Vevay, Ind., Nov.
28* 1881. Pupil of Cincinnati Academy
nrider Caroline Lord. Nowottny and
Meakin; Jonas Lie and A^an Dearing
Perrine in New York. Member"
Inter. Soc. AL; Cincinnati AC.
Award : Foulke prize, Richmond,
Ind., 1914. Decorator at Rookwood
Pottery,
STEVENS, William Lester, 8a Holbrook
St., Rockport, Mass.
P., T.— Born Rockport, June 16, 1888.
Pupil of Parker S. Perkins, Boston
Museum School. Member: Boston
AC; Boston WCC; NYWCC; Brush and
Chisel Club, Boston. Works: "Win-
ter Gray Day," Boston Art Club;
"Winding Road," Boston City Club.
STEVENSON, Beulah Elsie, Ovington
Bldg., 246 Fulton St.; h. 178 Emerson
Place, Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
P., T.— Borji in Brooklyn. Pupil of
Joseph Boston, Kenyon Cox, Kenneth
Hayes Miller, John Sloan. Member:
N. A. Women PS; Brooklyn SA.
STEVENSON, Gordon, The City Club, 55
West 44th St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Chicago, Feb. 28, 1892. Pupil
of Sorolla.
STEWART, Catherine, 816 Oak St.,
Columbus, O. (P.)
STEWART, Le Conte, Cardston, Alta.,
Canada.
P., I.— Born Glenwood, Utah, Apr. 15,
1891. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. and Carl-
son. Awards : Second prize, land-
scape, Utah State Fair, 1914; first prize,
landscape, Utah State Fair, 1915.
Work: "Twilight on the Deserted
Ranch." Utah State Collection; mural
decorations in the Hawaiian Temple
at Laie; Cardston Temple, Cardston,
Alta., Canada.
STEWART, Robert W., 550 West 53rd
St., New York, N. Y. (L)
STILSON. Ethel M., 1962 East 79th St..
2Z59 Cedar Ave., Cleveland, O.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
STIMSON, Anna K(atharine), 3400 Pearl
St., h. 3401 Powelton Ave., Philadel-
phia, Pa. ; summer, Bolton Landing,
N. Y.
S.— Born New York City, Nov, 14, 1892.
Pupil of Charles Grafly. Member:
Phila. Alhance; Fellowship PAFA;
Phila. WCC.
STIMSON, John Ward, Corona, Calif.
P., I., T., W., L. — Born Paterson, N. J.,
Dec. 16, 1850. Pupil of Ecole des Beaux-
Arts in Paris under Cabanel and Jac-
quesson de la Chevreuse. Studied in
Italy, Holland, England. Director
Metropolitan Museum School, New York,
for four years and founder of Artist-
Artisan Inst., New York; and of the
School of Fine and Industrial Arts,
Trenton. Author of "The Gate Beauti-
ful."
STITT, H. D., Sudbrook, Pikesville, Mary-
land.
Ldscp., P.— Born Hot Springs, Ark.. 18Sn
Pupil of Howard Pyle, Robert Spencer
and Fred Wagner at PAFA. Mem-
ber: Charcoal C, Baltimore. Work:
"Lyric," Wilmington Society of Fine
Arts.
576
STOCKBRIDGE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
STOTTER
STOCKBRIDGE, Dana W., 46 Middle St.;
h. 190 Pine St., Lowell, Mass.
P.— Born Haverhill, Mass., Jan. 29, 1881.
Pupil of Fine Arts School of Harvard
University and Eric Pape School of Art.
STOCKMAN, Mrs. Helen Park, Sherwood
Place, Englewood, N. J.
P.— Born Oct. 16, 1896. Pupil of Jonas
Lie, Louis Mora, Robert Henri. M e m-
b e r : S.Indp.A.
STODDARD, Alice Kent, 1603 Walnut
St.; h. 7930 Crefield St., St. Martin's,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — Born Watertown, Conn. Pupil of
PAFA. Member: Fellowship PAFA;
Plastic C. Awards: Mary Smith
prize, PAFA 1911 and 1913; hon. men-
tion, Phila. AC. 1913; Fellowship prize,
PAFA 1916; gold medal, Philadelphia
AC, 1916; Isidor medal, NAD, 1917.
Work : "Elizabeth Sparhawk- Jones,"
Pennsylvania Academy, Philadelphia;
Delgado Museum, New Orleans, La.
STODDARD, Frederick L(incoln), Emer-
son Hill, Stapleton, Staten Island, N. Y.
Mural P., I.— Born Coaticook, P. Q.,
Canada, March 7, 1861. Pupil of St.
Louis School of Fine Arts; Constant
and Laurens in Paris. Member: St.
Louis AG; Mural P.; Salma.C; N.T.
Arch.Lg. 1911. Award : Silver medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904. Work: Mural
paintings: City Hall, St. Louis; High
School, St. Louis; Hebrew Technical
School for Girls, New York; "Birth
and Development of Education," East-
ern District High School, New York;
"The Transfiguration," Memorial
Church, Baltimore, Md.
STOHR, Julia Collins (Mrs. Peter C.
Stohr), 86 Durand Road, Maplewood,
N. J.; summer "Cedarcrest." Lambert-
ville, N. J.
P.— Born Toledo, O., Sept. 2, 1866.
Pupil of Cooper Union and ASL in
New York under Beckwith. Chase, J.
Alden Weir, Freer and W. L. Lathrop,
and in Paris. Member: Art Work-
ers' Guild of St. Paul; Minnesota State
Art Soc; Chicago WCC; N. A. Women
PS.
STOKES, Frank W(ilbert), 3 Washington
Square, N., New York, N. Y.
P., S.— Born Nashville, Tenn. Pupil of
PAFA under Thomas Eakins; Ecole des
Beaux-Arts in Paris under Gerome;
ColarossI Academy under Collin; Ju-
lian Academy under Boulanger and Le-
febvre. Specialty, arctic and antarctic
scenes; member Pearv Greenland Ex-
pedition 1892 and 1893-94. Member:
Fellowship PAFA. Work: Mural
decorations, Museum of Natural His-
tory, New York.
STOLTENBERG, Hans, 490 Fifth Ave.,
Wauwatosa, Milwaukee. Wis.
P.— M ember: Wis. PS.
STONE. Frank F(rederlck), 1036 S. Bon-
nie Brae St., Los Angeles, Cal.
S. — Born London. England, March 2
1863. Pupil of Richard Belt. Mem
b e r : American Numismatic Soc
Awards : First prize for sculpture
San Antonio State Fair; gold medal
Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exp., 1909.
Work: "Gladstone," from life, Treas-
ury Office, London; "Mark Twain, Me-
dallion," Sacramento State Library.
STONE, Helen Loasley, Welland, Ontario,
Canada,
P. — M ember: Buffalo SA.
STONE, Leona, 39 West 67th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: SPNY; N. A. Women
PS.
STONE, Vera, Art Institute. Chicago, 111.
P.— M ember: Chicago WCC.
STONE, Walter King, Cornell University,
Forest Home, Ithaca, N. Y.; "Twin
Doors," Falls Village, Conn.
I., P. — Born Barnard, N. Y., March 2,
1875. Pupil of Pratt Inst., Brooklyn,
New York, under Arthur Dow. Mem-
ber: Salma.C. Work: "The Water
Garden," Memorial Gallery, Rochester.
N. Y. Assistant professor of painting
Cornell University.
STONER, Harry, 18 West 37th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Mural P., I. — Born Springfield, O., Jan.
21, 1880. Work : Design for glass
mosaic curtain, executed by Tiffany
Studios for the National Theatre,
Mexico City.
STONEY, Eleanor E., 15 West 67th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
STOOPS, Herbert M., 3 Vandam St.,
New York, N. Y. (I.)
STORM, Anna Alfrida, University of
Washington, Seattle, Wash. (P.)
STORRS, Frances Hudson (Mrs. William
M. Storrs), 1034 Prospect St., Hart-
ford. Conn.
P. — Born New York. Pupil of Chase
and Hale. Member: Conn, AFA;
Conn.^ ACS.
STORRS, John, 109 rue du Cherche Midi,
Paris. France.
S., E.— Born Chicago, June 29. 1885.
Pupil of Rodin. Member: Chicago
SE. W o r k in: Chicago Art Insti-
tute.
STORY, George H(enry), 230 West 59th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born New Haven, Conn., Jan. 22,
1835. Pupil of Charles Hine in New
Haven; studied in Europe. Mem-
ber: ANA 1875; Lotos C; A. Fund S.
Awards: Maine State medal. 1859;
medal. Centennial Exp., Philadelphia,
1876. Curator of Paintings, Metropoli-
tan Museu-.n, 1889-1906, acting director
1904-5; curator emeritus since 1906.
Director Art Dept., Wadsworth Athe-
nrpum. Hartford, since 1899. Work:
"The Young Mother," "Alexander S.
Murray" and "Self Portrait." Metro-
politan Museum, New York: "Lincoln,"
. National Art Gallery, Washington,
D. C.
STOTLER, Ilka Marie, 611 Penn Ave.,
Wilkinsburg, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
STOTTER. Charles C, 639 Massachusetts
Ave.. Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: S. Wash. A.
577
STOUFFER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
STUBBS
STOUFFER, J. Edgar, 106 East Saratoga
St., Baltimore, Md.
S. — M ember: Charcoal C.
STOUT, Ida McClelland, 5344 Kenmore
Ave. ; summer, Art Institute, Chicago, 111.
S., T.— Born Decatur, 111. Pupil of Al-
bin Polasek. Member : Chicago AG.
W o r k : "Goose Girl Fountain," Mary
W. French School, Decatur, 111; "Prin-
cess Badoura," Hillyer Gallery, Smith
College.
STOVER, Allan James, Corvallis, Oregon.
P., I.— Born West Point, Miss., Oct. 9,
1887. Pupil of Cleveland School of Art.
STOWELL, M. Louise, 714 Ins. Bldg.,
Main St.; h. 29 Atkinson St., Rochester,
N. Y.
P., I., C, T. — Born Rochester. Pupil of
ASL. of N. Y. and Arthur W. Dow.
Member: Rochester Soc.of Arts and
Crafts, NYWCC. Specialty, water
colors.
STRAHAN, Alfred W(infield), 214 Cham-
ber of Commerce Bldg.; h. 2127 Chelsea
Ave., Baltimore, Md.
P., I. — Born Baltimore, Md., June 24,
1886. Pupil of S. Edwin Whiteman, and
Harper Pennington. Member: Char-
coal Club.
STRAIN, Daniel J., 278 Boylston St., Bos-
ton, Mass.
Port.P. — M ember: Boston AC.
STRAIN, Frances, 88 Washington PL,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
STRAUS. Mitteldorfer, 96 Fifth Ave., New
fork. N. Y.; and 1809 Park Ave., Rich-
mond, Va.
P., I.— Born Richmond, Va., Jan. 21,
1880. Pupil of ASL. of Washington;
studied in Europe and Africa. Mem-
ber: Paris AAA; NYWCC. S. Indp.
A; Alliance. Award: Scholarship,
ASL of Wash., to Pratt Institute. De-
signer of toys.
STRAWBRIDGE, Anne W(est), 6711 Wis-
sahickon Ave. ; h. Mt. Airy, Philadel-
phia, Pa.; summer, Belfast Rd., Cam-
den, Maine.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., March 20,
1883. Pupil of W. M. Chase. Mem-
ber: Fellowship PAFA; Plastic C.
STREAN, Maria Judson, 140 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Washington, Pa. Pupil of
ASL. of N. Y. under Cox and J. Alden
Weir; Prinet and Dauchez in Paris.
Member: NYWCC; Am. S. Min. P.;
Pa. Soc. Min. P.; Allied AA; N. A.
Women PS; SPNY. Award: Hon.
mention, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo. 1901.
STREATFEILD, Josephine, Wynthrope,
Sydenham, London, S. E., England.
Port. P. — Born London, England, May
31, 1882. Pupil of Slade School in Lon-
don, under Fred Brown. Member:
Phila. PC; Soc. Women Artists, Lon-
don; Ontario SA. Specialty, pastel por-
traits of children.
STREATOR, Harold A., Box 345, Morris-
town, N. J.
P.— Born Cleveland, O. Pupil of ASL
of N. Y. Boston Museum School.
Member: Salma, C 1906.
STREET, Frank, Leonia, N. J. (I.)
STRETCH, Lillian R., 1163 Sunset Ave.,
S. W., Seattle, Wash. (P.)
STRINGFIELD, Vivian F., 229 South
Normandie Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
P., L, C, T.— Born California. Pupil of
Pratt Inst.; Douglas Donaldson and
Ralph H. Johonnot. Member: South-
ern Calif. Art Teachers Asso. Award:
Bronze medal, Panama-Calif. Exp., San
Diego, 1915.
STROHL, Clifford (Harrison), 416 Avenue
E., Bethlehem, Pa.
P.— Born South Bethlehem, Pa., Oct.
8, 1893. Pupil of Jules Dieudonne, Or-
lando G. Wales; PAFA. Member:
Salma. C.
STROTHMAN, Fred, 562 West 190th St.;
412 Audubon Ave., New York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI 1913.
STROUD. Clara, 61 Poplar St., Brooklyn,
New York. N. Y.
P., I., C, T.— Bom New Orleans, La.,
Nov. 4, 1890. Pupil of Cimiotti, Mary
Lantry, Otto W. Beck, Ethel F. Shaur-
man and Ralph Johonnot. Member:
S. Indp. A.; N. A. Women PS; Brook-
lyn SA; Brooklyn WCC.
STROUD, (Mrs.) Ida Wells, 10 West 17th
St., East Orange, N. J.
P., D. — Born New Orleans, La., Oct. 19,
1869. Pupil of Pratt Institute; ASL of
N. Y.; Chase, Linde, Cimiotti. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; NYWCC.
Instructor, painting, drawing and de-
sign, Fawcett School of Industrial Art,
Newark.
STRUNK, Herbert, Shakopee, Minn.
S.— Born Shakopee, Minn., Apr. 9, 1891.
Pupil of St. Paul Inst. School of Art.
Member: St. Paul AS. Award :
Silver medal, St. Paul Inst., 1915.
Work: "Chief Shakopee," model in
St. Paul Institute Gallery.
STUART, James E(verett), 239 Geary St.,
San Francisco, Cal.
P. — Born near Dover, Me., Mar. 24, 1852.
Pupil of Virgil Williams and R. D. Yel-
land in San Francisco. Member: S.
Indp. A.; NAC. Work: "Summer
Glow, Mt. Takoma" and "Sacramento
River," Kalamazoo (Mich.) Art Asso.;
"Sunset Glow, Mt. Hood," Michigan
State Library, Lansing; "Showers Among
the Trees, New Jersey" and "Sunset
Glow, Mt. Jefferson," Omaha Public
Library; "Suriset, Sacramento River,"
Reno Arts and Crafts Club; "Showers,
Napa Valley," Oakdale Public Library;
"Morning, Mt. Hood," Los Angeles Mu-
seum of History, Science and Art; "Mt.
Tallac, Lake Tahoe," Otis Art Insti-
tute, Los Angeles. Originator of a new
method of painting on aluminum and
wood.
STUBBS, Mary H(elen), 4429 Ellis Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
P., I.. C, T.— Born Greenville, O., Oct.
31. 1867. Pupil of Cincinnati Art
Academy; Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: Cincinnati Woman's AC;
Cincinnati Ceramic C. Award: Hon.
mention, Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893.
578
STUBBS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
SWAIN
STUBBS, Mary, Henrietta Bldg., West
4th St., Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woir'an's
AC.
STUEVER, Celia M., 3444 Russell Ave.,
St. Louis, Mo.
E., P.— Born St. Louis. Pupil of St.
Louis School of Fine Arts; Julian Acad-
emy in Paris under Bouguereau and
Farrier; studied in Vienna and Munich.
Member: Chicago SE; Cal. SE;
N.Y.SE.; Calif. P.M. Work in: City
Art Museum, St. Louis; Library of Con-
gress, Washington, D. C; New York
Public Library.
STURGEON, Ruth (Barnett), 115 Pearl
St., Council Bluffs, la.; summer. Ster-
ling, Kan.
P., E., C, T.— Born Sterling, Kan. Oct.
21, 188.3. Pupil of Louisa Card Catlin,
George Senseney. Henry B. Snell.
Member: Western Arts Association.
STURGES, Dwight C, Melrose, Mass.
P., E. — Born Boston, Mass. Pupil of
Cowles Art School in Boston. Mem-
ber: Chicago SE; Boston SE; Cana-
dian SE. Award : Lamont prize
($25), Chicago SE. 1915; silver medal for
etching, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915.
Work in: Boston Museum of Fine
Arts; Chicago Art Institute; Oakland
(Cal.) Museum; Library of Congress,
Washington; New York Public Library.
STURGES, Lee, Elmhurst, 111.
E.— Born Chicago, 111., Aug., 1865. Pupil
of AIC, PAFA. Member: Chicago
SE; Calif. P.M.; Brooklyn SE.
STURGIS, Mabel R., 63 Beacon St., Bos-
ton, Mass.
P. — M ember: Copley S. 1889.
STURTEVANT, Helena, Newport, R. L
P.— Born Middletown, R. I., Aug. 9, 1872.
Pupil of Boston Museum School under
Tarbell; Colarossi Academy in Paris un-
der Blanche and Simon. Member:
Inter. See. AL. Director School of Art
Association, Newport, R. I.
STURTEVANT, Louisa C(lark), Second
Beach Road, Newport, R. I.
P., D.— Born Paris, France, Feb. 2,
1870. Pupil of Boston Museum School
under Tarbell; Collin and Simon In
Paris. Member: Newport AA.
Award: Silver medal, P. -P. Exp.,
San Francisco, 1915.
SUCH, Marion, 4143 Windsor St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
SUHR, Frederic J., 381 Fourth Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. Bayside, L. I.,
N. Y.
I.— Born New York, Feb. 15, 1885. Pupil
Bridgman, Fogarty, Dufner. Mem-
ber: Salma. C; SI; Art Directors
Club.
SULLIVAN, Arthur B., Flatiron Bldg.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
SULLIVAN. James Amory, 98 Chestnut
St.; h. 148 Mt. Vernon St., Boston,
Mass. ; summer, Ashfield, Mass.
P.. T.— Born Boston, Mass., Aug. 17.
1875. Pupil of Laurens and Alexander
Harrison.
SULLIVANT, T(homas) S(tarling), 1911
Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa.
I.— Born Columbus, O., Nov. 4, 1854.
Pupil of PAFA, Bensell, Moran. Mem-
ber: SI; Phila. Sketch C.
SULLY, Kate, 393 Westminster Rd.,
Rochester, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
SUMMA, Mrs. E(mily) B., Route 32,
Ferguson, Mo.
P. — Born Mannheim, Germany, Sept.
20, 1875. Pupil of St. Louis School FA;
Bissell; Dawson-Watson. Member:
St. Louis AG; St. Louis A. Lg.
Awards : Frederick Oakes Sylvester
prize for landscape, St. Louis Artists'
Guild Exh., 1917.
SUMMER, Mrs. Laura, Englewood, N. J. ;
summer, Raquette Lake, N. Y.
P. — Born Middletown, Conn. Pupil of
Van Deering Perrine. Member:
Palisade Art Asso. ; S.Indp.A.
SUMMERS, Dudley Gloyme, 143 East 21st
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, Wood-
stock, Ulster Co., N. Y.
P.,. I. — Born Birmingham, England, Oct.
12, 1892. Pupil of D. J. Connoh, Charles
Chapman, George Bridgman, F. R.
Gruger. Member : Guild of Free
Lance Artists.
SUMMERS, Ivan F., Woodstock, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Mt. Vernon, 111. Mem-
ber: Salma. C; St. Louis AG.; Wood-
stock AA. Award : Ives landscape
prize, St. Louis AG, 1916.
SUSAN, Robert, 1520 Chestnut St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA;
Calif. AC.
SUTHERLAND, Minnie, 2011 North 80th
St., Seattle, Wash. (P.)
SUTTON, Mrs. Frank, 1522 44th St., S.
W., Seattle, Wash. (P.)
SVENDSEN, Charles C, P. O. Box 609;
h. 555 Elberon Ave., Price Hill, Cincin-
nati. O.
P.— Born Cincinnati, Dec. 7, 1871. Pupil
of Bouguereau, Ferrier and Colarossi
Academy in Paris. Member: Cincin-
nati AC. Award : Bronze medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904. Specialty, figure
and pastoral scenes.
SVENSSON, C. W., 1440 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember : Guild of Free Lance A.
SVOBODA, Vincent A., Elmhurst, L. L,
N. Y.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
SWAIN, Francis W(illiam), Selves Bldg.,
127 East 3d St.; h. 802 Oak St., Cin-
cinnati, O.; summer, 2799 Clay St., San
Francisco, Cal.
P., E. — Born Oakland, Cal., Mar. 24,
1892. Pupil of Frank Duveneck and
F. Van Sloun. Member: Cincinnati
AC; Cal. SE. Work: Decoration In
Westwood School, Cincinnati, O.
SWAIN, P(hilip) S(tarbuck), 3133 Broad-
wav. New York, N. Y.
P.. T.— Born Nantucket, Mass., Apl. 1,
1838. Specialty, marines.
579
SWAN
WHO'S WHO IN ART
TACK
SWAN, Emma L., 385 TNTestminster St.,
Providence, R. I.
P, — M ember: Providence AC.
SWAN, Florence (Wellington), 11 Mason
St., Cambridge, Mass.; summer, Dan-
bury, N. H.
D., T. — Born Cambridge, Mass., July
13, 1876. Pupil of Amy M. Sacker.
Member: Boston SAC; Am. Book-
plate Soc. Work: Memorial tablets
in Beneficent Congressional Church,
Providence; St. James' Church, Salem.
SWEENEY, William K., 854 S. Eutaw
St., Baltimore, Md.
P., I. — M ember: Charcoal C.
SWETT, William Otis, Jr., 154 West 55th
St.; care of Salmagundi Club, 47 Fifth
Ave., New York, N. Y.; and Deer-
field, Mass.
Ldscp.P. — Born Worcester, Mass. Pu-
pil of Whistler, H. G. Dearth; studied
in Munich, Paris, Belgium and Holland.
Member: Salma.C. 1903 ; Chicago
AG; S.Indp.A. Specialty, marines and
landscapes.
SWIFT, Ivan, Chippewa Cove Woods,
Harbor Springs, Mich.
P., E., C, W., L. — Born Wayne, Mich.,
June 24, 1873. Pupil of AIC; Freer.
Von Suiza, Ochtman and Chase. Mem-
ber: NAC. Work: "A Michigan
Home," Detroit Institute of Arts; "In-
dian Summer", DufReld Branch, Detroit
Library; "Toward the Light," and "In
the Shadow of the Hill," Detroit
Library. Author of books of verse,
"Fagots of Cedar" and "The Blue Crane
and Shore Songs".
SWIFT, Ted S(tephen), 220 Franklin St.,
Napa; summer, Monticello, Napa Co.,
Calif.
I., E.— Born Monticello, Apl. 2, 1900.
Pupil of Pedro J. Lemos and Lorenzo
P. Latimer. Member: Calif. PM.
Represented in Thomas W. Sanford
Gallery; Art Institute of Chicago; Los
Angeles Museum. Contributor to School
Arts Magazine.
SWISHER, P. M., 5504 Media St., Phila-
delphia, Pa. (I.)
SWOPE, H. Vance, Van Dyck Studios,
939 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y.;
Ogunquit, Me.
P. — Born southern Indiana, March, 1879.
Pupil of Julian Academy in Paris under
Constant. Member: MacD.C; Circle
of American PS.; Salma. C; N. Y. Arch.
Lg. Work in: Public Library, Sey-
mour, Ind.
SWOPE, Mrs. Kate F., 939 Eighth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Louisville, Ky. Pupil of NAD
in New York. Award : Gold medal.
Southern Art League, 1895; highest
award, Louisville AL. 1897. Mem-
ber: Louisville AL.
SWOPE, Virginia Vance, 939 Eighth
Ave.; h. 33 East 61st St., New York,
N. Y. ; summer, Leonardo, N. J.
P. — Born Loui.sville. Ky. Pupil of Du
Mond, Mora, Carlson, Penfield and
Bridgman.
SYKES, Mrs. Annie G., 3007 Vernon
Place, Vernonville, Cincinnati, O.
P. — Born Brookline, Mass. Pupil of
Bo&ton Museum School; Cincinnati Art
Academy under Duveneck. Mem-
ber: Cincinnati Woman's AC; N. A.
Women PS.
SYKES, Charles Henry, care of Evening
Public Ledger, Philadelphia, Pa.; h. 130
Upland Terrace, Bala, Pa.
Cartoonist — Born Athens, Ala., Nov. 12,
1882. Pupil of B. West Chnedinst,
Drexel Inst, of Phila. Member:
Phila. Sketch C.
SYIVIONS, (George) Gardner, Arts Club
Bldg., 119 East 19th St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born Chicago, 111., 1863. Pupil of
AIC; studied in Paris, Munich and Lon-
don. Member: ANA 1910, NA 1911;
Royal Soc.British Artists; Union Inter,
des Beaux- Arts et des Lettres; Salma.
C. 1909; NAC (life), Chicago SA; Cen-
tury Assoc; Cal. AC; Inst. Arts and
Letters. Awards: Carnegie prize,
NAD 1909; Evans prize, Salma. C. 1910;
bronze medal, Buenos Aires Exp., 1910;
NAC prize and gold medal, 1912; third
W. A. Clark prize ($1,000) and bronze
Corcoran medal, 1912; Saltus, medal
NAD, 1913; Altman prize ($500), NAD,
1919. Work: "The Opalescent River,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York: "Snow
Clouds," Corcoran Gallery, Washington;
"Sorrow," Cincinnati Museum; "Snow
Clad Fields in Morning Light," Toledo
Museum; "The Top of the Hill and
Beyond" and "The Winter Sun," Art
Institute of Chicago; "Through Snow-
Clad Hills and Valley." City Art Mu-
seum, St. Louis; "Through Wooded
Hills," Art Association, Dallas, Tex.;
"Deerfield River," Brooklyn Institute
Museum; "River in Winter," Minneap-
olis Institute of Arts; "November,
Dachau, Germany." Carnegie Institute.
Pittsburgh; "Sunlight in the Woods,"
Fort Worth (Tex.) Museum; also repre-
sented in National Arts Club, New
York; Des Moines Art Asso.; Lincoln
Art Asso., Nebr. ; Cedar Rapids Art
Asso., Iowa; Museum of Art, Erie, Pa.;
Rochelle Art Asso., Ind. ; Union Lg. Club,
Chicago; Los Angeles Museum of Art, i
Calif.; Hyde Park Art Asso., Chicago. |
TAAKE. Daisy. Midway Studios, 6016 -
Ellis Ave., Chicago, 111.; h. 1338 North
Kingshighway, St. Louis, Mo.
S.,T. — Born St. Louis, Mo., March 21,
1886. Pupil of AIC and St. Louis
School of Fine Arts; Lorado Taft.
Member: 'St. Louis AL. Winner of
St. Louis Art League Fountain Competi-
tion. Work: Eight-foot decorative
figure at Washington University.
TABER, Sarah A. See Mrs. W. H. Coffin.
TACK, Augustus Vincent, 7 West 43rd
St., New York, N. Y.; and Deerfield,
Mass.
P.. T. — Born Pittsburgh, Pa., Nov. 9,
1870. Pupil of Mowbray and La Farge
in New York; Merson in Paris. Mem-
ber: ASL of N.Y. (life); Conn.AFA;
New Haven Paint and Clay C; Century
Assoc; Inter.Soc.AL.
580
TADAMA
WHO'S WHO IN ART
TANNER
TADAMA, F(okko), 2012^ Laurelshade
Ave., Seattle, Wash.
P., T.— Born Bandar, India, May 16,
1871. Pupil of the Amsterdam Academy
of Fine Arts. Member : Seattle Fine
Arts Soc. Award: First prize, Am-
sterdam, 1898; hon. mention, Paris
Salon, 1901. Work: In San Francisco
Art Museum; New Royal Theatre, Vic-
toria, B. C; Press Club, and Industrial
Exhibition Bldg-., Seattle.
TAFFS, C. H., 39 West 67th St., New
York, N. Y. (I.)
TAFT, Lorado, 6016 EUis Ave.; h. 1548
East 61st St., Chicago, 111.; summer,
"Eagle Nest Camp," Oregon, 111.
S., T., W., L.— Born Elmwood, 111., Apr.
29, 1860. Pupil of Ecole des Beaux- Arts
in Paris under Dumont, Bonnaissieux
and Thomas. Member: NSS 1893;
ANA 1909, NA 1911; Nat. Academy AL;
Chicago SA; Chicago Municipal AL;
AIA (cor.), 1907; 111. State Art Com.
Instructor and lecturer, Chicago Art
Inst., since 1886; lecturer on art.
University of Chicago. Awards : De-
signer's medal, Columbian Exp., Chi-
cago, 1893; silver medal. Pan. -Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; gold medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904; Montgomery Ward prize, AIC,
1906; silver medal. P.-P. Exp., San F..
1915. Author: "History of American
Sculpture"; "Modern Tendencies in
'Sculpture." Work: "Solitude of the
Soul," Art Institute, Chicago; "Wash-
ington Monument," 'Seattle, Wash.;
"Fountain," Paducah, Ky. ; "Trotter
Fountain." Bloomington. 111.; "Columbus
Memorial Fountain," Washington; Fer-
guson "Fountain of the Great Lakes,"
Chicago; "Blackhawk," Oregon. 111.;
"Thatcher Memorial Fountain," Denver,
Colo.; Ogle Co. Soldiers' Memorial. Ore-
gon, 111.; "Fountain of Time," Chicago.
TAGGART, George H(enry), 200 Central
Park South, New York, N. Y.
Port.P. — Born Watertown, N. Y., March
12, 1865. Pupil of Bouguereau, Ferrier
and Lefebvre in Paris. Member:
Soc. Inter. des Beaux-Arts et des Let-
tres; Buffalo SA. Awards: Medal
of honor and cash prize, Utah State
Ex.; hon. mention, Exp. Toulouse,
France. Represented in private collec-
tion of Emperor of Germany; Palace of
Governor, Citv of Mexico; Mormon
Temple, Salt Lake City.
TAGGART, Lucy M., 1 Lexington Ave.,
New York, N. Y. ; h 1331 North Dela-
ware St., Indianapolis, Ind.
P. — Born Indianapolis, Ind. Pupil of
Forsyth, Chase and Hawthorne; stud-
led in Europe. Member: NAC (life);
Art Workers' Club for Women; Prov-
incetown AA; N. A. Women PS.
TALBOT, Cornelia Brackenridge (Mrs. M.
W. Talbot), Talbot Hall, Norfolk Co.,
Va.
P.— Born Natrona, Pa., Dec. 30, 1888.
Pupil of PAFA and Hugh Breckenridge;
Carnegie Tech. Inst. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA; Pittsburgh AA.
Award : First prize, Pittsburgh AA,
1916.
581
TALBOT, Henry S., 387 Washington St.,
Boston, Mass.
P. — M ember: Boston AC. Work:
"Morning in Mid Ocean," Minneapolis
Institute of Arts.
TALCOTT, Sarah W(hltlng), Elmwood,
Conn.
P.— Born West Hartford, Conn., Apr.
21, 1852. Pupil of Chase and Cox in
New York; Bouguereau and Robert-
Fleury in Paris. Member: Conn. AFA.
TALLMADGE, Thomas Eddy, 4 East
Ohio St., Security Bldg., Chicago, 111.;
h. University Club, Evanston, 111.
Etcher.— Born Washington, D. C, Apr.
24, 1S76. Pupil of Mass.Inst.of Technol-
ogy, Boston. Member: Cliff Dwell-
ers; Chicago SE; N.Y.SE. Award:
Chicago Arch. Club traveling scholar-
ship, 1904.
TALLMAN, M(artha) G(riffith) (Mrs.
Walter B. Tallman), 3609 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.; studio, Kent., Conn.
P- — Born Llanidloes, North Wales, Sept.
22. 1859. Pupil of F. S. Church; NAD;
ASL of N. Y.; Mrs. Coman; and Jane
Peterson. Member: Pen and Brush
C; NYWCC (assoc); N. A. Women PS.
TANAKA, Yasushi, 917 Seneca St..
Seattle, Wash.
P., T. — Born in Japan. Member:
Seattle FAS.
TANBERG, Mrs. Ella Hotelling, Laguna
Beach, Calif.
P. — Born Janesville, Wis. Member:
West Coast Arts; Janesville AL; Chi-
cago AC; Calif. AC; Laguna Beach AA.
Work: "Lily Pond, Lincoln Park,"
owned by Janesville Art League.
TANDLER, Rudolph, 31 Bennett Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
TANEJI, Moichiro Tsuchiya, 61 West 37th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Ogaki City, Japan, Jan. 14,
1891. Studied in Japan. Member:
Penguins.
TANNAHILL, Mary H., 121 Washington
PL, New York, N. Y.; summer, Prov-
incetown, Mass.
P- — Born Wanenton. N. C. Pupil of
Weir, Twachtman, Cox and Mowbray
in New York. Member: Pa. S.
Min. P.; N. A. Women PS; Provincetown
AA. Award: Prize for best group,
N. A. Women PS, autumn, 1914.
TANNAHILL, Sallie B., 121 Washington
PL, New York, N. Y. ; summer, Prov-
incetown, Mass.
P., T.— Born New York, Oct. 25, 1881.
Pupil of Arthur W. Dow, V. Preissig.
Member: N. A. Women PS. In-
structor, Art Dept., Teachers College,
Columbia Univ.
TANNER, H(enry) O(ssawa), 70 bis Rue
Notre-Dame-des-Champs, Paris, France.
P.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., June 21, 1859.
Pupil of PAFA under Thomas Eakins;
Laurens and Constant in Paris. Mem-
ber: ANA 1909; Paris SAP; Soc. Inter.
de Peinture et Sculpture; Fellowship
PAFA. Awards : Hon, mention,
Paris Salon, 1896; third class medal,
Paris Salon, 1897; Lippincott prize.
TARBELL
WHO*S WHO IN ART
TAYLOR
PAFA 1900; silver medal, Paris Exp.,
1900; silver medal, Pan.-Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; silver medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; second class medal, Paris,
Salon, 1906; Harris prize, AIC 1906;
gold medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
Specialty, biblical subjects. Work:
"The Raising- of Lazarus," Luxem-
bourg" Museum., Paris; "Christ at the
Home of Mary and Martha," Car-
negie Institute, Pittsburgh; "Nicode-
mus," Pennsylvania Academy, Philadel-
phia; "The Two Disciples at the Tomb"
and "The Three Marys," Art Institute
of Chicago; "L'Annonciation," Wilstach
Collection. Philadelphia; "Holy Family,"
Hackley Art Gallery, Muskegon, Mich.;
"Christ Walking on the Water," Des
Moines Asso. of Fine Arts.
TARBELL, Edmund C(harles), care Cor-
coran Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C,
and New Castle N. H.
P.. T, — Born West Groton, Mass., Apr.
26, 1862. Pupil of Boston Museum
School; Boulanger and Lefebvre in
Paris. Member: Ten Am. P.; ANA
1904, NA 1906; Nat.Inst.AL; Boston GA.
Awards: Clarke prize, NAD 1890;
Shaw fund, SAA 1893; medal, Colum-
bian Exp., Chicago, 1893; first Hall-
garten prize, NAD 1894; Lippincott
prize, PAFA 1895; Temple gold medal,
PAFA 1895; gold medal, ACPhila. 1895;
second Elkins prize, PAFA 1896; hon.
mention, Tennessee Exp., Nashville,
1897; first prize, Worcester Museum,
1900; three medals, Boston Charitable
Mechanics' Assoc; bronze medal, Paris
Exp., 1900; third prize, C.I.Pittsburgh,
1901; second prize, C.I.Pittsburgh, 1904;
first prize, Worcester Museum, 1904;
Harris prize AIC 1907; medal of honor,
PAFA 1908; Saltus medal, NAD 1908;
first prize (n,500), C.LPittsburgh, 1909;
first W. A. Clark prize, Corcoran AG
1910, Beck gold medal, PAFA 1911; hors
concours (jury of awards), P.-P.Exp.,
'San F., 1915. Instructor, Corcoran Art
School, Washington. Work: "Joseph-
ine and Mercie," Corcoran Gallery.
Washington; "Woman in Pink and
Green" and "Girl Reading," Cincinnati
Museum; "Girl's Head" and "Portrait
of a Lady," R. I. School of Design, Prov-
idence; "Portrait of Gen. Charles G.
Loring." "Portrait of Edward Robin-
son," "Girl Reading" and "My Children
in the Woods," Boston Museum of Fine
Arts; "The Venetian Blind," Worcester
(Mass.) Museum; "The Golden Screen,"
Pennsylvania Academy, Philadelphia;
"Afternoon Tea," Wilstach Collection,
Philadelphia, Pa.; "Portrait of John J.
Albright," Fine Arts Academy, Buffalo;
"Portrait of Gen. Hugh Scott," War
Department, Washington, D. C.
TARLETON, Mary Liyinqston, 201 In-
wood Ave., Montclair, N. J.; summer.
Great Neck. L. I., N. Y.
P.^— Born Stamford, Conn. Pupil of
Childe Hassam, Charles W. Hawthorne,
ASL of N. Y. Member: N. A. Wo-
men PS.
TAUSZKY, D(avid) Anthony, 1025 Lillian
Way. Hollywood, Calif. ; summer, Budd
La;ke, N. J.
Port.P.— Born Cincinnati, O., Sept. 4,
1878. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under
Blum; Julian Academy in Paris under
Laurens and Constant. Member:
Salma.C. 1907. Work: Portrait of
Emp. Franz Josef I, Criminal Court,
Vienna; portrait of George W. Wingate,
Wingate School, New York, N. Y.
TAYLOR, Beatrice M., 306 South Craig
St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
TAYLOR, Charles Jay, "The Players," 16
Gramercy Park, New York, N. Y.; h.
5654 Callowhill St., Pittsburgh, Pa.; also
Carnegie Technical Schools, Pittsburgh,
Pa,
I.. P., T.— Born New York, Aug. 11,
1855. Pupil of ASL, NAD and Eastman
. Johnson in New York; studied in Lon-
don and Paris. Member: SI 1910;
Pittsburgh AA; Pittsburgh Arch.C; The
Players; Phila.AC. Awards: Hon.
mention for drawing, Pan.-Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; bronze medal and hora
concurs (iury of awards). P. -P. Exp.,
'San F.. 1915. Represented in Carnegie
Inst, of Technology. Instructor, Carnegie
Technical Schools, Pittsburgh, since
1911; Instructor J'ederal Board Voca-
tional Summer classes, Boothbay Har-
bor, Me. Illustrated "The Taylor-Made
Girl," "Short Sixes," by H. C. Bunner;
"England," etc.
TAYLOR, Edgar J., Westbrook, Conn.
P., I.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Aug. 22,
1862. Pupil of NAD; ASL o'f N. Y.
under Beckwith; Brooklyn Art Guild
under Eakins. Member: Brooklyn
AC (vice-pres. 1889-91); Conn. Soc. A.;
S. Indp. A.
TAYLOR, Edwin C, Yale School of Fine
Arts; h. 352 Townsend Ave., New Haven,
Conn.; summer. Liberty, Me.
P.. T.— Born Detroit. Mich.. March 10.
1874. Pupil of ASL of N.Y. and Kenyon
Cox. Member: New Haven PCC
TAYLOR, Elizabeth, 1504 East 57th St.,
Chicago, 111.; h. New Berlin, 111., sum-
mer, Provincetown, Mass.
P. — M ember : Chicago SA. ; S. Indp.
A. ; Provincetown Printers. Work:
"Flowers," Detroit Institute.
TAYLOR, Emily (Heyward) Drayton
(Mrs. J. Madison Taylor), 1504 Pine
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Min.P., W.— Born Philadelphia, Pa.,
April 14, 1860. Pupil of Cecile Ferr^re
in Paris; PAFA. Member: Pa. Soc.
Min.P. (pres.); Fellowship PAFA:
Plastic C; Alliance. Awards : Gold
medal. Earl's Court Ex., London, 1900;
gold medal for services on Jury, Charles-
ton Exp., 1902; silver medal, P.-P.Exp.,
San F., 1915; medal of honor PAFA,
1919; Lea prize ($50), PAFA, 1920.
Collaborated with Miss Wharton in
writing "Heirlooms in Miniature."
Work: Portraits of President and
Mrs. "William McKinley. Dr. S. Weir
Mitchell, etc.
TAYLOR, Frank J., 5 West 16th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
582
TAYLOR
WHO'S WHO IN ART
THAYER
TAYLOR, Helena M., 124 North 18th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa,
P.— M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
TAYLOR, Henry Fitch, Cornish, N. H.
P.— Born Cincinnati, O., Sept. 15, 1853.
Pupil of Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: Am. PS (pres.). Author:
"The Taylor System of Organized
Color."
TAYLOR, H. Weston, 524 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia. Pa. (I.)
TAYLOR, Ida C, 55 Wolcott St., Le Roy,
N. Y.
P.— Born Le Roy. N. Y. Pupil of W. M.
Hunt; Julian Academy in Paris. Por-
trait, The Rt. Rev. W. D. Walker,
Historical Museum of Buffalo.
TAYLOR, John H., 527 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
TAYLOR, Mary Perkins (Mrs. William
F. Taylor). See Mary Smyth Perkins.
TAYLOR, Ralph, 1537 South Seventh St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
TAYLOR, William Francis, Lumberville,
Bucks Co., Pa.
P., I. — Born Hamilton, Ontario, Canada,
March 26, 1883. Pupil of W. L. Lathrop,
Albert Sterner. Member : Salma. C.
TAYLOR, W(illiam) L(add), Wellesley,
Mass.
I.. P.— Born Grafton. Mass., Dec. 10,
1854. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Boulanger
and Lefebvre in Paris. Member:
SI 1905; Copley S. 1907. Series of il-
lustrations: "The 19th Century in New
England," "The Pioneer West," "Pic-
tures from the Psalms." "Pictures from
the Old Testament." Specialty, biblical
subjects.
TAYLOR. William N(icholson), Harvard
Club, New York. N. Y.
P., A.— Born Cincinnati, O., Jan. 22,
1882. Pupil of Louis Bernier. Mem-
ber: Mural P.; NSS; Beaux- Arts Inst,
of Design; Beaux- Arts Architects; So-
ciete des Architects diplomes par le
Gouvernement Francais.
TAYLOR, Will S., American Museum of
Natural History, West 77th St., Borough
of Manhattan; h. 183 Emerson PL
Borough of Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
Mural P. — M ember: Mural P. ;
Salma. C; N. Y. Arch. Lg. ^V o r k :
Sixteen panels relating to early life of
Alaskan and British Columbian Indians,
Museum of Natural History, New York;
religious mural for the City Park
Chapel, Brooklyn.
TEAGUE, Walter Dorwin, 131 East 31st
St., New York, N. Y.; h. Forest Hills,
N. Y.
I., D.— Born Decatur, 111., Dec. 18, 1883.
Pupil of George Bridgman. Mem-
ber: Guild of Free Lance A.; SI;
Salma. C. Designer of advertising for
Community Plate and Adler-Rochester
Clothes, etc.
TEASDEL, Mary, 233 W. Canyon, Salt
I ake City. Utah.
P.— Born Salt Lake City. Utah. Pupil
of ASL of N. Y. under Brush; Collin,
Garrido and Simon in Paris. Mem-
ber: Utah SA.
TELLING, Elisabeth, 2120 Lincoln Park,
West, Chicago, 111.
E.— Born Milwaukee, July 14, 1881.
Pupil of W. P. Henderson, George Sen-
seney, H. E. Field, and studied in
Munich. Member: Chicago SE;
Chicago SA; Brooklyn SE; Calif. PM.
Work: " 'Uncle William' Creach,"
California State Library, Pasadena.
TENER, Mrs. George E., Grove Ave.,
Sewickley, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
TEN EYCK, John A(dams), III, 51 West
10th St., New York, N. Y.
P., E.— Born Bridgeport, Conn., Oct. 28,
1893. Pupil of F. Luis Mora, Kenneth
Hayes Miller and Bror J. O. Nordfeldt.
Member: Whitney Studio Club.
TERA, George Sugimori, 421 East 58th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born in Japan, Sept. 19. 1887. Pupil
of F. V. Du Mond; Henry Read.
TEW, Marquerite R., 4122 Pasadena Ave.;
h. 4204 Pasadena Ave., Los Angeles,
Calif.
S. — Born Magdalena, N. M., Jan. 6,
1886. Pupil of Pa. Museum School of
Ind. A., PAPA; under Grafly. Mem-
ber: Calif. AC; Fellowship PAFA;
N.A. Women PS. Award : Cresson
European Scholarship, PAFA, 1913.
Work: Mayan ornament on portal
of South West Museum, Los Angeles.
TEWKSBURY, Fanny W(allace), 86 Park
St., Newton, Mass.
P., T. — Born Boston. Mass. Pupil of
Mass. Inst, of Technology and Ross Tur-
ner in Boston. Member: NYWCC.
THAIN, Howard A., 286 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
THALINGER, E. Oscar, 4522a Adelaide
Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
P. — Born Alsace-Lorraine, March. 20,
1885. Pupil of St. Louis School of Fine
Arts under Wuerpel, Stoddard and
Campbell; Gruber in Munich.
THATER, Marie Louise, 2028 Cherry St.,
St., Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
THAYER, Mrs. Emma B., Monadnock,
N. H. (P.)
THAYER, Gerald H(anderson), Monad-
nock. N. H.
P., W., L.. T.— Born Cornwall-on-Hud-
son, N. Y., Sept. 5, 1883. Pupil of
Abbott H. Thayer. Work: "Par-
tridge", Metropolitan Museum of Art;
"Rabbit", Brooklyn Museum of Art.
Author of "Concealing Coloration in the
Animal Kingdom"; The Nature-Camou-
flage Book; "The Seven Parsons and
the Small Iguanodon."
THAYER, Gladys (Mrs. David Reasoner),
Monadnock, N. H.
P. — Born South Woodstock, Conn., July
17, 1886. Pupil of her father, Abbott H.
Thayer.
THAYER, Grace, 845 Boylston St., Bos-
ton, Mass.
P. — Born Boston. Pupil of Boston Mu-
seum School; Mme. Hortense Richara
In Paris. Member: Copley S. 1885.
583
THAYER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
THOMPSON
THAYER, Raymond L., 141 East 27th
St., New York, N. Y. '
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
THEISS, J(ohn) W(illiam), 1308 East 46th
St., Los Angeles, Cal. ; summer, Strain's
Camp, Mt. Wilson, Cal.
Watercolor P. — Born Zelionople, Pa.,
Sept. 20, 1863. Pupil of Lorenzo P,
Latimer.
THEOBALD, Elisabeth Sturtevant (Mrs.
Samuel Theobald, Jr.), 40 Crescent Ave.,
Arrochar, S. I. ; N. Y.
S., P.— Born Cleveland, O., July 6, 1876.
Pupil of Chase, Mora, Hawthorne, F. C.
Gottwald, Herman Matzen. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; S. Indp. A.
THEOBALD, Samuel, Jr., 40 Crescent
Ave., Arrochar, S. I., N. Y.
P., T. — Pupil Andre Castigne. Instruc-
tor Dickinson High School, Jersey City,
N. J.
THEUERKAUFF, (Carl) R(udolph), Corn-
wall Bldg. ; h. 55 South Ave., Roches-
ter, N. Y.
P. — Born in Germany, May 4, 1875.
Chiefly self-taught. Member: Sal-
ma.C. ; Rochester AC.
THIEDE, Henry A., North American
Bldg., Chicago, 111.; h. 2749 Woodbine
Ave., Evanston, 111.
I. — Born Chicago, 1871. Member:
Palette and Chisel C.
THIEM, Herman C, 1589 St. Paul St.;
summer, Stop 16, Sumerville Blvd.,
Rochester, N. Y.
P., Arch., I. — Born Rochester, N. Y.,
Nov. 21, 1870. Pupil of Mechanics' Inst.;
Seth Jones, Carl M. Raschen. Mem-
ber: Rochester AC; Picture Painters'
C.
THOBURN, Jean, Peabody High School,
Margaretta St., Pittsburgh, Pa.; care
of Mrs. W. F. Knox, Prospect Ave.,
Ben Avon, Pa.; summer, 12 Cookman
Ave., Chautauqua, N. Y.
P.. T.— Born Calcutta, India, Nov. 27,
1887. Pupil of Frank A. Parsons, H. S.
Stevenson, A. W. Dow. Member:
Pittsburgh AA.
THOMAS, Alice Blair, 1541 Cassie Place,
Hollywood, Cal.
P.— M ember: Cal. AC.
THOMAS, Elizabeth H., 474 Commercial
St., Provincetown, Mass.
P. — Born in Philadelphia. Studied at
PAFA and in Paris. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA.
THOMAS, Emma W(arfieid), 1823-25 Wal-
nut St.; h. 3409 Hamilton St., Philadel-
phia, Pa.
P.. T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Nov. 23,
1878. Pupil of Beaux, Chase, Thos. P.
Anshutz and Hugh H. Breckenridge.
Member: Fellowship PAPA. ; Phila.
Alliance.
THOMAS, Mrs. E. R., New York Tele-
graph Bldg., 822 Eighth Ave., New
York, N. Y. (Port. P.)
THOMAS, Estelie L., 512 No. Euclid Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
THOMAS, Paul K(lrk) M (Iddlebrook),
New Rochelle. N. Y.
Port. P.— Born Philadelphia, Jan. 31,
1875. Pupil of PAFA under Cecilia
Beaux, Chase and Grafly. Member:
Lotos C; Alliance. Award: Bronze
medal, S't. Louis Exp., 1904. Work:
"Dr. Joseph Taylor," Bryn Mawr Col-
lege; "Prof, and Mrs. Richard G. Moul-
ton," Chicago University; "A. C. Hough-
ton," Williams College; "Prof. G. T.
Ladd," Western Reserve University;
"Prof. Dexter," Yale University; "Prof.
H. N. Gardiner," Smith College; "Charles
Curtis Harrison, LL.D.," University of
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
THOMAS, Roland, 409 East 10th St.,
Kansas City, Mo. ; summer, 1900 South
Noland, Independence, Mo.
P. — Born Kansas City, Mo., July 31,
1883. Pupil of William Chase, Robert
Henri and Frank Vincent DuMond.
Member: Kansas City AG; and
American Artists, Munich. Aw a rd :
Landscape prize, Mo. State Art Ex-
hibit, 1912. Wo r k : "Autumn," El-
verhoj Art Gallery, Milton, N. Y.;
"Winter Dachaon," American Artists'
Club, Munich; mural decoration in Cur-
tiss Bldg., Kansas City, Mo.
THOMAS, S(tephen) Seymour, 80 West
40th St.. New York, N. Y.
Port. P. — Born San Augustine, Tex., Aug.
20, 1868. Pupil of Chase in New York;
Lefebvre and Constant in Paris. M e m-
ber: Paris SAP; Paris AAA.
Awards : Plon. mention, Paris Salon,
1895; bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1900;
third class gold medal, Paris Salon 1901;
bronze medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; gold medal, Munich, 1901; second
class medal, Paris Salon, 1904. Legion
of Honor, France, 1904, Chevalier 1905.
Work: "A Portrait," Albright Art
Gallery, Buffalo; "Gen. Lew Wallace,"
Art Association, Indianapolis; "Lady
with a Dog," Metropolitan Museum,
New York.
THOMPSON, Mrs. Dorothea. See Lltz-
inger.
THOMPSON, Mrs. Edith Blight, West-
bury, Long Island, N. Y. ; summer, New-
port, R. I.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Apr. 27,
1874. Pupil of F. V. Du Mond and Luis
Mora. Member: Newport AA.
Specialty, interiors.
THOMPSON, Fred D., 184 Alabama Ava,
Providence, R. I.
P. — M ember: Providence WCC.
THOMPSON. F. Leslie, 3607 Leland Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
E.— M e m b e r : Chicago SE; Calif.
P.M.
THOMPSON, Frederic Louis, 126 East
75th St.; h. 47 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y. ; summer, Chilmark, Mass.
P., S. — Born Middleboro, Mass., Nov.
5, 1868. Pupil of George H. McCord.
Member: Salma. C. ; Soc. des Beaux
Arts.
THOMPSON, G(eorge) A(Ibert), 12 Ash-
bey St.. Mystic, Conn.
P., T., D.— Born New Haven, Conn., July
584
THOMPSON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
THURBER
1, 1868. Pupil of Yale School of Fine
Arts, Yale University; John La Farge in
New York; Merson, Blanc, Courtols and
Girardot in Paris. Member: Paint
and Clay C. of New Haven; Salma.C.
1909. Work: "Nocturne, the Quinni-
piack," National Gallery, Uruguay, S. A.
THOMPSON, Hannah, 415 Oakland Ave.,
Pasadena, Calif.
P., E., C, T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa.,
Dec. 27, 1888. Pupil of W. M. Chase.
Member: Calif. AC; Calif. SE.
THOMPSON, John Edward, 1556 High
St., Denver, Colo.
P., D., T.— Born Buffalo, N. Y., Jan. 3,
1882. Pupil of ASL of Buffalo and New
York; of Laurens, Blanche, Cottet, and
Tudor-Hart in Paris. Member:
Denver AA. Instructor at Denver
Academy of Applied Art.
THOMPSON, J. Woodman, 4739 Maripoe
St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
THOMPSON, Juliet, 119 East 19th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Port.P.— Born in New York. Pupil of
Corcoran Art School and ASL In Wash-
ington; Julian Academy In Paris. M e m-
ber : N.Y.Municipal AS; NAC; S.Wash.
A.; Wash.WCC. Award: Bronze
medal, Atlanta Exp., 1895.
THOMPSON, Leslie P(rince), 308 Fenway
Studios, 30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.
P.— Born Medford, March 2, 1880. Pupil
of Boston Museum School under Tar-
bell. Member: Boston GA; St.
Botolph C. Awards: Bronze medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904; third Hallgarten
prize, NAD 1911; H. S. Morris prize,
Newport AA 1914; silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F.. 1915; Beck gold medal,
PAFA. 1919.
THOMPSON, Mills, Saranac Lake, N. Y.
Mural P., W.— Born Washington, D. C,
Feb. 2, 1875. Pupil of Corcoran Art
School in Washington; ASL of Wash-
ington; ASL of N. Y. Member:
S.Wash. A.; Wash.WCC; AC Phila.
THOMPSON, Myra, Spring Hill, Tenn.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
THOMPSON, Nellie Louise, 8 Adams Hall,
Trinity Court, Dartmouth St., Boston,
Mass.
P., S. — Born Jamaica Plain, Boston.
Pupil of Sir James Linton and South
Kensington School under Alyn Williams
and Miss Ball Hughes in London;
Cowles Art School in Boston under De
Camp; Henry B. Snell. Studied sculp-
ture under Roger Noble Burnham, Bela
Pratt. Member: Copley S. 1893;
allied mem. MacD. C.
THOMSON, Frances Louise, 819 17th St.,
N. W., Washington, D. C.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC; S. Wash.
A.
THOMSON, George, 789 Elm St., New
Haven, Conn.
P. — Born Claremont, Ontario, Canada,
Feb. 10, 1868. Pupil of F. V. DuMond,
W. L. Lathrop, H. R. Poore. Mem-
ber: Conn.AFA; New Haven Paint and
Clay Club. Awards : Hon. mention,
Conn.AFA. 1915.
THOMSON, H(enry) G(rlnnell), Wilton,
Fairtield Co., Conn.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., Nov. 24,
1850. Pupil of NAD, ASL of N.Y.,
Chase. Member: S.Indp.A.
THOMSON, Rodney, 49 Claremont Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
I. — Born San Francisco, Calif., Oct. 2,
1878. Pupil of Partington School of
Illustration. Member: SI; Guild of
Free Lance Artists,
THOMSON, W(illlam) T., 1020 Chestnut
St.; h. 252 North 16th St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
P., L— Born Philadelphia, Oct. 5, 1858.
Pupil of PAFA. Member: Fellow-
ship PAFA; ACPhila.; Phila. Sketch C;
AAS.
THORNDIKE, Charles Hall, 26 Ru«
Friant, Paris, France.
Ldscp.P. — Born Paris, of American pa-
rents, Dec. 10, 1875. Pupil of Laurens in
Paris. M e m. b e r : Paris AAA; Assoc.
Salon d'Automne, Paris,. Officer, French
Academic.
THORN E, William, Carnegie Hall, 154
West 57th St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Delavan, Wis., 1864. Pupil of
Constant, Lefebvre and Laurens in
Paris. Member: ANA 1902, NA 1913;
SAA 1893. Awards : Medal, NAD 1888;
hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1891; bronze
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
Work : "The Terrace," Corcoran Gal-
lery, Washington.
THRASHER, Leslie, 51 West Tenth St.,
New York, N. Y.; h. 10 Barrow St.,
New York, N. Y.; summer, Lake Placid,
N. Y.
P., I. — Born Piedmont, West Virginia,
Sept. 15, 1889. Pupil of Chase and An-
shutz. Member: Wilmington SFA;
SI; Guild of Free Lance A.
THROCKMORTON, Cleon (Francis), 3
Greens Court, Washington, D. C.
P.— Born Atlantic City, N. J., Oct. 8,
1897. Member: Wash. AC.
THULSTRUP. See De Thulstrup.
THUM. Patty P^rather), 1236 Garvin PI.;
654 Fourth St., Louisville. Kv.
P., I., W.— Born Louisville. Pupil of
Henry Van Ingen at Vassar Col.; ASL
of N. Y. under Chase. Member;
Louisville Art C. ; Louisville AA. ; Louis-
ville A/tists' Lg. ; Louisville Sketch C;
Louisville AC. Award : Hon. men-
tion for illustration, Columbian Exp.,
Chicago, 1893. Specialty, flowers and
landscapes.
THURBER, Caroline (Nettleton) (Mrs.
Dexter Thurber), 320 Tappan St.,
Brookline, Mass.; summer. Ferry Hill,
Bristol, R. I.
Port.P.— Born Oberlin, O. Pupil of
Laurens and Constant in Paris; studied
in Italy and Germany. Work: "Mile.
Ollivier," Chateau de la Mouette,
France; "Austin Adams," late Chief
Justice, and "Lieut.-Gen. Nelson A.
Miles," State House, Des Moines, la.;
"Ex-Governor Garvin," State House,
Providence; "Ex-Mayor Miller," City
Hall, Providence; "Judge Tillinghast,"
Supreme Court, Providence; "Ex-Presl-
585
THURLOW
WHO'S WHO IN ART
TODAHL
dent Mead," Mt. Holyoke College; "Mrs.
A. A. F. Johnston," Oberlin College;
"President McKee," Western College
for Women, Oxford, O. Specialty, por-
traits of children.
THURLOW, Helen, 46 East 28th St., New
York, N. Y.
P, — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
TIBBETS, Marion, care of Seattle Fine
Arts Society, Seattle, Wash. (P.)
TIDDEN, John C(lark), Rice Inst.; h.
1110 Dennis Ave., Houston, Tex.; sum-
mer, Stratton Park, Colorado Springs,
Colo.
P., T.— Born Yonkers, N. Y., Feb. 10,
1889. Pupil of PAFA. Awards :
Cresson European Scholarship, PAFA;
second Toppan prize, PAFA, 1914.
Work : "Autum.n, 1918" and 4 por-
traits, University Club, Houston, Tex-
as; "Portrait of Josiah Jackson," Penn.
State University, Philadelphia.
TIEL, Ella Sheldon, 30 Milbourne Ave.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
TIFFANY, Louis C(omfort), 347 Madison
Ave., h. 27 East 72d St., New York,
N. Y.; summer, Laurelton Hall, Oyster
Bay, L. I., N. Y.
P., C— Born New York, Feb. 18, 1848.
Pupil of George .Inness and Samuel
Colman in New York; Leon Bailey in
Paris. Member: ANA 1871; NA 1880;
SAA; AWCS; N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1889: Century
Assoc; NAC; N.Y.SFA; N.Y.Municipal
AS; AI Graphic A; NSS; Societe Nat.des
Beaux- Arts; Im. Soc. of F. Arts, Japan.
Awards : Gold medal for applied arts,
Paris Exp., 1900; Chevalier of the
Legion of Honor of France, 1900; gold
medal, Dresden Exp., 1901; grand prize,
Turin Exp. of Decorative Art, 1902; spe-
cial diploma of honor, St. Louis Exp.,
1904; gold medal, P.-P.Exp., San F..
1915. In painting, makes specialty of
Oriental scenes; originator of what is
known as B^avrile glass. Art director
of Tiffany Studios.
TILDEN, Alice F(oster), 55 White St.,
Milton, Mass.
. P. — Born Brookline, Mass. Pupil of
Boston Museum School; Wm. M. Chase
in New York; Lucien Simon. Mem-
ber: Copley S. 1898.
TILDEN, Douglas, Oakland, Cal.
S., T., W.— Born Chico, Cal., May 1.
1860. Pupil of NAD under Ward and
Flagg; Gotham Students' Lg. under Mow-
bray; Choppin in Paris. Awards :
Mon. mention, Paris Salon, 1890; bronze
medal, Paris Exp., 1900; gold medal
Alaska- Yukon-Pacific Exp., Seattle,
1909; commemorative gold medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904. Work: "The Tired
Boxer," Art Institute, Chicago; "Base-
ball Player," Golden Gate Park, San
Francisco; memorial monuments at
Portland, Ore., Los Angeles, San Fran-
cisco, etc.
TILTON. Olive, (Mrs. Bigelow Tilton).
24 "West 59th St.; h. 150 East 72nd St.,
New York, N. Y. : summer, Cover Fariii.
Hull's Cove, Me.
P. — Born Mountain Station, N. J., May
12, 1886. Pupil of Collin and Delo-
cluse in Paris, and studied in Munich
and London.
TIM KEN, Georgia. See Mrs. John H.
Fry.
TIMIVIONS. Edward J., 952 Lawrence
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Janesville, Wis.. 1882. Pupil
of AIC; also studied in Holland, France,
Italy and Spain, Member: Chicago
SA; Chicago ASL. Work: Portraits
in Univ. of Chicago, Univ. of Arkansas,
etc. Instructor AIC.
TIMOTHY, David, 240 Miller St., Knox-
ville, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
TIN DALE, Edward Henry, Fenway Stu-
dios, Boston, Mass.; h. 64 North Ash
St., Brockton, Mass.; summer, Hanover,
Mass.
P., T. — Born Hanson, Mass., Mar. 21,
1879. Studied at Munich Acad, under
Carl Marr, Hans von Hayeck, Loeftz.
TISCHLER, Marian Clara, 453 Riddle
Road. Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
TITCOMB, M(ary) Bradish, Fenway
Studios, Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.
P., I. — Born in New Hampshire. Pupil
of Boston Museum School under Tar-
bell, Benson and Hale. Member:
^^nley S., 1895; NYWXC; N. A. Women
PS; Conn. AFA. Award: Hon. men-
tion, Conn. AFA. 1917. Work In:
White House, Washington, D. C.
TITLOW, Harriet W(oodfin), 132 East
19th St.. New York. N. Y.
P. — Born Hampton, Va. Pupil of Rob-
ert Henri. Member: N. A. Women
PS: PBC; S. Indp. A.; NAC.
TITSWORTH, Julia, care of Mrs. S. H.
Titsworth, 26 East 49th St., New York,
N. Y. ; Bronxville. N. Y.
P.— Born Westfield, Mass., 1878. Pupil
of AIC; R. Collin in Paris. Member:
N. A. Women PS.
TITTLE, Waiter (Ernest), 3 North Wash-
ington Square, New York, N. Y.; and
212 East Cassillv St.. Springfield. O.
P., E.— Born Springfield, O., Oct. 9, 1883.
Pupil of Chase, Henri and Mora in New
York. Member: Royal Society of
Arts, London. England. Author and il-
lustrator. "Colonial Holidays"; "The
First Nantucket Tea Party," etc. Etch-
ings in Chicago Art Inst.; Cleveland Art
Museum; Library of Congress and Na-
tional Gallery, Washington; N. Y. Pub-
lic Library; Calif. State Library.
TITUS (Mr.) Aime Baxter, 2924 Juniper
St., San Diego, Calif.
P., I., T.— Born Cincinnati, April 5, 1883.
Pupil of ASL of N.Y., Harrison, Mora,
Bridgman, DuMond.
TOBIN, George T(imothy), 528 Main St.,
New Rochelle. N. Y.
Genre P.. I — Born Weybridge, Vt., July
26, 1864. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under
Brush. Member: ASL of N. Y.
TODAHL, John O., 212 Second Ave., Mil-
ford, Conn.
P. — M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
586
TODD
WHO'S WHO IN ART
TOWNS LEY
TODD, Charles Stewart, Rookwood Pot-
tery; h. 2513 Park Ave., Cincinnati, O.
P.— Born Owensboro, Ky.. Dec. 16, 1885.
Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy; Albert
Herter in New York. Member: Cinn.
AC; Cinn.MacDowell Soc.
TOERRING, Helena, 2215 West Tioga St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Min.P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
TOKSVIG, Harald, 422 West 150th St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
TOLMAN, R(uel Pardee), 2020 G St., N.
W., Washington, D. C.
P., Restorer, Etcher. T. — Born Brook-
field. Vt.. March 26. 1878. Pupil of
Los Angeles School of Art and Design;
Mark Hopkins Inst, of Art; Corcoran
School of Art, Washington; ASL of N.
Y.; NAD; J. C. Beckwith. Member:
Wash. AC; S. Wash. A.; Wash. ATCC.
Assistant curator. Division of Graphic
Arts, United States National Museum,
Washington.
TOLMAN. Stacy. 7 Thomas St.. Provi-
dence, R. I.; h. 1182 Mineral Spring
Ave., Pawtucket, R. I.
Port. P., T. — Born Concord, Mass., Jan-
uary, 1860. Pupil of Otto Grundmann in
Boston; Boulanger, Lefebvre and Ca-
banel in Paris. Member: Providence
AC; Providence WCC; Boston AC. In-
structor of anatomy, R. I. School of
Design.
TOLSON, Norman, 3723 Warwick Blvd.,
Kansas City, Mo.
P., T., E. — Born Distington, Cumber-
land, England, Mar. 25, 1883. Pupil of
Angelo von Jank, Munich; AIC. M e m-
b e r : Chicago SA. Awards : Ed-
ward B. Butler prize, AIC. 1917; first
prize, Kansas City Art Institute, 1921.
Work : Decorative panels in La Salle
Hotel, Chicago. Instructor in compo-
sition and illustration, Kansas City Art
Institute.
TOMLINSON, Henry W(elling), Taconic,
Conn.
P.— Born Baltimore, Md., Sept. 18, 1875.
Pupil of E. S. Whiteman in Baltimore;
ASL of New York under Cox and
Brush.
TOMPKINS. Frances L(ouise), 260 Wash-
ington Ave.; Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Newark. N. J.. Sept. 21. 1877.
Pupil of Robert Henri, John Sloan, K.
H. Miller, Max Weber. Member:
S. Indp. A.; ASL of N. Y.
TOMPKINS, F(rank) H(ector), care of
Boston Art Club, Boston, Mass.
P.— Born Hector, N. Y.. May 13, 1847.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Cincinnati School
of Design; Royal Academy in Munich
under Loefftz. Member: Boston AC;
Copley S. Award: Gold medal, Mass.
Charitable Mechanics' Assoc. Work:
"Mother and Child," Boston Art Club;
"The Penitent," Pennsylvania Acad-
emy, Philadelphia; "The Young
Mother," Boston Museum.
TOMPKINS, Van Veet, 51 West 10th St.,
NeAv York. N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
TOOMEY, R. W., 54 Cleveland Ave. Co-
lumbus, O.
P. — M ember: Pen and Pencil C, Co-
lumbus.
TOPP, Esther E., 5438 Kincaid St., Pitts-
burgh. Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
TOPPING, James, 1006 North Lawler
Ave., Chicago, 111.
Ldscp. P. — Born Cleator Moor, Eng-
land, in 1879. Studied in England, and
at AIC. Member: Palette and
Chisel C; Chicago SA; Business Men's
AC.
TORRANCE, H. C, 5624 Elgin Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
TORRES, Garcia J., 4 AVest 29th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
TORREY, Elliot (Bouton), 39 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born East Hardwick, Vt. Studied
in Florence and Paris. Me m b e r :
Salma. C; Soc. N.Y.A. Represented in
Chicago Art Institute.
TORREY, Fred M., 6016 Ellis Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.
S.— Born Fairmont, W. Va., July 29,
1884. Pupil of Charles J. Mulligan,
Lorado Taft. Member: Chicago
SA; Western Soc. of Sculptors.
TORREY, Mable Landrum, 6016 Ellis
Ave., Chicago, 111.
S., T.— Born Sterling, Colo., June 23,
1886. Pupil of Charles J. Mulligan.
Member: Alumni AIC; Cordon C.
Work: "Wynken, Blynken and Nod
fountain," City and County of Denver;
"Buttercup — Poppy and Forget-me-
not," South Bend (Ind.), Library.
TOWNSEND, Ethel Here (Mrs. .John
Townsend), 184 North 19th St., East
Orange, N. J.
Min.P.— Born Staten Island, N. Y., Sept.
26. 1876. Pupil of Henry B. Snell and
Orlando Rouland in New York. M e m-
b e r : NYWCC.
TOWNSEND. Frances, 312 North 3rd St.,
Yakima, Wash.
Landscp. P., T. — Born Washington,
Me., March 27. 1863. Pupil of Robert
Harshe. M. de Neal Morgan, Ambrose
Patterson.
TOWNSEND, Harry E(verett), 23 East
63rd St., New York, N. Y.
P.. I.. Etcher. C— Born Wyoming, 111..
March 10. 1879. Pupil of AIC; Howard
Pvle. Member: Salma.C. 1908; SI
1911; Allied AA; P-G.; Brooklyn SE.
Official artist with the A. E. F. during
World War. Work : drawings and
paintinsrs of the War at War College;
and in the Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D. C.
TOWNSLEY, C(hannel) P(ickering), care
of Frank Brangwyn, Temple Lodge,
Hammersmith, London, England; h. 623
Park View St.. Los Angeles, Calif.
P., T.— Born Sedalia, Mo., Jan. 20, 1867.
Pupil of Julian and Deleclnse academies
in Paris; Chase in New York. Mem-
587
TOZZER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
TRUMP
ber: Salma. C; Calif. AC. Formerly
director, Chase European classes; Lon-
don (Eng.) School of Art. Director,
Otis Art Institute.
TOZZER, A. Clare. Fernbank, O.
P. — Member: Cincinnati Woman's A. C.
TRACY, Glen, 157 A-17, Mt. Washington,
Cincinnati, O. (P.)
TRADER, Effie Corwin, 538 Hale Ave.,
Avondale, Cincinnati, O.
Min.P.— Born Xenia, O., Feb. 18, 1874.
Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy; T.
Dub6 in Paris. Member: Cincin-
nati Woman's AC.
TRAIN, H. Scott, 128 Bradhurst Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI.
TRASK, J. E. D., 52 East 53rd St., New
York, N. Y. (P.)
TRAVER. George A., 2 East 23d St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Member: NAC; Salma. C.
Work: "Intervale," Brooklyn Insti-
tute Museum, Brooklyn, N. Y.
TRAVER, Marion Gray, Williamsburg,
Mass.; 103 West 80th St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
TRAVER, Warde, Central Park Studios,
15 West 67th St., New York, N. Y.
P., W., L.., T.— Born Ann Arbor, Mich.,
Oct. 10, 1880. Pupil of Royal Academy,
Munich, under Marr; Millet and Snell.
TRAVIS, Olln H(erman), 245 West North
Ave., Chicago, 111.; summer, Ozark, Ark.
P.— Born Dallas, Texas, Nov. 15, 1888.
Pupil of AIC.
TREGANZA, Mrs. Ruth Robinson, 110
Morningside Drive, New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
TREIDLER, Adolph, 32 West 11th St.,
New York, N. Y.
I.— Member: SI, 1912; Salma. C.
TREMAINE, Edna A., care of Massachu-
setts Normal Art School, Boston, Mass.
(P.)
TREVITTS,. J., Manistee, Mich.
P., T. — Pupil of PAFA. Member:
Fellowship PAFA. Award : Cresson
Traveling Scholarship, PAFA.
TRICKER, Florence, 5639 Wyalnsing Ave.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember : Fellowship PAFA.
TRIEBEL, F(rederic) E., North Boule-
vard, College Point, L. I., N. Y.
P.— Born United States, Dec, 29, 1863.
Pupil of Augusto Rivalta. Member:
Academiciare of Merit, Roman Royal
Academy, San Luca, Rome, Italy.
Awards : Galileo silver medal,
Museo Nazionale di Antropologia, Flor-
ence, 1889, 1891. Works: Soldier's
Monument, Peoria, 111.; Iowa State
Monument, Shiloh, Tenn.; Miss. State
Monument, Vicksburg; Robert G. Inger-
soll statue, Peoria, 111.; statues of late
Senator George L. Shoup and late Sen-
ator Henry M. Rice, Statuary Hall,
Washington Otto Pastor Monument,
Petrograd, Russia.
TRIFYLLIS, Demetrius, 80 West 40th St.,
New York, N. Y. (P.)
TRIGGS, Floyd W(lllding), Darien, Conn.
Cartoonist. — Born Winnebago, 111.,
March 1. 1872. Pupil of AIC.
TRIPP, B. Wilson, 252 Hope St., Provi-
dence. R. I.
P. — M ember : Providence AC.
TRISCOTT, S(amuel) P(eter) R(olt),
Monhegan, Me.
P. — Born Gosport, England, Jan. 4, 1846.
Pupil of Philip Mitchell and R.Inst.of
Painters in Water Colors in London.
Came to United States in 1871. Mem-
ber: Boston AC. Work in: Bos-
ton Museum of Fine Arts.
TRNKA, Mrs. Alois.. See A. B. W.
Kindlund.
TROCCOLI, Giovanni Battista, 108 Ward
St., Chestnut Hill, Mass.
P., C. — Born Lauropoli, Italy, Oct. 15,
1882. Pupil of Denman Ross and Julian
Academy. Member: Copley S.;
Boston SAC ; Boston GA. Awards :
Hon. mention, C. I. Pittsburgh, 1911;
Harris silver medal ($500), AIC 1913;
gold medal, P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915.
TROTTA, Gieuseppe, 204 Amity St.,
Flushing, New York. (P.)
TROUBETZKOY, Paul, 15 West 67th St.,
New York, N. Y.
S. — Born Lake Intra, Lake Magglore,
Italy, Feb. 16, 1866. Studied in Italy,
Russia, and France. Award : Grand
prize, Paris Exp.. 1900. Bronzes in the
Luxembourg in Paris; National Gallery
in Rome; National Gallery in Venice;
Museum of Alexander III in Petrograd:
Treliakofsky Gallery in Moscow; Na-
tional Gallery in Berlin; Royal Gallery
in Dresden; Leipsig Gallery; Chicago
Art Institute; Detroit Institute; Toledo
Museum; Buffalo Fine Arts Academy;
Golden Gate Park Museum; and Mu-
seum in Buenos Aires; Brera Museum,
Milan.
TROUBETZKOY, Pierre, 15 West 67th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Castle Hill,
Cobham, Va.
P., W.— Born Milan, Italy, Apr. 19. 1864.
Member: London Port. P. Soc.
TROUNSTINE, Syl. F., 2545 N. Ingleslde
Place, Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati AC.
TRUE. Allen Tupper, Silt. Colo.; h. 1450
Grant St., Denver. Colo.
P., I. — Born Colorado Springs, Colo..
May 30. 1881. Pupil of Howard Pyle;
.Corcoran Art School in Washington;
Brangwyn in London. Member:
Denver AA. Assisted Frank Brangwyn
with decorations for Panama-Pacific
Exp., 1915; mural decorations in Wyom-
ing State Capitol; Denver Public Li-
brary; Montana National Bank; open
air Greek Theater, Civic Center, Denver.
TRUMAN, Ella S., 319 Crown St., New
Haven, Conn.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
TRUMP, Mrs. Rachel Bulley, 51 Pine-
brook Drive, Larchmont, N. Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
588
TRY ON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
TUTTLE
TRYON, D(wight) W(illiam), Harperly
Hall, 41 Central Park West; 1 West 64th
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer. South
Dartmouth, Mass.
Ldscp.P., T. — Born Hartford, Conn.,
Aug. 13, 1849. Pupil of C. Daubigny,
Jacquesson de la Chevreuse, A. Guille-
met and H. Harpignies in Paris. M e m-
ber: ANA 1890, NA 1891; SAA 1882;
AWCS; Nat.Inst.A.L. Awards:
Bronze medal, Boston, 1882; gold medals,
American Art Assoc, New York, 1886
and 1887; third Hallgarten prize, NAD
1887; Ellsworth prize, AIC 1888; Palmer
prize, Chicago Interstate Exp., 1889;
Webb prize, SAA 1889; first class gold
medal, Munich Exp., 1892; medal, Co-
lumbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; first prize,
Cleveland Interstate Exp., 1895; first
prize, Tennessee Centennial, Nashville,
1897; gold medal ($1,500), C.I.Pittsburgh
1898; chronological medal, C.I.Pittsburgh
1899; gold medal. Pan- Am. Exp., Buffalo,
1901; gold medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F.. 1915.
Professor of Art, Smith College.
Work: Thirty oil paintings, two
water colors and sixteen pastels in
Freer Collection, National Gallery,
Washington; "The End of Day," Cor-
coran Gallery, Washington; "Moonrise
at Sunset," and "Moonlight," Metro-
politan Museum, New York; "Spring
Morning," Toledo Museum; "Autumn
Sunset," Worcester Museum; "Eve-
ning," Pennsylvania Academy, Phila-
delphia; "November Morning," Herron
Art. Inst., Indianapolis; "Before Sun-
rise— June," Institute of Arts, Detroit;
"Twilight at Arverne," Art Museum,
Montclair. N. J.; "Rising Moon," Hack-
ley Art Gallery. Muskegon, Mich.; "Day-
break," R. I. School of Design, Provi-
dence.
TSCHUDI, Rudolf, 3338 Evanston Ave.,
W. H., Cincinnati, O.
P., T.— Born Schwanden, Canton Gla-
rus, Switzerland, April 27, .1855. Pupil
of H. Ruch at Glarus. Member:
Cincinnati AC. Awards : First prize,
Ohio Mechanics Institute, 1874; silver
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904. Work:
"Surrender of Lee." -ortraits of Jeffer-
son and Lincoln, Evanston School, Cin-
cinnati; eleven paintings at the Art Mu-
seum, Glarus, Switzerland.
TSCHUDY, H(erbert) B(olivar), 50 Liv-
ingston St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
P.. I.— Born Plattsburg. O., Dec. 28,
1874. Pupil of N. Y. ASL. Member:
Brooklyn Society of Artists; Brooklyn
WCC. Works: Forty-eight panels
in Brooklyn Museum.
TUCKER, Allen, 121 East 79th St., New
York, N. Y.
P., Arch. — Born Brooklyn, N. Y., June
29, 1866. Pupil of Columbia Univ.; ASL
of N. Y. Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg.
1902; SCUA 1888; Am. PS. Represented
in Providence Museum, Brooklyn Mu-
seum, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
TUCKERMAN, Lilia (McCauley), (Mrs.
Wolcott Tuckerman), Foothill Rd., Car-
pinteria, Calif.
P. — Born Minneapolis. Minn., July 15,
1882. Pupil of Geo. S. Noyes, Chas. H.
Woodbury and DeWitt Parshall. Mem-
ber: Calif. AC.
TUDOR, Rosamond (Mrs. Burgess),
258 West 11th St., New York, N. Y.
P., S. — Born Buzzards Bay, Mass., June
20, 1878. Pupil of Boston Museum
School under Benson and Tarbell.
Member: Newport AA; Province-
town AA; Wash. AC; Lg. of N.Y.A.
TURCK, Ethel Ellis de, 524 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — Member: N. A. Women PS;
Fellowship PAFA; Plastic C.
TURMAN, William T., Terra Haute,
Ind.
P.— Born Graysville, Ind., June 19, 1867.
Pupil of AIC; J. Francis Smith, A. F.
Brooks, Sterba, A. T. Van Laer. Mem-
ber: Terre Haute Art Assoc (v.-pres.).
Work in: High School, Columbia City,
Ind.; Public Library, Thorntown, Ind.
Head of Art Dept., Ind. State Normal
School.
TURNBULL, Grace H., 1530 Park Ave.,
Baltimore, Md. (P., S.)
TURNER, Helen M., Ill East 10th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Cragsmoor,
Ulster Co., N. Y.
P. — Born Louisville, Ky. Pupil of ASL
N. Y. under Cox. Member: ANA
1913; NA, 1921; NYWCC; AUied AA;
Port. P.; NAC; N. A. Women PS.
Awards : Filing prize for landscape,
N. Y. Woman's Art Club, 1912. Agar
prize N. A. Women PS; Shaw memorial
prize NAD, 1913; lion, mention AIC,
1913; Altman prize ($500), NAD, 1921.
Work : Miniature, Metropolitan Mu-
seum, New York; "Girl With Lantern."
Corcoran Gallery, Washington; Detroit
Institute; Delgado Museum, New Or-
leans, La.; National Arts Club, New
York.
TURNER, Lottie B., 296 Ryerson St.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Saginaw, Mich.
P., T. — Graduate of Pratt Inst.; pupil
of Beck, Prellwitz, Paddock, Johonnot;
Collins, Haney, Snell, Watson.
TURNEY, Mrs. Agnes Richmond. See
Agnes M. Richmond.
TURNEY, Olive, 322 Amber St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
TURNEY, Winthrop Duthle, 122 East
59th St.. New York, N. Y.; summer,
Rockport, Mass.
P.— Born New York, N. Y. Pupil of
Loeb, Du Mond and Brush. Member:
Mural P.; S. Indp. A.
TUTTLE. Adrianna, 97 Quitman St.,
Newark, N. J.
P. — Born Madison. N. J., Feb. 6, 1868.
Pupil of Chase. Specialty, portraits on
ivory.
TUTTLE, Charles iVI., Woodstock, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
TUTTLE, Mrs. Mildred Jordan, 186 St.
Ronan St., New Haven, Conn.
P., E., T.— Born Portland. Me., Feb. 26,
1874. Pupil of Yale School of Fine
Arts; W. M. Chase. Member: New
Haven PCC. Work: "Bishop Samuel
Seabury," Yale University.
589
TUTTLE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
ULLRICH
TUTTLE, Ruel Crompton, 36 Pearl St.,
Hartford, Conn.; h. Windsor, Conn.
Port, and Mural P. — Born Windsor, Sept.
24, 1866. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under
Mowbray and J. Alden Weir. Mem-
ber: ASL. of N. Y.; Conn. APA;
Wash. WCC.
TYLER, Bayard H(enry), 95 William St.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. 26 Marshall Rd.,
Yonkers, N. Y.
Port. P.— Born Oneida, Madison Co., N.Y.,
April 22, 1855. Pupil of Syracuse Univ.;
ASL and NAD in New York. Mem-
ber: Lotos C; Salma C; Lg. of
N.Y.A. Award : Hon. mention
Wash. S.A. 1913. Work: "J. J.
Albright," Albright Memorial Library,
Scranton, Pa.; Holder Memorial, Clin-
ton, Mass.; Bill Memorial Library,
Groton, Conn.; Standard Club, Chicago;
Municipal Gallery and State Banking
Dept., Albany; Supreme Court, White
Plains; College for Women, New
London.
TYLER, Carolyn D., 1401 East 53d St.,
Chicago, III.
Min.P.— Born Chicago. Pupil of AIC
under Mrs. Virginia Reynolds. M e m-
b er : Chicago SA; Chicago WCC;
Chicago S. Min.P.; Alumni AIC; Chicago
AC; Cordon.
TYLER, Ernest F(ranklin), 15 West 38th
St.; h. 131 East 66th St., New York,
N. Y.
P., A.. D. — Born New Haven, Conn.,
Apr. 13, 1879. Pupil of Yale School of
Fine Arts. Member: Society of
Beaux-Arts Architects; N. Y. Arch. Lg.
Work in association with Edgar W.
Jenney — decorations in main Banking
Room, Sun Life Assurance Soc, Mon-
treal, Canada; ceilings in Woolworth
Bldg., New York; Wisconsin State Cap-
itol Bldg., Madison; Union Central Life
Bldg., Cincinnati; decorations, Hibernia
Bank and Trust Co., New Orleans, La.
TYLER, James G(ale), Greenwich, Conn.
Marine P., I., W. — Born Oswego, N. Y.,
Feb. 15, 1855. Pupil of A. Gary Sn\ith.
Member: Brooklyn AC; Salma.C.
1893; A. Fund S,
TYNG, Griswold, 1011 Centre St., Jamaica
Plain, Mass.
P. — M ember: Boston AC.
TYRE, Philip, Oak Lane, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
TYSON, Carroll S(argent), Jr., 319 Wal-
nut St.; h. 1900 Spruce St., Philadel-
phia, Pa.
P., S.— Born Philadelphia, Nov. 23, 1878.
Pupil of PAFA under Chase, Anshutz
and Beaux; Carl Marr and Walter Thorr
in Munich. Member: AC Phila.; Fel-
lowship PAFA; S.Indp.A. Awards:
Sesnan gold medal, PAFA 1915; bronze
medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915. Work
in: Art Club of Philadelphia; State
College of Pennsylvania.
TYSON, Mrs. George, 314 Dartmouth St.,
Boston, Mass.
P.— M ember: Boston WCC.
UERKVITZ, Herta (E.W.E.), 3030 Hoyt
Ave., Everett, Wash.
P-. W.— Born in Wisconsin, March 1,
1894. Work: "Summer Sunset,"
Seattle Fine Arts.
UFER, Walter, c/o J. E. D. Trask, 52
East 53rd Street, New York, N. Y •
summer, Taos, N. M.
P.— Born Louisville, Ky., July 22, 1876.
Studied in Chicago, Dresden, Munich
and Paris. Member: ANA; Chicago
SA; Salma. C. ; Taos SA; Los Angeles
Modern AS; Phila AC; Boston AC; NAC;
Wash. AC; American Ac. of Munich.
Awards: Cahn prize, AIC, 1916;
first Logan medal ($500), AIC, 1917;
Clarke prize, NAD, 1918; Third class
medal. Int. Exp., Carnegie Inst., Pitts-
burgh, 1920; Altman prize ($1,000),
NAD, 1921. Works: "The Solemn
Pledge — Taos Indians," Chicago Art In-
stitute; "Portrait of ex-Gov. Edward
F. Dunne," Springfield (111.) State
House; "Don Pedro de Taos," Brooklyn
Inst, of Arts and Sciences; "Artist and
Model," Pennsylvania Academy of the
Fine Arts, Philadelphia; "Suzanna and
her Sisters," Maryland Inst., Baltimore;
"Isleta Bella" and New Mexican land-
scape. Museum of History, Science and
Art, Los Angeles; "Blind Indian—
Isleta," Chicago Municipal Collection.
UHLE, Bernhard, 125 No. 21st St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Phila.AC.
ULBRICHT, Elsa E(milie), School of Fine
and Applied Art. Milwaukee; h. 249
28th St., Milwaukee, Wis., summer.
Summer School of Painting, Saugatuck,
Mich.
P., C, T.— Born Milwaukee, Wis., Mar.
18, 1885. Pupil of Frederick F. Furs-
man; Wis. School of Art; Alex Mueller;
Walter Marshall Clute; George Sen-
seney and Pratt Inst. Member
Wis. PS; Milwaukee Art Inst.; Wis.
Society of Applied Arts.
ULLMAN, Alice Woods (Mrs. Eugene P.
Ullman), 39 Commercial St., Province-
town, Mass.
1., P. — Born Goshen, Ind. Member
N. A. Women PS; NAC.
ULLMAN, Eugene Paul, care of The
Salmagundi Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, March 27, 1877.J
Pupil of Wm. M. Chase. Member:!
Assoc.Soc.Nat.des Beaux-Arts, Paris;!
Paris SAP; Salma.C. 1902. A w a r
Bronze medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
first class medal, Orleans, France, 1905;|
second prize, Worcester, 1906; Tempi*
gold medal, PAFA 1906; silver medal,
P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915: Work: "Por-
trait of Madam Fisher" and "The Sea,'*
Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis, IndJ
ULLRICH, Albert H., 932 Judson Ave..
Evanston, 111.
P.— Born Berlin, Germany, April 24»
1869. Pupil of AIC under Chas. B.
Boutwood; Frederick Freer; Gari Mel-
chers and Duveneck, and in Rome^
Munich and Paris. Member: Palette
and Chisel C, Chicago; Chicago SA'A
Chicago AC.
590
ULP
WHO'S WHO IN ART
VALENTINE
ULP, Clifford M(cCormlck), 64 Adams St.,
Rochester, N. Y. ; summer, Saranac,
Mich.
P., I., T.— Born Olean, N. Y., Aug. 23,
1885. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; William
M. Chase and F. Walter Taylor;
Mechanics Inst., Rochester. Mem-
ber: Rochester AC. Work :
"Adoration of the Magi," altar paint-
ing St. Monica's Church, Rochester,
N. Y. ; Mural decorations, Eastman Den-
tal Dispensary, Rochester, N. Y. ; "Gen.
Allenby in Palestine," National Gallery,
Washington. Director School of Fine
and Applied Art, Mechanics' Inst.,
Rochester, N. Y.
UNDERWOOD, Clarence F., 25 Clermont
Ave., New York, N. Y.
I. — Born Jamestown, N. Y., 1871. Pupil
of ASL of N. Y.; Julian Academy in
Paris under Constant, Laurens and
Bouguereau. Member: SI 1910.
UNITT, Edward G., 152 West 46th St.; h.
228 West End Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Scenic P.— M ember: Artists Aid Soc.
UPJOHN, Anna Milo, care of Credit
Lyonnais, Paris, France; 11 Central
Ave.. Ithaca, N, Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
UPTON, Florence K., 21 Great College
St., Westminster, London, England.
P., L— Born New York. Pupil of Ken-
yon Cox; Raphael Collin in Paris;
George Hitchcock in Holland. Mem-
ber: Soc. Nat. des Beaux- Arts, Paris.
Award : Medal of honor. Inter. Exp.,
Nantes. 1905. Illustrator and creator
of the "Golliwogg" series of children's
books.
URICH, Louis J., 79 Gerry Ave., Elm-
hurst, L. I., N. Y.
S., T.— Born Paterson, N. J., July 4,
1879. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Cooper
Union; Beaux- Arts Arch. Award:
Barnett prize, NAD, 1914.
USHER, Leila, 9 Kirkland PI., Cam-
bridge, Mass; summer, Yarmouth, Me.
S., P. — Born Onolaska, La Crosse Co.,
Wis., Aug. 26, 1859. Pupil of Geo. T.
Brewster in Cambridge, Mass.; ASL in
New York under Augustus Saint Gau-
dens; H. H. Kitson in Boston; and
studied in Paris. Awards : Bronze
medal, Atlanta, Exp., 1895; hon. men-
tion for medals, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
Work: Bronze portraits in Harvard
University; Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore; Bryn Mawr Universi ^
Rochester University; Bowdoin College;
Tuskegee and Hampton Universities.
Medal in the Royal Danish Mint and
Medal Collection, Copenhagen. Bas-
relief in Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge,
Mass.
VAGIS, P(olignotos) G(eorge), 126 Ea.st
75th St.; h. 75 Ellen St., New York,
N. Y.
S.— Born Island of Thasos, Greece, Jan.
14, 1894. Pupil of Gutzon Borglum, Leo
Lentelli, John Gregory.
VAIL, Eugene, 89 Rue AmpSre, Paris,
France.
P. — Born Saint-Servan, France, of
American father, Sept. 29, 1857. Pupil
591
of ASL in New York under Beckwith
and Chase; Ecole des Beaux-Arts in
Paris under Cabanel, Dagnan-Bouveret
and Collin. Member: Soc.Nat.des
Beaux-Arts; Paris SAP; Society de
Peintres et Sculpteurs; Providence AC.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1886; third medal, Paris Salon,
1888; gold medal, Paris Exp., 1889;
grand diploma of honor, Berlin; sec-
ond medal. Munich; tirst class medal,
Antwerp; silver medal. St. Louis Exp.,
1904; first medal, Liege Exp., 1905;
Legion of Honor, 1894. Work:
"Ready About," Corcoran Gallery,
Washington; "La Salute— Moonlight-
Venice," and "Old Walls— Venice,"
Rhode Island School of Design, Provi-
dence.
VAILLANT, Louis D(avld), 1.52 West
55th St.; h. 1 West 64th St., New York,
N. Y. ; summer, Washington, Conn.
Mural P. —Born Cleveland, O., Dec. 14,
1875. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under
Mowbray. Member: ASL of N. Y •
N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1902; Mural P.; N.Y.
Municipal AS; Century Assoc; Salma.C.
Award: Second Hallgarten prize.
NAD 1910. Work: Stained glass •
windows in Meeting House, Ethical
Culture Society, New York; ceiling
decoration. First National Bank, Pikes-
ville, Pa.
VALENTIEN, Albert R., 3903 Georgia St.,
San Diego, Cal.
P., Potter.— Born Cincinnati, O., May
11, 1862. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Acad-
emy under Noble and Duveneck. Mem-
ber: Cincinnati AC; San Diego AG.
Awards: Gold medal for pattery. Paris
Exp., 1900; silver medal, Pan.-Cal.Exp.,
San Diego, 1915. Member: Jury of
Awards, Pan-Calif. Exp., San Diego,
VALENTIEN, Anna M. (Mrs. A. R.
Valentien), 3903 Georgia St., San Diego,
Cal.
S., Potter.— Born Cincinnati, O., Feb. 27,
1862. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy
under Rebisso; Rodin, Injalbert and
Bourdelle in Paris. Member: Cin-
cinnati Woman's AC; San Diego AG.
Awards : Gold medal, Atlanta Exp.,
1895; collaborative gold medal, Pan.-
Cal. Exp., San Diego, 1915: two gold
medals, Pan-Calif. Exp., San Diego,
1916; highest award and cash prize,
Sacramento Exp., 1919.
VALENTINE, De Alton, 135 West 16th
St., New York, N. Y.
I.— Born Cleveland, Ohio, June 6, 1889.
VALENTINE, Edward V(lrginius), 809
East Leigh St.; h. 109 North Sixth St.,
Richmond. Va.
S.— Born Richmond, Va., Nov. 12, 1838.
Pupil of Couture and Jouffroy in Paris;
Bonanti in Italy; Kiss in Berlin. Mem-
ber: Richmond AC (ex-pres.). Presi-
dent, Valentine Museum. Richmond, Va.
Work: "Gen. Robert E. Lee," Memo-
rial Chapel, Lexington. Va.; "Thomas
Jefferson," Richmond; "Gen. Hugh Mer-
cer," Fredericksburg, Va.; "I. I. Audu-
bon," New Orleans, La.; "Jefferson
Davis," Richmond. Va. ; "Gen. R. E
Lee," U. S. Capitol, Washington.
VALENTINE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
VAN INGEN
VALENTINE, Jane H., 50 East Chestnut
Ave., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Bellefonte, Pa., in 1870. Pupil
of PAFA. Member: Phila. Alli-
ance.
VALK, Ella Snowden, 58 West 57th St.,
New York. N. Y,.
Min. P. — M ember: N. A. Women
PS.
VALLE, Mme. Maude Richmond Fioren-
tino, 1136 Corona St., Denver, Colo.;
summer, "Mt. Falcon," Mt. Morrison
P. O., Colo.
P., I., V^., T.— Studied in New York
and Paris. Member: Denver AA.
VAN BOSKERCK, Robert W(ard), 58
West 57th St., New York, N. Y.
Ldscp.P. — Born Hoboken, N, J., Jan,
15, 1855. Pupil of R. Swain Gifford and
A. H. Wyant in New York. Mem-
ber: ANA 1897, NA 1907; SAA 1887;
Lotos C. ; A. Aid S. Awards: Silver
medal. Pan- Am. Exp,, Buffalo, 1901;
silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904. Rep-
resented in Union League and Lotos
Club, New York; Lay ton Art Gallery,
Milwaukee; Hamilton Club, Brooklyn,
VAN BUREN, Rae, 138 West 56th St.,
New York, N, Y. (L)
VANCE, Fred Nelson, corner Plumb and
Jefferson Sts, Crawfordsville, Ind.
Mural.P. — Born Crawfordsville, Ind.,
1880, Pupil of AIC; Smith Academy in
Chicago; Julian, Colarossi and Vittl
academies in Paris; Max Bohm in
Paris; E. Vedder In Rome, Member:
Paris AAA.
VAN DEN HENGEL, Walter, 63rd and
Overbrook Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. (P.)
VANDERPOEL, Emily Noyea (Mrs. John
A. Vanderpoel), 22 Gramercy Park, New
York. N. Y.; summer, Litchfield, Conn.
P., W.— Born New York. Pupil of R.
Swain Gifford and Wm. Sartaln. Mem-
ber: NYWCC; N. A. Women PS; NAC.
Award : Bronze medal, Columbian
Exp., Chicago, 1893. Author of "Color
Problems"; "Chronicles of a Pioneer
School."
VANDERPOOL, Matilda, 9431 Pleasant
Ave., Chicago, 111; summer, Gold Hill,
Colo.
P., T.— Born Holland. Pupil AIC, David
Ericson. Member: Chicago WCC;
Chicago SA; Cordon C.
VAN DER VEER, Mary, Amsterdam,
N. Y.
P. — Born Amsterdam, N, Y, Pupil of
NAD under Edgar M, Ward and Will
H. Low; Phila.Art School under Chase;
Whistler in Paris; studied in Holland.
Member: NYWCC ; Plastic C. ;
N. A. Women PS. Awards : Bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; Shaw
memorial prize, NAD, 1911.
VAN DER WEYDEN, Harry, Rye, Sussex,
England.
P. — Born Boston, Mass., 1868, Pupil of
Laurens, Lefebvre and Constant in
Paris; Fred Brown in London, Mem-
ber: Paris SAP; Paris AAA; Inst, of
Oil Painters, London. Awards:
Third class medal Paris Salon, 1891;
second medal, Inter,Exp., Antwerp,
1894; gold medal, Atlanta Exp., 1895;
bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1900; second
gold medal, Munich, 1901; gold medal,
Vienna, 1902; third medal, LiSge Exp,,
1905, Work: "Christmas Eve," Art
Institute of Chicago; pictures purchased
by French Government, 1906 and 1908.
VAN-DORSSEN, G., 103 West 14th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
VAN DRESSER, William, 7 Reservoir
Oval, Williamsbridge, New York City,
N. Y.
I. — Born Memphis, Tenn,, Oct, 28, 1871.
Pupil of F. Luis Mora and Walter Ap-
pleton Clark, Member: SI 1911,
VAN DUZEE, Kate Keith, 1471 Main St.;
Dubuque, Iowa.
P., C, — Born Dubuque, la,, Sept. 18,
1874, Pupil of Arthur Dow, John Jo-
hansen and Charles Woodbury. Mem-
ber: Chicago AG; Dubuque AA.
Awards : Medals for water color.
Iowa 'State Fair, 1917, 1918; hon, men-
tion for water color, St. Paul Inst., 1918;
medal for monochromes and water
colors, Iowa State Fair, 1919, 1920.
Work: Oil painting in Dubuque Pub-
lic Library.
VAN ELTEN, Elizabeth F. Kruseman.
See Mrs. Duprez.
VAN EVEREN, Jay, 309 East 77th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Mural P.
VAN GORDER, L(uther) Emerson, 504
Euclid Ave., Toledo, O.
P., I,— Born Pittsburgh, Pa„ Feb, 22,
1861. Pupil of Chase and C. Y. Turner
in New York; Ecole des Beaux- Arts In
Paris under Carolus Duran; studied in
London, Member: NYWCC; Toledo
Tile C. Work: "Quai Aux Fleurs."
Museum of Art, Toledo.
VAN INGEN, W(illiam) B(rantley), 60
Washington Mews, New York, N. Y.
Mural P, — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Aug,
30, 1858, Pupil of PAFA under Schues-
sele and Eakins; La Farge in New
York; Bonnat in Paris. Member:
N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1889; Mural P.; Fellow-
ship PAFA; ACPhila.; NAC; Lotos C;
A, Aid S,: A.Fund S. Award: Hon.
mention, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
Work: "The Divine Law," "Signing
of the Magna Charta," "Socrates Dis-
cussing the Nature of Justice," "Cicero
Speaking from the Roman Forum,"
"The Origin of Circuit Courts," "The
Signing of the Constitution of the
United States," "Lincoln as a Law
Student" and "Lincoln as President,"
eight panels in U. S. Court House, Chi-
cago; "Justice and Mercy," "An Ap-
peal to Justice," U. S, Court House, In-
dianapolis; eleven panels representing
"Coinage," four panels, "Gold Mining,"
U, S. Mint, Philadelphia; fourteen pan-
els representing the "Early Settlers of
Pennsylvania," State Capitol, Harris-
burg, Pa.; sixteen panels, "Industries
of New Jersey," State Capitol, Trenton;
"The Departments," six panels in Con-
gressional Library, Washington; "Con-
struction of the Canal," five panels In
592
VAN LAER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
VER BECK
Administration Bldg., Panama Canal
Zone, 1914-15.
VAN LAER, Belle, Johnsville, Bucks Co.,
Pa.
Min.P.— Born Philadelpliia, Sept. 19,
1862. Pupil of S. J. Ferris, J. L. G.
Ferris, Herman Faber and Ludwig
Faber. Member: Plastic C; Alumni
Phila. School of Design.
VAN NESS, Mrs. Beatrice Whitney. See
Whitney.
VAN PEPPELENDAM, Laura, Art Insti-
tute, Chicago, 111. (P.)
VAN ROEKENS, Paule (Victorine
Jeanne), Baker Bldg., 1628 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia; h. Glenside, Pa.
P. — Born Chateau-Thierry, France, Jan.
1, 1898. Pupil of Henry B. Snell, Leo-
pold G. Seyffert, Jos. Pearson and C.
Grafly. Member: Fellowship PAFA;
Plastic C; Alliance. Award: Gold
medal, Plastic C, 1920. Works: "15th
St., from Broad St. Station," Pa. State
College; "The New Boulevard," Graphic
Sketch Club; "Treat 'Em Rough," Pa.
Academy of the Fine Arts.
VAN SLOUN, Frank J., 1617 California
St.; h. 946 Central Ave., San Francisco,
Calif.
P., E., T.— Born St. Paul, Mmn.
Award: Bronze medal, P.-P Exp.,
San F., 1915.
VAN SOELEN, Theodore, Chamber of
Commerce Bldg., Albuquerque, N. M. ;
summer, care of San Ysidro Trading
Co., San Ysidro, N. M.
P.— Born at St. Paul, Minn., Feb. 15,
1890. Pupil of PAFA. Work: "Sum-
mer Morning," Pennsylvania Academy
of the Fine Arts.
VAN VEEN, Pieter (J.) (L.), 58 West
57th St., New York, N. Y.; summer,
Kent, Conn.
P. — Born The Hague, Holland, Oct. 11,
1875. Studied in Holland and France.
Member: Salma. C; NAC; N. Y.
Municipal AS. Represented in Museum,
Seattle, Washington; Butler Art Insti-
tute, Youngstown, O.
VAN-VLECK, Natalie, 149 East 45th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
VAN VOAST, Virginia R., 507 East Third
St., Cincinnati, O. ^^
P — M ember: Cincinnati Woman s
AC.
VAN VORST, G., 470 Fourth Ave., New
York. N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
VAN WART, Ames, care of Century As-
soc, 7 West 43d St., New York, N. Y.r
and Neuilly-sur-Seine, France.
S —Born New York. Pupil of Hiram
Powers. Member: Century Assoc.
VAN WERVEKE, (George), Atelier
Bldg., 33 West 67th St., New York,
N. Y.
I.— Born Chicago, 111., Oct. 7, 1888.
Illustrations for "New York Times,"
"Scribner's," "Century."
VAN WESTRUIVI, Anne, 8 West 8th St.,
New York. N. Y.
P. — M ember: Conn.AFA.
VARIAN, George Edmund, 256 West 121st
St.; 114 East 28th St., New York, N. Y. ;
638 10th St., Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
I. — Born Liverpool, England, Oct, 16,
1865. Pupil of Brooklyn Art Guild;
ASL of N. Y. Member: Salma.C.
1905; Brooklyn AC. Illustrated: "Seen
in Germany," by Ray Stannard Baker;
"The Tragedy of P616e," by George
Kennan, etc.
VARIAN, Lester E., 903 Gas and Electric
Bldg.; h. 464 Williams Parkway, Denver,
Colo.
E., A., T.— Born Denver, Colo., Oct. 20,
1881. Pupil of Donn Barber and Chif-
flot. Member: Denver AC; AIA.
VARNUiVI, William H(arrison), School of
Fine Arts. University of Wisconsin,
Madison. Wis.; summer, Monhegan, Me.
Ldscp.P., C, T.— Born Cambridge,
Mass., Jan. 27, 1878. Pupil of De Camp,
Major and C. H, Woodbury in Boston;
Julian Academy in Paris under Lau-
rens. Member : Western Arts Assoc.
Asso, professor of applied arts, Univ.
of Wis.
VAYANA, Nunzio, 903 Main St., Hart-
ford, Conn.; summer. South Glaston-
bury, Conn,
P. — Born Castelvetrano, Italy, Aug. 28,
1878. Pupil of Grosso, Morelli, and Pi-
sani. Member: Conn. AFA; Conn.
Soc. of Painters; Society of Artists,
Rome.
VEDDER, Elihu, 4 Porta Pinclana. Roma
VI, Italy,
P., S., I., W,— Born New York, Feb. 26,
1836. Pupil of T. H. Mattlson at Sher-
burne, N, Y, ; Picot in Paris; studied
in Italy. Has resided In Rome since
1867. Member: ANA 1863, NA 1865;
SAA 1880; Mural P,; Century Assoc;
Nat. Inst. A,L. Awards : Hon. men-
tion, Paris Exp., 1889; gold medal, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901. Work: "The
Pleiades" and "African Sentinel," Met-
ropolitan Museum, New York; "Min-
erva," mosaic and five panels. Library
of Congress, Washington; mural decor-
ation, Bowdoin College; "The Keeper of
the Threshold," Carnegie Institute,
Pittsburgh; "The Lair of the Sea Ser-
pent," "Lazarus," "The Sphinx" and
"Fisherman and Djinn," Boston Museum
of Fine Arts; "Storm in Umbria," "The
Fates Gathering in the Stars," Art Insti-
tute of Chicago; "Fisherman and the
Mermaid," Brooklyn Institute Museum;
"Sicilian Girl" and "Landscape," R. I.
School of Design, Providence. Illus-
trated: "The Rubaiyat of Omar Khay-
yam." Author of "The Digressions of
v."; "Woods in "Verse."
VENANZI, Carlo Gino, 4300 Wornall Rd. ;
h. 4903 Broadway, Kansas City, Mo.
P., E., A. — Borji Assisi, Italy, Sept. 6.
1875. Pupil of Fine Art Institute of
Siena, Florence and Rome. Member:
Academic Belle Arti, Perugia.
VER BECK, Frank, care of Curtis Brown,
Ltd.. 6 Henrietta St., Covent Garden,
London, England.
I.— Born Belmont Co., Ohio, 1858. lU
lustrator and author of "A Short Little
593
VER BECK
WHO'S WHO IN ART
FOLK
Tale from Bruintown," "Timothy
Turtle's Great Day," "The Donkey
Child," "The Little Cat Who Journeyed
to St. Ives"; "Ver Beck's Book of
Bears"; "The Elephant Child"; "The
Little Lost Lamb," etc. Designer of
the Ver Beck earthenware models.
VER BECK, Mrs. Frank. See Rion,
Hanna.
VERBEEK, Gustave, 125 Sherman Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., E.— Born Nagasaki, Japan, Aug. 29,
1867. Pupil of Constant, Laurens,
Girardot, Blanc, and Brush.
VERHEYDEN, Francois (Isidore), Prov-
incetown, Mass.
P., E., T. — Born Hoeylaert, Belgium,
April 8, 1880. Pupil of Royal Academy
of Brussels.
VERSCHAERER, Barth, 60 West 36th
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
VETTER, IVIrs. Cornelia C(owles), 29
Huntington St., Hartford, Conn.
P., E., T.— Born Hartford, Feb. 20, 1881.
Pupil of Robert Henri; Andrada in Paris
and Spain. Member: Conn.AFA.
VEZIN, Charles, 409 Palisade Ave., Yon-
kers, N. Y.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., April 9,
1858. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under
Du Mond, Chase, George Elmer Browne,
Helen M. Turner, John Carlson. M e m-
b er : ASL of N. Y. (pres.); Salma.
C. 1902 (pres. 1914); Municipal AS;
Yonkers AA (vice-pres.); Alliance;
NAC; Century Assoc. Award: Hon.
mention S.Wash.A. 1914.
VHAY, Mrs. John D., R. F. D. No. 6,
Pontiac, Mich. (P.)
VIANCO, Ruth, care of Mechanics Inst.,
Rochester, N. Y.
P. — Member: Rochester AC.
VICE, Herman Stoddard, 56 East Con-
gress St.; h. 1460 Argyle St., Chicago,
111.
P., I.— Born Jefferson, Ind., 1884. Pupil
of Chicago Academy of Fine Arts.
Member: Palette and Chisel C.
VICKERS, S(quire) J(oseph), Grand-
View-on-Hudson, N. Y. .
P., A., C, W.— Born Middlefield, Ot-
sego Co., N. Y., May 18, 1872. Designed
subway stations and ornamental ele-
vated structures of the rapid transit
system of New York.
VILLON, Jacques, care of Walter Pach,
13 East 14th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
VINCENT, H(arry) A(iken), Rockport,
M!ass.
P.— Born Chicago, Feb. 14, 1864. Self
taught. Member: ANA; Salma. C;
Allied AA. Award : Shaw prize,
Salma. C, 1907; Isidor prize, Salma. C,
1916; Turnbull prize, Salma. C, 1918.
VI N MAR, Charles, care of Charles A.
Moran, 220 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
VINTON, L(illian) Hazlehurst, 51 West
12th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Boston, Mass., June 5, 1881.
Pupil of 'S. Simi in Florence; R. Collin
and Richard Miller in Paris.
VINTON-Brown, Pamela, 51 West 12th
S., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Boston, Mass., Jan. 28, 1884.
Pupil of Collin and Courtois in Paris;
Edwin Whiteman in Baltimore. Mem-
ber: French Miniature Society;
Deutsche Werkbund. Award : Hon.
mention, miniature section. Exhibition
American Woman's Work, Paris, 1914.
VIVIAN, Calthea (Campbell), Hotel Clare-
mont, Berkeley, Calif.
P., E., T.— Born Fayette, Mo. Pupil of
Arthur Mathews; Lazar and Colarossi
Academy in Paris. Member: San
Francisco AA; San Francisco SE;
Laguna Beach AA; Calif. AA. Repre-
sented in Palace of Fine Arts, San
Francisco; Arkansas Auditorium Gal-
lery.
VOGNILD, Edna (Mrs. Enoch Vognild),
22 Tooker PI., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born, Chicago. Pupil of AIC; Haw-
thorne, J. C. Johansen, H. B. Snell,
Colarossi and Delecluse Academies in
Paris.
VOGNILD, Enoch M., 22 Tooker PI.,
Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Chicago, April 8, 1880. Pupil
of AIC under Johansen and Vanderpoel;
summer under Woodbury; Julian and
Delecluse Academies in Paris. M e m-
ber: ASL of Chicago; The Round
Table; Chicago AC; Chicago AG;
Chicago SA. Award : Municipal Art
League prize, 1906.
VOGT, L(ouis) C(harles), 141 East Fourth
St., Cincinnati; h. 3300 Westside Ave.,
Hyde Park, Cincinnati, O.
P. — Born Cincinnati, July 29, 1864. Pu-
pil of H. Siddons Mowbray and Frank
Duveneck, Member: Cincinnati AC.
Represented by three water colors in
Cincinnati Museum.
VOIGHT, Charles A., 514 Rochelle Terrace,
Pelham Manor, N. Y.
I.— Mem be r : SI 1913.
VOLK, Douglas, 119 East I9th St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Centre Lovell,
Me.
P., T., L., W.— Born Pittsfleld, Mass.,
Feb. 23, 1856. Son of the sculptor, Leon-
ard W. Volk. Pupil of G6r6me In Parlii.
Member: ANA 1898, NA 1899; SAA
1880; NAC; A. Fund S.; A. Aid S.; Port.
P.; N.Y.Arch.Lg, 1912; Century Assoc;
Inter.Soc.A.L.; Mural P. Awards:
Medal, Col. Exp., Chicago, 1893; Shaw
Purchase, SAA 1899; first prize,
Colonial Exh., Boston, 1899; silver
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
silver medal, Charleston Exp., 1902;
Carnegie prize, SAA 1903; silver
medal, St. Louis Exp.. 1904; gold
medal. Carolina A A 1907; Proctor
portrait prize, NAD 1910; Saltus gold
medal. NAD 1910; gold medal. NAC
1915; Maynard portrait prize, NAD 1915;
gold medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915;
Beck gold medal, PAFA 1916. Cross
594
VOLKERT
WHO'S WHO IN ART
VONNOH
I
of officer of the Order of Leopold II.,
1921. Organized handicraft movement
at Centre Lovell; director Minneapolis
School of Fine Arts 1886 to 1893- for-
merly instructor NAD and Cooper Union.
Work: "Father Hennepin" and "Battle
of Missionary Ridge," mural decora-
tions, St. Paul Capitol, St. Paul, Minn.;
"Puritan Mother and Child," Carnegie
Institute, Pittsburgh; "Portrait of Dr.
Felix Adler" and "Little Mildred,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York; "Ac-
cused of Witchci^aft," Corcoran Gallery,
Washington; "Boy with the Arrow," Na-
tional Gallery, Washington; "Maiden's
Reverie." Pittsfield (Mass.) Museum;
"Fur Trading Period," mural decoration
1913 for Court House, Des Moines, Iowa;
"Reverie," Art Museum, Montolair,
N. J.; "The Artist's Daughter," Me-
morial Art Gallery, Rochester, N. Y. ;
"Among the Lilies," National Arts C^lub,
New York; "Adoration," Hackley Art
Gallery, Muskegon, Mich.; "By the
Pond," Omaha Art Gallery; portraits
of King Albert, Lloyd George, Gen.
Pershing, National Gallerv, Washing-
ton; "Gov. A. E. Smith," Capitol,
Albany.
VOLKERT, Edward C(harles), 741 South
Oak Drive, Williamsbridge. New York,
N. Y.; summer, 3426 Hallwood Place,
Cincinnati, O.
P.— Born Cincinnati, O., Sept. 19, 1871.
Pupil of Frank Duveneck in Cincin-
nati; ASL of N. Y. Member: ANA;
NYWCC: AWCS; Allied AA; Salma.C;
Cincinnati AC; Union Inter, des Beaux -
Arts et des Lettres; Cincinnati MacD.ti.
Work: Decoration Woodward and
Hughes High School, Cincinnati, O. ;
Hamilton High School, Hamilton, O.;
Specialty, cattle.
VOLL, Joseph A., 224 Pennsylvania Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
VON DER LANCKEN, Frank, 102 Aber-
deen St.; h. 193 East Ave., Rochester,
N. Y. ; summer. New Milford, Conn.
P., S., L, C, T.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y.,
Sept. 10, 1872. Pupil of Pratt Inst.
under Herbert Adams; ASL in New
York under Mowbray; Julian Academy
in Paris under Constant and Lau-
rens. Member: ASL of N.Y.; Sal-
ma. C; Rochester AC. Instructor and
lecturer on History of Art, University
of Rochester; instructor of life drawing
and anatomy, Mechanics' Inst., Roches-
ter, N. Y. Director, Chautauqua School
of Arts and Crafts.
VONDROUS, John C, Kr. Vinohrady, NA
Smetance 16, Prague, Czecho-Slovakia;
h. 179 East 79th St., New York, N. Y.
P., I., E. — Born Bohemia, Europe, Ja7i.
24, 1884. Pupil of NAD in New Yoj-k
under E. M. Ward, G. Maynard, F. C.
Jones and James D. Smillie. Mem-
ber: S. V. U. Manes and Graphic C,
of Prague, Bohemia; Chicago SE;
Brooklyn SE. Award : Bronze medal
for etching, P. -P. Exp., San F., 191^;
Logan prize ($75), Chicago Society of
Etchers, 1917, 1918 and 1919. Work
in: National Gallery of Prague, Bo-
hemia; Art Inst., Chicago; New York
Public Library; Fogg Museum, Cam-
bridge, Mass.
VON GOTTSCHALCK, O. H., 225 West
39th St.; h. 7 Fairmount Ave.., Hacken-
St^ok ^^ T
p., L— Pupil of R.I.School of Design;
ASL of N. Y. Member: Salma.C.
1903.
VON HOFSTEN, H(ugo Olof), Winnetka,
I., P. — Born in Sweden, June 20, 1865.
Pupil of Royal Academy at Stockholm
under M. E. Winge, O. Aborehus and
A. Larson. Organizer of the Forestry
Painters of Chicago. Award : First
water color prize, Swedish American
Artists, 1919.
VONNOH, Bessie (Onahotema) Potter
(Mrs. Robert W. Vonnoh), 33 West 67th
St., New York, N. Y.; summer, Grez-
sur-Loing, Seine-et-Marne, France;
Lyme, Conn.
S., P.— Born St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 17,
1872. Pupil of AIC under Taft. Mem-
ber: NS'S 1898; ANA 1906; Port. P.;
Allied AA. Awards : Second prize,
Nashville Exp., 1897; bronze medal,
Paris Exp., 1900; hon. mention, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; gold medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F., 1915; Watrous gold medal.
NAD, 1921. Specialty, small groups.
Work: "The Young Mother," and
eleven statuettes, Metropolitan Museum,
New York; eleven statuettes. Art In-
stitute of Chicago; thirteen statuettes,
Brooklyn Institute Museum ; "Girl Danc-
ing," Carnegie Inst., Pittsburgh; two
statuettes, Corcoran Gallery, Washing-
ton; two statuettes, Philadelphia Acad-
emy; two statuettes, Newark Museum;
two statuettes, Cincinnati Museum; two
stiltuettes, Detroit Institute.
VONNOH, Robert, 145 East 23rd St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, Grez-sur-Loing,
Seine-et-Marne, France; Pleasant Val-
ley, Lyme, Conn.
P., T. — Born Hartford, Conn., Sept. 17,
1858. Pupil Mass. Normal Art School
in Boston; Julian Academy in Paris
under Boulanger and Lefebvre. M e m-
ber: ANA 1900, NA 1906; SAA 1892;
NAC; N. Y. Arch. Lg. NAC; Port.
P.; Lotos C; Salma C. 1904; Fellow-
ship PAFA; Allied AA; Munich Seces-
sion (cor.); Lg. of N.Y.A.; Conn, AFA.
Awards : Gold medal for por-
traiture, Mass. Charitable Mechanics
Asso., Boston, 1884; hon. mention, Paris
Salon, 1889; bronze medal, Paris Exp.,
1889 and 1900; medal. Pan. -Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; medal, Charleston, 1901;
Proctor prize, NAD, 1904; gold medal.
P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915: Charles
Noel Flagg prize. Conn. AFA; 1920;
Richard S. Greenough prize, Newport
AA, 1920. Work: "Companion of
the Studio," "Portrait of the Artist"
and "Dr. S. Weir Mitchell," "No-
vember," Pennsylvania Academy,
Philadelphia; "Dr. S. Weir Mitchell,"
College of Physicians. Philadelphia;
"John G. Milburn." Buffalo Club, Buf-
falo; "Hon. John Russell Young," Union
595
VON RECKLINGHAUSEN WHO'S WHO IN ART
WAGER-SMITH
League Club, Philadelphia; "Attor. Gen.
Grlg-gs," Department of Justice, Wash-
ington, D. C; "Postmaster General
Charles Emory Smith," Post Offico De-
partment, Washington; "Dr. W. W.
Keen," American Philosophical Society.
Philadelphia; "Charles Francis Adams."
Massachusetts Historical Society, Bos-
ton; "Family of President Woodrow Wil-
son," the White House, Washington;
"In Flanders Fields," Youngstown (O.)
Museum.
VON RECKLINGHAUSEN, M., 74 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
VON SCHMIDT, Harold, care of Foster
& Kleiser. 287 Valencia St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif. (I.)
VON SCHNEIDAU, C, care of Los
Angeles Athletic Club, Los Angeles,
Calif.
P., T. — Born Smoland, 'Sweden, March
24, 1893. Pupil of J. Wellington Rey-
nolds, K. A. Buehr, H. M. Walcott,
C. W. Hawthorne, Richard Miller.
Member: ASL of Chicago; Chicago
Swedish AC; Calif. AC; Laguna Beach
AA; Beachcombers Club, Provinctown.
Awards: First prize AIC, 1915; John
Quincy Adams Traveling Scholarship,
AIC, 1916; second prize for portrait,
Minn. State Fair, 1916; first prize
for portrait, Swedish American Exhi-
bition, Chicago, 1917; gold medal, Cali-
fornia State Fair, 1919; second prize,
California State Fair, 1920; second prize,
Swedish Club, Chicago, 1920.
VOORHEES, Clark G(reenwood), 104
West 57th St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, N. Y., May 29,
1871. Pupil Julian Academy In Paris.
Member: Allied AA; Conn.AFA; Sal-
ma.C; Lyme AA. Awards: Bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; third
Hallgarten prize, NAD 1906.
VOS, Hubert, 15 West 67th St., New
York, N. Y.; Newport, R, I.
P. — Born Maastricht, Holland, Feb. 17,
1855. Pupil of Academy of Fine Arts in
Brussels; Cormon in Paris. Awards :
Gold medals Paris, Amsterdam, Munich,
Dresden, Brussels, etc. Specialty, types
of aboriginal races, portraits and in-
teriors.
VOS, Marius, 47 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C
VOSE, Adairene. See Mrs. Thomas
Congdon.
VYSEKAL, Edouard A(ntonin), 1945 Mag-
nolia Ave., Los Angeles, Cal.
P. — Born Kutna Hora, Czechoslovakia,
Mar. 17, 1890. Pupil of Harry M. Walcott;
S. Macdonald Wright. Member:
Calif. AC; Chicago Palette and Chisel
C Work: "The Conquest of the
Desert," Barbara Worth Hotel, El
Centro, Cal.; "Korean," in Mission Inn,
Riverside, Cal.
VYSEKAL, Ella Buchanan (Mrs. E. A.
Vysekal), 1945 Magnolia Ave., Los
Angeles, Calif.
P., W.— Born Le Mars, la. Pupil of S.
Macdonald Wright, Harry M. Walcott
and Ralph Clarkson. Member: Calif.
AC. Work: Portrait of Christian
Hoffman in State Historical Bldg.,
Topeka, Kan.
VYTLACIL, William, Mt. Lebanon, N. Y.
P. — Member: Chicago WCC Award:
Hon. mention AIC 1913.
WACHTEL, Elmer, 315 West Ave. 43,
Los Angeles, Cal.
P., T.— Born Baltimore, Jan. 21, 1864.
Member: Ten Painters of Los
Angeles.
WACHTEL, Marion Kavanaugh (Mrs.
Elmer Wachtel), 315 West Ave. 43, Los
Angeles Cal.
P. — Born Milwaukee, June, 1875. Pupil
of AIC and Chase. Member : Ten
Painters of Los Angeles; NYWCC
Work: "Eucalyptus at Evening." Cali-
fornia State Building; "San Gabriel
Canon," Friday Morning Club, Los An-
geles.
WACK, H(enry) W(ellington), 33 West
42nd St.; Author's Club, 7th Ave. and
56th St., New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Monroe, Orange Co., N. Y.
P., I., W., L.— Born Baltimore, Md.,
Dec. 21, 1873. Pupil of Leon Dabo, N.
R. Brewer, H. Salem Hubbell, Frank
Spenlove. Member: N.Y. Lg. of
Painters.
WADE, Caroline D., 59 East Van Buren
St., Athenaeum Building, Chicago, 111.;
h. Elmhurst, 111.
P., T. — Born Chicago. Pupil of AIC;
Courtois in Paris. Member: Chicago
SA.
WADSWORTH, Adelaide E., 10 West
Cedar St., Boston, Mass.
P.— Born Boston, Oct. 29, 1844. Pupil
of Wm. M. Hunt, Frank Duveneck,
John Twachtman, C. H. Woodbury and
Arthur Dow. Member: Copley S.
1894.
WADSWORTH, Myrta M., 119 Chili Ave.,
Rochester, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Rochester AC.
WADSWORTH, Wedworth, Durham.
Conn.
Ldscp.P., L, W.— Born Buffalo, N. Y.,
June 22, 1846. Member: NYWCC;
■Salma. C, 1890; Brooklyn AC. Author
and illustrator of "Leaves from an
Artist's Field Book." Illustrated "The
Song of the Brook," "A Winter's Walk
with Cowper," "Under the Greenwood
Tree with Shakespeare," "Through
Wood and Field with Tennyson," etc.
WAGENHALS, Katherine H., 2124 Sunset.
Blvd., San Diego, Calif.
P.— Born Ebensburg. Pa., Aug. 2, 1883.1
Pupil of Art Department of Smith Col-1
lege: ASL of N. Y. ; Academic Modernef
in Paris. Award : Art Association)
prize, Herron Art Inst., 1916. Work:]
"The Visitor," Herron Art Inst., In-
dianapolis.
WAGER-SMITH, Miss Curtis, 518 Wal-1
nut St.; h. 3207 Baring St., Philadel-j
phia, Pa.
Port. P., I., W. — Born Binghamton, N. Y.I
Pupil of Emily Sartain, Alice Barber)
Stephens and Henry McCJarter in Phlla-(
596
WAGNER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WALDEN
delphia. Member: Plastic C; Soc.of
Arts and Letters; City Parks Assoc;
Women's Press Assoc. Award: Silver
medal, Dallas Exp., 1890. Illustrated
"Rhymes for Wee Sweethearts," "Story
Without an End" and other children's
books.
WAGNER, Blanche Collet, care of C.
Peters, 78 West 55th St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
WAGNER, Frank Hugh, care Pine Crest
Inn, Saugatauk, Mich.
P., S., I. — Born Milton, Wayne Co., Ind.,
Jan. 4, 1870. Pupil of Freer, Vanderpoel
and Von Salza. Member: Chicago
Palette and Chisel C; Indiana AA;
Richmond AA; Indiana Traveling AA;
Alumni Asso. AIC. Work: "Adora-
tion of the Magi," St. Joseph's Chapel,
West Pullman, 111.; "Portrait C. W.
Hargrave,' and "Portrait of A. Kate
Huron," Chapel Hall, Danville, Ind.
WAGNER, Fred, 1520 Chestnut St.. Phil-
adelphia, Pa.
P., T.— Born Valley Forge, Pa., 1864.
Pupil of PAFA. Member: Phila. Sketch
C; Fellowship PAFA; Phila. WCC.
Award: Fellowship prize, PAFA. 1914.
Work: "Addingham — Winter," Penn-
sylvania Academy; "Along Canal," Phil-
adelphia Art Club; "Winter Evening,"
Reading Art Museum. Instructor at
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
Summer School, Chester Springs, Pa.;
Addingham Summer School of Outdoor
Painting.
WAGNER, Mary North, care Pine Crest
Inn, Saugatauk, Mich.
P., S., I., W., L.— Born Milford, Ind.,
Dec. 24, 1875. Pupil of John Vander-
poel, Charles Francis Browne, Mary S.
West. Louis J. Millet, C. J. Mulligan
and W. M. Chase. Member: Ind.
SA; Richmond AA; Alumni Asso., AIC;
Ind. S A. Work: Four drawings for
the "Second Brownie Book," by Mrs.
Alpha B. Benson.
WAGNER, Rob, 226 Isabel St., Los An-
geles, Cal.
P., I., W, — Born Detroit, Mich., Aug. 2,
1872. Pupil of Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: Cal. AC. Award : Sil-
ver medal, Alaska-Yukon Pacific Exp.,
Seattle, 1909; bronze medal, P.-P.Exp.,
San F., 1915.
WAGNER. Rosa, Rockville, Md.
P.— M ember: Wash. WCC.
WAINWRIGHT, Christine H., 8425 Wab-
ash Ave., Seattle, Wash. (P.)
WAITE, Charles W., 1355 Locust St., Wal-
nut Hills. Cincinnati, O.
P. — Studied at Ohio Mechanics' Insti-
tute and under Duveneck. Member:
Cincinnati AC.
WAITE, Emily Burling, 104 West 40th
St., New York. N. Y.
P.— Born in Worcester, July 12, 1887.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Boston Art Mu-
seum School; studied in England,
France, Belgium, Holland, Germany,
Austria, Italy and Spain. Award :
Silver medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
Portraits in Tufts College; Clark Uni-
versity; Episcopal Theological School,
Cambridge; Worcester Art Mus. School.
WAITT, Mrs. M(arian) P(arkhurst), 162
Newbury St., Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Salem, Mass. Pupil of Boston
Museum School, Juglaris, Gallison and
Louis Kronberg in Boston. Member:
Copley S. 1904; N. A. Women PS.
WALCOTT, Belle Havens (Mrs. H. M.
Walcott), Rutherford, N. J.; summer,
Newark, O.
P. — Born in Franklin Co., Ohio. Pupil
of ASL of N. Y. ; studied in Paris art
schools. Award : Third Hallgarten
prize, NAD 1903. Represented in St.
Louis Club.
WALCOTT, H(arry) M(ills), Rutherford,
N. J.
P., T.— Born Torringford, Conn., July
16, 1870. Pupil of NAD in New York;
Julian Academy under Constant In
Paris. Member: ANA 1903; SAA
1902. Awards : Hon. mention, Paria
Salon, 1897; bronze medal, Pan- Am.
Exp., Buffalo, 1901; Shaw Fund, SAA
1902; first Hallgarten prize, NAD 1903;
Clarke prize, NAD 1904; hon. mention,
C.I.Pittsburgh, 1904; silver medal, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; silver medal, P.-P.
Exp., San F.. 1915. Work : "Hare and
Hounds," Richmond (Ind.) Art Assoc;
"The Contest," Erie (Pa.) Art Assoc;
portrait at Ohio State University, Co-
lumbus; portrait at Ohio Wesleyan
University, Delaware; "School's Out,"
H. C. Frick Collection.
WALCOTT, Helen Breese, 1743 22nd St.,
Washington, D. C; summer, care of
Morgan, Harjes & Co., 14 Place Ven-
dome, Paris, France.
P. — Born Rochester, N. Y., Aug. 20,
1894. Pupil of C. W. Hawthorne.
WALDECK, C(arl) G(ustave), Marina
Bldg., Grand and Lindell Blvds., St.
Louis, Mo.
P. — Born in the United States, March
13, 1866. Pupil of Constant and Lau-
rens in Paris. Member: St. Louis
AG; 2x4 Soc. Awards: Bronze
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; silver
medal, Lewis & Clarke Exp., Port-
land, Ore., 1905; Betty Brown prize
($50), St. Louis AG 1914; first prize, St.
Louis AL 1915. OfRcier d'Academie,
Paris, 1904. Work: "Soap Bubbles"
and "American Type," City Art Mu-
seum, St. Louis.
WALDEN, Lionel, P. O. Box 1227, Hono-
lulu, Hawaii.
Marine P. — Born Norwich, Conn., May
22, 1861. Pupil of Carolus-Duran in
Paris. Member: Nat. Inst. A.L.;
Paris SAP; Society Inter.de Peinture et
Sculpture, Paris. Awards : Second
class medal. Crystal Palace Exh., Lon-
don; hon. mention, Paris Salon, 1899;
silver medal, Paris Exp., 1900; third
class medal, Paris Salon, 1903; silver
medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; silver
medal, P.-P.Exp.. San F.. 1915. Chev-
alier of the Legion of Honor. France,
1910. Work : "Fishing in the Road-
stead," Wilstach Collection, Philadel-
phia; "Cardiff Docks," Luxembourg
597
WALES
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WALKER
Gallery. Paris. Represented in Cardiff
Museum, Wales; Cooke Gallery, Hono-
lulu, Hawaii.
WALES, Orlando G., 832 Hamilton St.,
Allentown, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia. Pa. Pupil of
Wm. M. Chase, Alphonse Mucha.
Member: Fellowship PAPA; Salma.
C. 1908.
WALES, Susan M. L., 341 Marlboro St.,
Boston, Mass.
Ldscp. P. — Born Boston, Mass., July
24, 1839. Pupil of Boston Museum
School; Vincente Poveda in Rome;
Blommers in Holland. Member:
Boston WCC.
WALKER, A(lanson) B(urton), 253 Bar-
clay St., Flushing-, N. Y. ; summer,
Morningside, Milford, Conn.
I. — Born Bing-hamton, N. Y., Nov. 19,
1878. Pupil of Kenyon Cox, Bryson
Burroughs, Charles Curran, P. V. Du-
Mond. Member: SI. Illustrations
and humorous ideas for "Life,"
"Judge," "Harper's Weekly," "Harpers'
Bazaar," "Scribner's," "Century," etc.
WALKER, Alice J., 97 Whitney Ave.,
New Haven, Conn.
P. — M ember: New Haven PCC.
WALKER, Dugald Stewart, 30 East 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
I., P., L. — Born Richmond, Va. Stud-
ied under Anne Fletcher and Harriotte
Taliaferro Montague in Richmond;
Graham Cootes at Summer School of
University of Virginia; at the New
York School of Art; ASL of N. Y.
Work: Illustrated "Hans Ander-
son's Fairy Tales," "Stories for Pic-
tures," "The Gentlest Giant," etc.
WALKER, Ferdinand G(raham), 308
Commercial Bldg., Louisville, Ky. ; h.
New Albany, Ind.
P.— Born Mitchell, Ind., Feb. 16, 1859.
Pupil of Dagnan-Bouveret. Puvis de
Chavannes. Blanche and Merson in
Paris. Member: Soc. of Indiana
Artists; Louisville AA; Chicago AG.
Portraits in Kentucky State His-
torical Society Collection; University
of Kentucky at Lexington; Berea Col-
lege; Agricultural College of Michigan;
Lincoln Institute, Simpsonville, Ky. ;
Kentucky State Collection at Frank-
fort; State House, Indianapolis, Ind.;
Public Library, Jefferson Davis Memor-
ial, New Albany, Ind., and other places;
also by landscapes in the public gal-
leries at New Albany, Ind., and Lexing-
ton Ky., two murals in St. Peter's
Church, Louisville, Ky.
WALKER, H(enry) O(liver), Cornish,
N. H.
Figure and Mural P. — Born Boston,
Mass., May 14, 1843. Pupil of Bonnat
in Paris. Member: ANA 1894, NA
1902; SAA 1887; Mural P.; Nat. Inst.
A.L.; Century Assoc. Awards : medal,
Columbian Exp., Chicago, 1893; Shaw
Fund, SAA 1894; Clarke prize, NAD
1895; silver medal, Pan-Am.Exp., Buf-
falo, 1901; gold medal, Charleston Exp.,
1902; silver iTiedal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
third prize, Worcester, 1907. Work
Mural paintings — "Lyric Poetry," series
of lunettes. Library of Congress, Wash-
ington; "Pilgrims on the Mayflower,"
Massachusetts State House, Boston;
"Wisdom Attended by licarning," Ap-
pellate Court, New York; "Yesterday,
Today and Tomorrow," lunette in
Minnesota State Capitol, St. Paul; panel
in Court Room, Essex County Court
House, Newark, N. J.; paintings —
"Eros et Musa" and "Musa Regina,"
National Gallery, Washington; "Morn-
ing Vision," Metropolitan Museum,
New York; "Mrs. Evans and Son,"
National Gallery, Washington, D. C.
WALKER, Hobart A., 60 Carleton St.,
East Orange, N. J.
P., A., W.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Nov.
1, 1869. Pupil of Arthur Hoeber.
WALKER, Horatio, care of Montross
Gallery, 550 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y.
P. — Born Listowel, Ont., Canada, 1858;
came to New York in 1885. Member:
ANA 1890, NA 1891; SAA 1887; Nat.
Inst.AL. ; Royal Inst, of Painters in
Water Colors, England; AWCS; Salma.
C; A. Fund S.; A Aid S. ; Rochester AC.
Awards : Gold medal, competitive
exhibition at American Art Galleries,
New York, 1887; Evans prize, AWCS
1888; bronze medal, Paris Exp., 1889;
gold medal and diploma, Columbian
Exp., Chicago, 1893; gold medal, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; gold medal,
Charleston li]xp., 1902; gold medal for
oil and gold medal for water colors, St.
Louis Exp., 1904; gold medal of honor,
PAPA 1906; first prize, Worcester, 1907;
gold medal, P.-P.Exp.. San F., 1915;
Hudnut prize, AWCS, 1920. Work:
"The narrower — Morning," "The nar-
rower" and "The Sheepfold," Metro-
politan Museum, New York; "Ave
Maria," Corcoran Gallery, Washington;
"The Wood Cutter" and "Milking—
Evening," City Museum, St. Louis;
"Sheep Shearing," Albright Art Gallery,
Buffalo; "Sheepyard — Moonlight." Na-
tional Gallary, War.hington; "Moonrise
— A Canadian Pastoral," Carnegie Inst.,
Pittsburgh.
WALKER, Mrs. Jess J., 515 Forest Ave.,
Bellevue, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
WALKER, Marian D. Bausman (Mrs.
Otis L. Walker), Casper, Wyom.
S. — Born Minneapolis, Minn., June 21,
1889. Studied in Minneapolis. Mem-
ber: Minneapolis SFA. Award :
Hon, mention, Minn. State Art Soc, 1914.
WALKER, Nellie V(erne), The Midway
Studios, 6016 Ellis Ave., Chicago, 111.
S.— Born Red Oak, la., Dec. 8, 1874.
Pupil of AIC under Lorado Taft.
Member: NSS 1911; Chicago SA;
Soc. W. Sc. Awards: First Chi-
cago Municipal Art League prize,
1907; second Grower prize, AIC 1908;
Shaffer prize, AIC 1911. Work:
"Stratton Memorial." Colorado Springs.
Colo.; portrait statue of "Senator Har-
lan," Washington; "Her Son," ideal
group. Art Institute of Chicago; "Chief
Keokuk," Keokuk, la.
598
WALKER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WALTMAN
WALKER, Sophia A., 70 West 49th St..
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Palatine
Bridge, N. Y.
P., s;, E., C, W., Lr., T.— Born Rock-
land, Mass., June 22, 1855. Pupil Lefeb-
vre in Paris; Mowbray and Chase in
New York. Member: NAC. Work:
"Portrait of E. B. Woodward," State
Normal School, Bridgewater, Mass.
WALKER, William H(enry), 336 Sanford
Ave., Flushing, L. I.. N. Y.
Cartoonist. — Born Pittston, Pa., Feb.
13, 1871. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: SI 1909; Guild of Free Lance
Artists. Contributor to "Life" since
1898. Specialty, political subjects.
WALKINSHAW, Mrs. Jeanle Walter.
See Walter, Jeanie.
WALKLEY, David B., Rock Creek, O.
P.— Born Rome, O., Mar. 2, 1849. Pupil
of Julian Academy; PAFA. Member:
Salma.C, 1903.
WALKOWITZ, Abraham, 12 Union Sq.,
New York, N. Y.
P., Etcher. — Born Tuiemen, Siberia,
Russia, March 22, 1880. Pupil of NAD
under Ward, Maynard and F. C. Jones
in New York; Julian Academy in Paris
under Laurens. Member: Paris
AAA; P-G.
WALL, A. Bryan, 814 Arch St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — Born Allegheny City, Pa. Pupil of
his father, A. Wall. Member: A.S.
of Pittsburgh; ACPhila. Award:
Gold medal, AAS 1907.
WALL, Bernhardt, 1947 Broadway, New
York. N. Y.
P.. E.— Born Buffalo. N. Y.. Dec. 30,
1872. Pupil of W. A. Levy. Member:
Salma. C. Editor and publisher, Wall's
Etched Monthly.
WALLACE, Ethel A., 62 Washington
Sq., New York, N. Y. ; summer, New
Hope, Pa.
P.— Born Chesterfield, N. J. Pupil of
PAFA and William Lathrop. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; Fellowship
PAFA.
WALLACE, Lucy, Van Dyck Studios, 939
Eighth Ave.; h. 411 West End Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P., C— Born Montclair, N. J., Nov. 13,
1884. Pupil of Kenneth Hayes Miller.
Member: Alliance; NYSC.
WALLER, Frank, 27 Franklin St., Mor-
ristown, N. J.
P., A.— Born New York, June 12, 1842.
Pupil of Chase, J. G. Chapman in Rome.
Member: ASL of N. Y.; N.Y.Arch.
Lg., 1887; NAC. Work : "Washington
Pleadquarters in Morristown."
WALLEY, Abigail B. P., 201 Clarendon
St.. Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Boston. Pupil of Sanderson,
Langerfeldt, Bensa and Rice. Mem-
ber: Copley S. Specialty, landscapes
and gardens in watercolors and pastels.
WALP, Mrs. M. Vignes, R. F. D. No. 2,
Long Beach. Calif.
P.— M ember: Calif. P.M.
WALSH, Elizabeth Morse, 419 Andover
St., Lowell, Mass.
P. — Born Lowell, Mass. Pupil Boston
Museum School.
WALTER, Christian J., 809 Penn Bldg.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.; summer, Ligonier, Pa.
Ldscp.P., C— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., Feb.
11, 1872. Member: Associated Artists
of Pittsburgh; Artists' Brotherhood.
Award : Third prize, Pittsburgh AA
1913; Roland prize ($200), Pittsburgh
AA 1915. Specialty, stained glass.
WALTER, J. W., 306 Penn Ave., Wilkins-
burg. Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
WALTER, Jeanie (Mrs. Robert Walkin-
shaw), 936 12th Ave., North, Seattle,
Wash.
P.— Born Baltimore, Md., Mar. 28, 1885.
Pupil of Charcoal C, Baltimore; Lu-
cien Simon, Rene Menard in Paris;
Robert Henri in New York. Award :
Hon. men., Pac. Northwest Exhibition,
1920.
WALTER, Martha, Park Avenue Hotel,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil of
PAFA; Julian Academy in Paris.
Member: N. A. Women PS; Fellow-
ship PAFA. Awards : Cresson schol-
arship, PAFA, 1903; Mary Smith prize,
PAFA, 1909; prize, N. A. Women PS,
1915. Work: "Anne," Toledo Museum;
"Dorothy Lee Bell," Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts; "Umbrellas
on the Beach," Norfolk Society of Art;
"Baby"; Fellowship, Pennsylvania Aca-
demy of the Fine Arts.
WALTER, Otis W., 314 North Euclid
Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
_ P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
WALTER, V. H., 57 East 59th St., New
York, N. Y. (S.) -
WALTERS, Emiie, Tiffany Foundation,
Oyster Bay, L. I., N. Y.
P., C. — Born Winnipeg, Canada, Jan.
31, 1893. Pupil of AIC, PAFA, and
Tiffany Foundation. Member:
Salma. C; Lg. of N.Y.A.; ASL of Chi-
cago; Fellowship PAFA. Awards:
Goodman prize, Chicago Art Inst., 1918,
1920, 1921; first municipal prize, Chicago,
1920; Tiffany Foundation Scholarship
($2,000), Work: "Spring Blossoms,"
State College (Pa.) Museum; "Moon-
glow," Winnipeg Museum of Fine Arts;
"Winter," Herkscher Museum, Hunt-
ington; "The Old Mir.," National Muse-
um of Ireland; "Winter," Tiffany
Foundation, Oyster Bay, N. Y.
WALTHER, Charles H., 4000 Pimlico
Road, Baltimore, Md.
P. — M ember: Charcoal C.
WALTMAN, Harry Franklin, 59 East 59th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born in Ohio, April 16, 1871. Pupil
of Constant and Laurens in Paris.
Award : Isidor prize, Salma. C, 1916.
Member: 'Salma. C, 1897; ANA
1917; AlHed AA; NAC.
599
WALTON
WHO*S WHO IN ART
WARWICK
WALTON, Florence L., 18 East 8th St.,
New York, N. Y.; h. Llewellyn Park,
West Orange, N. J. , ^
P.— Born East Orange, N. J., July 9,
1889. Pupil of George Bellows, John
Johansen, B. J. O. Nordfeldt, Homer
Boss. Member: S.Indp.A.
WANG, E. O., 225 Harrison St., Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
WARD, E(dmund) F., SSVa Court St.; 10
Washington Ave., White Plains, N. Y.
P., I.— Born White Plains, N. Y., Jan.
3, 1892. Pupil of Edward Dufner,
George Bridgman, Thomas Fogarty.
Member: Guild of Free Lance
Artists. Illustrations for "Saturday
Evening Post," "Pictorial Review,"
"Red Book," "Woman's Home Com-
panion."
WARD, Elsie. See Mrs. Henry Hering.
WARD, Mrs. Heber Arden, Box 21,
Denver, Colo.
P. — M ember: Denver AA.
WARD, Hilda, Roslyn, Long Island, N. Y.
P — Member: N. A. Women PS;
NYWCC.
WARD, Irving, 6 East Pleasant St., Balti-
more, Md. ^
P.— M ember: Charcoal G.
WARD, Nina B., 1515 Arch St., Phila-
delphia, Pa. „ „, T
P.— Born Rome, Ga. Pupil of St. Louis
School of Fine Arts; N.Y. School of Art
and PAFA. Member: Fellowship
PAFA. Awards: Cresson European
scholarship, PAFA 1908 and 1911; first
Toppan prize, PAFA 1912; Mary Smith
prize, PAFA 1914.
WARD, Winifred, 2006 Mt. Vernon St.,
Philadfcxphia, Pa. ^ .r on
S., W. — Born Cleveland, C, Jan. 20,
1889. Pupil of Charles Grafly. Mem-
ber: Fellowship PAFA; Plastic C;
N. A. Women PS; S.Indp.A.
WAREHAM, John Hamilton D(ee), Rook-
wood Pottery Co.; h. 3329 Morrison Ave..
Clifton, Cincinnati, O. ,. -r. ^
p.^ C.— Born Grand Ledge, Mich. Pupil
of Duveneck and Meakin. Member:
Cincinnati Municipal AS. Award:
Bronze medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
Decorations in Fort Pitt Hotel, Pitts-
burgh; Seelbach Hotel, Louisville; Ho-
tel Sinton, Cincinnati; Poll's Theatre,
Washington, D. C.
WARGHY, Armand, 3426 Michigan Ave.,
Chicago, 111. (E.)
WARHAMIK, Mrs. C. A., 6052 5th St.,
N. W., Seattle, Wash. (P.)
WARLOW, C. Joseph, 1710 Green St.;
and 1924 Mt. Vernon St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
P.— M ember: PAFA.
WARNER, Everett L(ongley), care of
Salmagundi Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y. ; Lyme, Conn.
Ldscp.P., Etcher.— Born Vinton, la.,
July 16, 1877. Pupil of ASL In Wash-
ington and New York; Julian Academy
in Paris. M e m b e r : NYWCC; AWCS;
ANA 1913; NAC (life); Wash.WCC;
Conn.AFA; S. Wash. A.; Salma. C. 1909;
Paris AAA. Awards: First Corcoran
prize, Wash.WCC 1902; Sesnan medal,
PAFA 1908; silver medal, Buenos Aires
Exp., 1910; second Hallgarten prize,
NAD 1912; Evans prize, Salma.C. 1913;
bronze medal, S.Wash.A 1913; Vezin
prize, Salma.C. 1914; silver medal for
painting and bronze medal for etching,
P.-P.Exp., San. F., 1915; hon. men-
tion, Conn. AFA 1917. Work:
"Broadway on a Rainy Evening," Cor-
coran Gallery, Washington; "A Febru-
ary Day," Pennsylvania Academy,
Philadelphia; "Amsterdam," Erie (Pa.)
Public Library; "Quebec," Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts; "December
Hillside," Museum of Fine Arts, Syra-
cuse, N. Y.; "Along the River Front,
New York," and six etchings, Toledo
Art Museum; "The Frozen Brook," R. I.
School of Design, Providence; "A Moun-
tain Village, Tyrol," City Art Museum,
St. Louis; "The Guardian Elm," Na-
tional Arts Club, New York; "Snowfall
In the Woods," Art Inst, of Chicago.
WARNER, Mrs. Mary Loring, Middle-
town, Conn.
P. — M ember: Conn. AFA; New
Haven PCC.
WARNER, May, 4318 Brooklyn Ave.,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
WARREN, F. A., Snow Hill, Md.
P.— M e m \) e r : Pitts. AA.
WARREN, Harold B(roadfield), 8 Craigie
Circle. Cambridge, Mass.
Ldscp.P., 1., C. — Born Manchester, Eng-
land, Oct. 16, 1859. Pupil of Charles
H. Moore and Charles Eliot Norton at
Harvard University. Member: Cop-
ley S. 1891; Boston S.Arch. (Assoc);
Boston SWCP; Boston SAC (Master).
Specialty, water color. Work: "The
Parthenon," "The Propyaea," "^gina
from the Parthenon" and "Northwest
Corner of the Parthenon," Boston Mu-
seum of Fine Arts; "The Parthenon,"
Cleveland Art Museum. Instructor in
water color. Department of Architecture,
Harvard University.
WARRICK, Meta Vaux (Mrs. Fuller), 7
Warren Rd., Framingham, Mass.
S.. I., C, T.— Born Philadelphia, June 9,
1877. Pupil of School of Industrial Art;
PAFA; Collin, Carles, Colarossi Acad-
emy and Rodin in Paris. Member:
Alumni Assoc, Pniladelphia School of
Industrial Art. Represented in Cleve-
land Art Museum.
WARS HAWS KY, A. G., care of Folnet,
19 Rue Vavin, Paris, France; summer,
Point de Croix, Bretagne, France.
P.— Born Sharon, Pa., Dec. 28, 1883.
Pupil of Mowbray and Loeb in New
York; Winslow Homer. Member:
Paris AAA; Salon d'Automne; Cincin-
nati AC. Work: Mural decoration,
"The Dance," Rorheimer and Brooks
Studios, Clevelan<:, O; Cleveland Mu-
seum of Art; Minneapolis Art Inst.
WARWICK, Edward, School of Industrial
Art, Broad and Pine 'Sts. ; h. 5407 Ches-
ter Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.. C, T. — Born Philadelphia, Dec. 10.
1881. Pupil of J. Frank Copeland and
Charles T. Scott. Member: Phila.
Sketch C.
600
WARWICK
WHO*S WHO IN ART
WATSON
WARWICK, Ethel Herrick, 5407 Chester
Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born New York, N. Y. Pupil of W.
M. Chase, Fred Wagrier, Hugh Brecken-
ridge, H. B. Snell. Member: Plastic
C. ; Phila. Alliance; Fellowship PAFA.
WASHBURN, Cadwallader, Box 403,
Lakewood, N. J.
P., Etcher, W. — Born Minneapolis, Minn,
Pupil in architecture of Mass. Inst, of
Technology, Boston; ASL of N. Y. un-
der Mowbray and of Chase; Sorolla in
Spain; Besnard in Paris. Member:
NAC; Wash. AC. Awards: Second
prize, Paris AAA; gold medal, P. -P.
Exp., San P., 1915. Has spent winters
in Mexico since 1908.
WASHBURN, Mary S., 1933 Howe St.,
Berkeley, Calif.
S.— Born Star City, Ind. Pupil of AIC;
Charles Mulligan; Edwin Sawyer in
Paris. Member: Cordon C; SW Sc;
Awards : Second prize, Paris AAA;
gold medal, P. -P. Exp., San P., 1915.
Work: "Statue of Gen. Milroy," Mil-
roy Park, Rensselaer, Ind. ; medal in
Carnegie Inst., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Memor-
ial to Lit. Joseph Wilson, Logansport,
Ind. Medal in Carnegie Inst., Pittsburgh.
WASHBURN, May N (ightingale), 1206
Carnegie Studios, 7th Ave. & 56th St.,
New York, N. Y.; h. 451 Main St.,
Greenfield, Mass.
P.— Born Greenfield, Mass., July 2, 1861.
Pupil of D. W. Tryon.
WASHINGTON, Elizabeth Fisher, 1710
Chestnut St.; h. 214 South 43rd St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Min. P. — Born Siegfried's Bridge, Pa.
Pupil PAFA, Hugh Breckenridge, Fred
Wagner. Member : Fellowship
PAFA; Plastic C. ; Phila. Alliance; Pa.
S. Min. P. Award: Mary Smith
prize, PAFA, 1917; Fellowship prize,
AFA, 1917. Represented in PAFA Col-
lection, Civic Club, Philadelphia; Pierce
Business College.
WATANABE, Torajiro, 102 West 123rd
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, Wood-
stock, N. Y.
P.— Born Fukushima, Japan, July 9,
1886. Pupil Henry Read, Charles Rosen,
Member: Japanese Art Society,
Woodstock Art Association.
WATERS, R. Kinsman, 308 East Tome
St., 1143 Lincoln Rd., Columbus, O.
P., C, T.— Born Columbus, O., July 21,
1887. Member: NYWCC.
WATKINS, Mrs. Catherine W., 49 ^West
39th St., New York, N. Y.; Woodstock.
N. Y.
P. — Pupil of AIC; Dauchez, Miller and
Brangwyn in Paris and London.
Member: N. A. Women PS.
WATKINS, Mary Wiiklns. See Mrs-
Preston.
WATKINS, W. Reginald, 801 Williams
St., Baltimore, Md.
I.— M ember: Char. C.
WATROUS, Harry W(liison), 58 West
57th St.; h. 145 West 58th St.. New
York. N. Y. ; summer, Hague, Warren
Co., N. Y.
P, — Born San Francisco, Cal., Sept. 17,
1857. Pupil of Bonnat, Boulanger and
I^efebvre in Paris. Member: ANA
1894, NA 1895 (cor. sec. 1898-1920; SAA
1905; A. Aid S.; Lotos C; Century Assoc;
NAC; Salma. C. Awards: Clarke
prize, NAD, 1894; bronze medal, Pan-
Am. EXp., Buffalo, 1901; special com-
memorative gold medal, St. Louis Exp.,
1904. Work : "Passing of Summer,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York; "A
Vision of Love," Montpelier (Vt.) Mu-
seum; "A Study in Black," City Art
Museum, St. Louis; "An Auto Sugges-
tion," Buffalo Fine Arts Academy; "The
Drop Sinister." Portland (Me.) Museum.
WATROUS, Mary E., Laguna Beach, Cal.
P.— Me m b e r : Calif. AC.
WATSON, Adele, 20 West 10th St., New
York, N. Y.; summer, 283 South Grand
Ave., Pasadena, Cal.
P.— Born Toledo, O., Apr. 30, 1873.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. and Raphael
Collin in Paris. Member: PBC;
N. A. Women PS; S. Indp. A.
WATSON, Agnes M., 10 South 18th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I., T.— Born Philadelphia. Pupil of
Pennsylvania Museum School of In-
dustrial Art and of Howard Pyle.
Member: Plastic C.
WATSON, Amelia Montague, "Wild
Acres," East Windsor Hill, Conn.
P.. I., T.— Born East Windsor Hill,
March 2, 1856. Specialty. 'Southern
scenery. Cover and frontispiece for
"The Carolina Mountains." by Margaret
W. Morley; illustrations for Thoreau'a
"Cape Cod"; "Thousand Mile Walk to
the Gulf," by John Muir.
WATSON, Charles A., 729 Homestead St.,
Baltimore, Md.
P.— Born Baltimore, Nov. 16, 1857. Pu-
pil of Andre Castaigne, E. S. Whiteman
and D. Woodward. Member: Char-
coal C.
WATSON, Dawson. See Dawson — Wat-
son.
WATSON, Dudley Crafts, 704 Marshall
St.. Milwaukee, Wis.
P.. T., W.. L.— Born Lake Geneva, Wis..
April 28, 1885. Pupil of AI Chicago;
Sorolla; Sir Alfred East. Member:
Chicago SA; Wisconsin PS; Cliff Dwell-
ers' Club, Chicago. Award : Hon. men-
tion for water colors. AIC, 1911.
Work: "Monsalvat," Milwaukee Art
Inst., "Parliament Tower, London,"
Burlington (Iowa) Public Library. Lec-
turer on the fine arts. Art editor, Mil-
waukee; "Journal." Originator of the
Music-Picture Symphonies; official di-
rector of pageantry. City of Milwaukee;
director, Milwaukee Art Institute; Edu-
cational Director of Minneapolis Inst,
of Arts; Rockford, 111. Art Club; Spring-
field, Ind. Art Association; Minnesota
State Fair; Lecturer on Art, 1920-21, St.
Paul Institute.
WATSON, Elizabeth H., 126 South 18th
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Pupil of PAFA. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA. Award : Mary Smith
prize, PAFA 1896.
601
WATSON
WHO*S WHO IN ART
WEBER
WATSON, Elizabeth V. Taylor, 404 Fen-
way Studios, Ipswich St., Boston,
Mass.; h. 165 Rawson Road, Brookline,
Mass.; summer, Clark's Island, Ply-
mouth, Mass.
P. — Born in New Jersey, Pupil of Tar-
bell, DeCamp. Member: Copley S.
Award : Bronze medal, Tennessee
Centennial Exp., Nashville, 1897. •
WATSON, Ernest W., Pratt Institute; h.
181 Emerson Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. ;
summer, The Berkshire Summer School
of Art, Monterey, Mass.
I., Li., T. — Born Conway, Mass., Jan.
14, 1884. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art
School, Boston; Pratt Institute, Brook-
lyn. One of the founders and directors
of The Berkshire Summer School of Art.
WATSON, Mrs. Eva Auld, 181 Emerson
PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. ; summer, Mon-
terey, Mass.
P., I., C— Born in Texas, April 4, 1889.
Pupil of M. O. Leisser, Pittsburgh
School of Design, Pratt Inst., Brook-
lyn. Member: Boston SAC.
Award: Hon. mention, P,-P. Exp.,
San F., 1915.
WATSON, Harry, Jr., Flanders Hotel,
47th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
WATSON, Henry S(umner), 38 West 72nd
St., and care of "Players," 16 Gramercy
Park, New York, N. Y.
I.— Born Bordentown, N. J., 1868, Pu-
pil of Thomas Eakins in Philadelphia;
Laurens in Paris. Member: SI 1904,
WATSON, Jessie N., 1004 Chemical Bldg.;
h. 5723 Vernon Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
P„ A,— Born Pontiac, 111., Jan, 13, 1870,
Member: 2x4 S,
WATSON, Nan, Harbor Springs, Mich.
P. — Born Edinburgh, Scotland. Pupil
of Chase, Du Mond, Girardot and Prinet
in Paris. Member: S. Indp. A.
WATT, Barbara H(unter), 25 Oakland
St., Wellesley Hills, Mass.; summer.
Camp Quanset, South Orleans, Mass.
P., I., A., C, W.— Born Wellesley, Mass.
Pupil of Albert H. Munsel, V. L. George,
J, De Camp and D, J. Connah. Mem-
ber: Brush and Chisel C. ; Alumni
Asso. of Mass. Norm. Art School
Work: Mural decoration, "Pan,"
Mass. Normal Art School, Boston.
WATT, William G., 54 West 9th St.,
New York. N. Y.
Wood Engr. — Born New York, May 18,
1867. Pupil of E. Heinemann, Emile
Clement w.nd NAD. Member: Sal-
ma.C. 1903. Work: "The Harvest,"
after L'Hermitte; "The Pool," after
own painting; "A Music Party," after
Metsu; "The Trousseau," by C. W,
Hawthorne; "Magnolia," by J. J. Shan-
non. Work in: New York Public Li-
brary; Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh;
Public Library, Newark, N, J.; Metro-
politan Museum Library, New York:
Salmagundi Club.
WATTS, William Clothier, Carmel, Mon-
terey Co,, Calif.
P,— Born Philadelphia, Pa. Pupil PAFA.
Member: Fellowship PAFA; Phila.
Sketch C,
WAUGH, Colton, 428 Lafayette St., New
York, N. Y. (I.)
WAUGH, Frederick J(udd), Kent, Conn.
Marine P., I. — Born Bordentown, N. J.,
Sept. 13, 1861; son of S. B. Waugh, por-
trait painter. Pupil of PAFA; Julian
Academy in Paris. Member: Royal
Academy of the West of England, Bris-
tol, ANA, 1909; NA, 1911; Salma. C.
1908; Lotos C. (life); NAC (life); Conn.
AFA; Fellowship PAFA. Awards :
Clarke prize, NAD 1910; gold medal,
Buenos Aires Exp,, 1910; $100 prize,
Boston Art Club; Harris bronze med-
al and $300, AIC 1912; prize ($100),
Conn. AFA 1915; silver medal, P,-P,Exp,,
San F,. 1915. Work: "Roaring Forties"
and "The Great Deep," Metropolitan
Museum, New York; "The Outer Surf"
and "Surf and Fog, Monhegan," Art In-
stitute of Chicago; "The Coast," Mu-
seum of Art, Toledo; "After a North-
easter" and "Southwesterly Gale, St,
Ives," National Gallery, Washington;
"Under the Full Moon," Brooklyn In-
stitute Museum; "Evening, Coast of
Maine," Art Museum, Montclair, N. J.;
"The Blue Gulf Stream," Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts. Represented
in Bristol (Eng.) Academy; Walker Art
Gallery, Liverpool; Durban Art Gallery,
South Africa; Dallas Art Association;
Austin (Tex.) Art League; City Art
Muesum, St. Louis. Author of "The
Clan of Munes."
WAXMAN, Mrs. Francis S. See Sheafer.
WAYMAN, Nelson P., 814 Jarvella St..
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
WEATHERLY, Newton, Geneva, N. Y.
P, — M ember: Rochester AC.
WEAVER, Clara. See Mrs. W. P. Par-
rish,
WEBB, Charles A., 21 Ampersand Ave,,
Saranac Lake, N, Y,
P.— M ember: NYWCC.
WEBB, Edna Dell, 9 Lansing Avenue,
Troy, N, Y. ; summer, Navesink, N, J.
P., T,— Born Cohoes, N, Y., Feb. 12,
1891. Pupil of NAD; Troy School of
Arts and Crafts.
WEBB, Herbert, Lumber Exchange Bldg.,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
WEBB, J(acob) Louis, 32 East 42nd St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born 1856. Member: SAA 1888;
ANA 1906.
WEBB, Margaret Ely, Denison House, 93
Tyler St.. Boston, Mass.; 26 West Mich-
eltonva St., 'Santa Barbara, Calif,
I., E.— Born Urbana, 111., March 27, 1877.
Pupil of Twachtman and Cox in New
York. Illustrated "The House of Pray-
er," by F, C, Converse; "Aldine First
Reader," "Under Greek Skies," etc.
WEBER, August J(ames), 1234 Louden
Ave., Cincinnati, O.; h. 420 Third St.,
Marietta, O,
P,— Born Marietta, 0„ Oct. 21, 1889.
Pupil of Meakin and Duveneck in Cin-
cinnati. Member: Cincinnati AC.
I
602
WEBER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WEINMAN
WEBER, F(rederick) (Theodore), 65-67
East 56th St., New York, N. Y.
P., S., E. — Born Columbia, S. C, Mar.
9, 1883. Pupil of Laurens and Ecole
des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Member:
Alliance; NTWCC; Brooklyn SE. Etch-
ings in the Library of Congress, Wash-
ington.
WEBER, Max, Nassau Haven, New Hyde
Park, L. I., N. Y.
P., T., L.— Born in Russia, Apr. 18, 1880.
Pupil of Dow; Laurens and Matisse in
Paris. Member : Modern Artists;
Lg. of N.Y.A. Author, "Essays on Art,"
"Cubist Poems," etc.
WEBER, Sarah S. Stilwell, 1906 Sansom
St., Philadelphia, Pa. (I.)
WEBERG, John, 80 Sylvania St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
WEBSTER, E. Ambrose, Provincetown,
Mass.
P., T.— Born Chelsea, Mass., Jan. 31,
1869. Pupil of Boston Museum under
Benson and Tarbell; Laurens and Ben-
jamin-Constant in Paris. Member:
Provincetown AA; Boston AC.
WEBSTER, Harold Tucker, Tribune
Bldg., 154 Nassau St.; h. 370 Central
Park, West, New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Meddybemps, Me.
Cartoonist. — Born Parkersburg, West
Va., Sept. 21, 1885. Member: SI;
Salma. C. Author of "Our Boyhood
Thrills and other Cartoons"; "Boys and
Folks"; cartoon series entitled — "Our
Boyhood Ambitions"; "The Thrill that
comes once in a Lifetime"; "Life's
Darkest Moment"; "The Beginning of
a Beautiful Friendship"; "How to Tor-
ture your Wife."
WEBSTER, Herman A(rmour), 39 rue
d'Artois, Paris, France.
Painter-Etcher — Born New York, N. Y.,
April 6, 1878. Pupil of Laurens in Paris.
Member: R.Soc.of Painter-Etchers,
London; Soc.Nat.des Beaux-Arts, Paris;
Paris AAA; Chelsea AC; Cercle et
Union Interalli6s, Paris. Award :
Gold medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915,
Work in: Luxembourg, Paris; South
Kensington, London; Darmstadt; Li-
brary of Congress, Washington; Art In-
stitute, Chicago; Fogg Museum, Cam-
bridge, etc.
WEBSTER, Mary H(ortense), Midway
Studios. 6016 Ellis Ave., Chicago, 111.;
h. 1931 East 89th St., Cleveland, O.
P., S.. T.— Born Oberlin. O., May 16,
1881. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy
under Barnhorn and Nowottny; Injal-
ber. Verlet, and Waldmann in Paris;
Hitchcock in Holland; Hawthorne in
Provincetown. Member: Cleveland
Woman's AS.
WEDDELL, Iris, Hinsdale, 111.
E. — M ember: Chicago SE.
WEDDERSPOON, R(ichard) G(ibson),
4611 Ellis Ave., Chicago, 111.; summer,
Hollister, Mo.
P.— Born Red Bank, N. J., Oct. 15, 1889.
Pupil of Daniel Garber and Henry Mc-
Carter. Member: Fellowship PAFA;
Chicago SA; Chicago AC. Awards :
European scholarship, PAFA, 1915 and
1916; first Toppan prize, PAFA, 1917.
Represented in Chicago Civic Com-
mittee, DePau University.
WEEDELL, Hazel (Elizabeth), (Mrs.
Gustav F. Goetsch), 20 Elm Ave., Glen-
dale, Kirkwood, Mo.
P., E., C, T.— Born Tacoma, Wash.,
Jan. 26, 1892. Pupil of Gustav F.
Goetsch, Robert Koehler and Ernest
Batchelder. Member: Alumni, Min-
neapolis School of Art; St. Louis AG.
WEIFFENBACH, Elizabeth, 86 Delaware
Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. (P., T.)
WEI LAND, James, 61 Poplar St., Brook-
lyn, New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Toledo, O. Pupil of NAD;
Royal Academy in Munich; Delecluse
and Colarossi Academy in Paris. M e m-
ber: Salma.C; Allied AA; Province-
town AA.
WEILL, Edmund, 756 East 9th St., Brook-
lyn, New York, N. Y.
P., E.— Born New York, July 29, 1877.
Pupil of NAD under Edgar M. Ward.
Member: Brooklyn SA; Brooklyn
WCC; S. Indp. A; Salma. C.
WEINBERG, Mrs. E(milie) Sievert, 511
14th St., Oakland, Cal.
P.— Born Chicago, 111. Pupil of AIC
and William M. Chase. Member:
San F. AA; Calif. AC; Oakland AA;
Alumni Asso. AIC.
WEINBERG, Louis, 897 Riverside Drive,
New York, N. Y.
P., T. — Born Russian Poland, Apr. 11,
1885. Pupil of Sigismond de Ivanowski.
Member: S.Indp.A.
WEI N DORP, Arthur, W^oolworth Bldg.,
New York, N. Y. ; h. 216 Fifth Ave.,
Astoria, L. L, N. Y.
P., A., W., T.— Born Long Island City,
May 25, 1885. Member: S.Indp.A.
WEINERT, Albert, 256 West 55th St.; h.
201 West 15th St., New York, N. Y.
S. — Born Leipzig, Germany, June 13,
1863. Pupil of Ecole des Beaux-Arts,
in Brussels. Member: NSS.
1909; S.Indp.A. Work: "Lake George
Memorial," Lake George, N. Y.; "Mc-
Kinley Monument," Toledo, O.; "Statue
of Lord Baltimore," Baltimore, Md.;
marble groups in vestibule of Hall of
Records, New York, N. Y. ; "Stevens
T. Mason Monument," Detroit, Mich.;
historical tablets for Sons of the Revo-
lution and Society of Colonial Wars;
work at Panama-Pacific Exposition,
San Francisco, Cal.
WEINMAN, Adolph A(lexander), 441
West 21st St., New York, N. Y.
S. — Born Karlsruhe, Germany, Dec. 11,
1870; came to America in 1880. Pupil
of ASL of New York, Augustus Saint
Gaudens, Niehaus, Martigny, French,
and of Cooper Union. Member:
NSS 1900; N. Y. Arch. Lg. 1902; SAA
1903; ANA 1906; NA 1911; Nat. Inst.
A. L. ; Century Assoc; Am. Numis-
matic Soc. Member: Int. Jury
for Sculpture, P.-P. Exp., San F.,
1915. Awards : Hon. mention, Pan-
603
WEINRICH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WELSCH
Am.. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; silver medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904; silver medal,
Brussels Exp., 1910; gold medal of
honor for sculpture, N. Y. Arch. Leg.
1913; Saltus Medal for medal, American
Numismatic Society, 1920. Work:
Lincoln memorials at Hodgenville, Ky.,
and Madison, Wis.; "Gen. Macomb
Monument," Detroit; "Abraham Lin-
coln," statuette, Metropolitan Museum,
New York; "Indian," head, Brooklyn
Institute Museum; "The Rising Sun"
and plaque "Adelaide," Carnegie In-
stitute, Pittsburgh; "Descending Night,"
Kansas City Museum; "Alexander J.
Cassatt," New York; all sculpture on
exterior and interior of Pennsylvania
Railway Station, New York; sculpture
on facade and top of tower, Municipal
Bldg., New York. Designer of half
dollar and dime for U. S. Government.
Victory Button for U. S. Army and
Navy.
WEINRICH, Agnes, Provincetown, Mass.
P., E., C. — Born in Iowa.
WEIR, Edith Dean. See Mrs. J. DeW.
Perry.
WEIR, Irene- Hotel Netherland, Fifth
Ave. and 59th St., New York, N. Y.;
summer, Katonah, N. Y.
P., D., W,., L., T.— Pupil of J. H.
Twachtman. J. Alden Weir, Yale School
of Fine Arts; ASL of N. Y. ; Academic,
Paris. Member: NYWCC ; N. A.
Women PS; Alliance. Director, School
of Design and Liberal Arts and of Art
Alliance of America.
WEIR, John F(erguson), care of Yale
University, New Haven, Conn,
P., S., T., L., W.— Born West Point,
N. Y., Aug. 28, 1841. Pupil of his
father, Robert W. Weir, at West Point;
NAD in New York. Me m b e r : ANA
1864, NA 1866; Conn.AFA; Century
Assoc; Providence AC; New Haven
PCC. Director of the Yale School of
Fine Arts 1869 to 1913, and now Di-
rector Emeritus. Author of "John
Trumbull and His Works," etc.
Work: "Forging the Shaft," Metro-
politan Museum, New York; statues of
Pres. Woolsey and Prof. Silliman at
Yale Univ.; public fountain, New Haven
Green; numerous portraits at Yale and
elsewhere.
WEIS, John E(llsworth), 148 East Fourth
St.; h. 2125 Alpine PL, W. H., Cincin-
nati, O.
P., W., T. — Born Higginsport, O., Sept.
11, 1892. Pupil of Duveneck, Meakin,
Hopkins and Wessel. Member: Cin-
cinnati AC; Cincinnati MacD. C; Duve-
neck Soc. of P. and S.; Lg. of N. Y. A.
WEIS, S(amuel) W(ashington), 1815 Mai-
ler's Bldg., Chicago, 111.
P.— Born Natchez, Miss., Aug. 8, 1870.
Member: Salma.C; N. O. AA.
WEISBROOK, F. S., 48 McManus Bldg.,
Davenport, la.
P. — A ward: Bronze medal for wa-
ter color. St. Paul Institute, 1918.
WEISS, Mary L. (Mrs. William H.
Weiss), East Gloucester, Mass.
P. — Born Mauch Chunk, Pa. Pupil of
PAFA under Chase. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA; Plastic C.
WEISS, William L.,. East Gloucester,
Mass.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
WELCH. Katharine G., Spring Station.
Ky.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
WELCH, IVIabel R.. care Van Dyck Stu-
dios, 939 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y,;
Min.P., T. — Born New Haven, Conn.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under Cox and
Reid; Van der Weyden, Garrido, Lazar
and Scott in Paris. Member: N. A.
Women PS; Am. S. Min. P.; Pa. S. Min.
P.; Lg. of N.Y.A. Awards: Silver
medal, P.-P Exp., San F., 1915; medal
of honor, PAFA, 1920.
WELDON, C(harles) D(ater), 51 West
10th St., New York, N. Y.
I., P.— Born Ohio. Pupil of Walter
Shirlaw in New York; Munkacsy in
Paris. Member: ANA 1889, NA
1897; AWCS; Century Assoc. Award:
Bronze medal, Charleston Exp., 1902.
WELLS, Mrs. Alice Rushmore, 80 Wash-
ington Ave., Plainfield, N. J.
P. — Member: Am. S. Min. P.; Pa.S.
Min. P.; N. A. Women PS.
WELLS, Benjamin B., Hackensack, N. J.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
WELLS, Carrie Carter (Mrs. Charles J.
Wells), Mattituck, L. I., N. Y.
P.— Member: N. A. Women PS.
WELLS, Charles S., 3004 Hennepin Ave.;
summer, 5250 Penn Ave., South, Minne-
apolis, Minn.
S., T. — Born Glasgow, Scotland, June
24, 1872. Pupil of Karl Bitter, Augustus
Saint Gaudens, George G. Barnard.
Work : Fountain Gateway Park, City
of Minneapolis.
WELLS, Mrs. Emily, 210 Alexander St.,
Rochester, N. Y.
P. — M ember : Rochester AC.
WELLS. Newton A(lonzo), University of
Illinois; h. 803 West Oregon St., Ur-
bana. 111.
P., S., L, Arch., C, T.— Born Lisbon, St.
Lawrence Co., N. Y., April 9, 1852.
Pupil of Constant and Laurens in Paris.
Member: Mural P. 1905; Arch.Lg.of
America (vice-pres. 1904-06); Chicago
SE; Paris AAA. Instructor in paint-
ing, University of Illinois, since 1899.
Work : Mural decoration in Library of
Univ. of Illinois; Sangamon Co. Court
House, Springfield, 111.; Colonial Thea-
ter, Boston; Englewood High School,
Chicago.
WELSCH, Paul, 5 Rue du Quartier des
Quinze, Strasbourg, France.
P.— Born at Strasbourg, July 26, 1889.
Pupil of Maurice Denis, Charles Guerin,
Bernhard Naudin in Paris. Repre-
sented in: Chicago Art Inst.; Musee de
Mulhouse and Musee du Chateau des
Rohans in Strasbourg.
604
WELSH
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WEST
WELSH, Herbert, 814 Carpenter Lane,
Mt. Airy Station.; h. 5335 Baynton St.,
Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Dec. 4, 1851.
Pupil of Bonnat in Paris; F. Auguste
Ortmanns in Fontalnebleau; Onorato
Carlandi in Rome. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA.
WELSH, H (Grace) Devitt, 1520 Chestnut
St., Philadelphia, Pa.
I., E., P. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Mar.
2, 1888. Pupil of Thomas Anshutz, Wil-
liam M. Chase, Joseph Pennell, and
Walter Everett. Member: Phila.
Sketch C; Fellowship PAFA; 'SI; Phila.
WCC; Art Directors' Club. Work:
Etching of Rembrandt's "Mill," and
"St. Paul," Widener Collection, Phila-
delphia; etchings of the White House
for President Wilson; etching of "The
Lock," by Constable, Elkins Collection,
Philadelphia. Assistant Secretary of
Division of Pictorial Publicity, during
World War.
WEN DEL, Theodore, Ipswich, Mass.
P.— M ember: Boston GA. Award:
Sesnan medal, PAFA 1909; silver medal,
P.-P.Exp.. San F., 1915. Work: "Land-
scape," Cincinnati Museum; "Winter at
Ipswich," Pennsylvania Academy, Phila-
delphia.
WENDT, Julia M. Bracken (Mrs. Wm.
Wendt), 2814 N. Sichel St., Los An-
geles, Calif; Laguna Beach. Calif.
S., P.— Born Apple River, 111., June
10, 1871. Pupil of AIC under Taft.
Member: Chicago SA; Chicago
Municipal A.Lg. ; Los Angeles FAA;
Calif. AC; NAC; Three Arts C. of Los
Angeles. Awards : Sculpture prize,
Chicago, 1898; Chicago Municipal A.Lg.
prize, 1905; Harrison prize; gold medal,
Pan-Calif. Exp., San Diego, 1915; Calif.
AC, 1918. Work: "Illinois Wel-
coming the Nations," presented to the
State by 111. Woman's Bd.. Columbian
Exp., 1893; group, "Art, Science, and
History," Los Angeles Museum. In-
structor Otis Art Inst., Los Angeles.
WENDT, William, 2814 N. Sichel St., Lcs
Angeles, Calif; Laguna Beach, Calif.
P.— Born in Germany, Feb. 20, 1865;
settled in Chicago 18S0. Self-taught.
Member: ANA, 1912; Chicago SA;
NAC; Calif. AC" Ten Painters of
Los Angeles. Awards: Second
Yerkes prize, Chicago, 1893: Young
Fortnightly prize, AIC 1897; bronze
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo. 1901;
Cahn prize, AIC 1904; silver medal, St.
Louis Exp.. 1904; hon. mention. Chicago
SA 1905; silver medal, Wednesday Club,
St. Louis, 1910; Cahn hon. mention, AIC
1910; Fine Arts Bldg. prize, SWA, 1912;
Kirchberger prize, AIC, 1913; silver
medal, P.-P. Exp., San F.. 1915; Black
prize, Cal. AC, 1916. Work : "To Join
the Brimming River," Cincinnati Mu-
seum; "When All the World Is Young,"
"The Silence of the Night," Art Insti-
tute of Chicago; "Marine," Herron Art
Institute, Indianapolis; "Hills in Spring-
time," Hibbard High School, Richmond,
Ind. ; "Montecito," Cliff Dwellers Club.
Chicago; "Where Peace Abides," Des
Moines Assso. of Fine Arts.
605
WENIGER, Maria P., 14 St. Luke's PI.,
New York, N. Y.
S.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
WENGER, John, 1931 Broadway; h. 456
East 141st St.; summer, care of Fol-
som Galleries, 396 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Born Russia, June 16, 1886. Studied
at Art Academy, Petrograd. Mem-
ber: Salma.C; S.Indp.A.
WENTWORJTH, Adelaide E., 17 The Som-
erset, Avondale, Cincinnati, O.; sum-
mer, Kittery Depot, Me.
E., C, L., T.— Born Wakefield, N. H.
Pupil of D. W. Ross, W. S. Robinson,
Arthur Dow. Member: Cincinnati
Woman's AC; Crafters Co.
WENTWORTH, D(aniei) F., 904 Main
St.; h. 7 Regent St., Hartford, Conn.
P. — Studied in Munich, but largely self-
taught. Member: Conn. AFA.
(pres.). Work: "In the Lane," "In
the Forest of Allach," Wadsworth
Athenaeum.
WENTZ, Henry Frederick, Worcester
Bldg. Roof, Portland, Ore.; summer,
Neah-kah-mie Mt., Nehalem P. O., Ore.
P., C, L., T.— Born The Dalles, Ore.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Work: "Sand
Dune, Neahkahmie," Portland Art As-
sociation.
WERNER, Frank A., 5121 Drexel Blvd.,
Chicago, 111.
P. — M ember: Chicago SA.
WERNTZ, Car! N., 81 East Madison St.,
Chicago, 111.
P., I., T.— Born Sterling, 111., July 9, 1874.
Pupil of J. H. Vanderpoel, Frederick
Freer, Lawton Parker, Jeanette Pratt,
Orson Lowell, A. Mucha and Robert
Reid in America; Richard Miller In
Paris; Onorato Carlandi in Rome; Seti
Mizuno and Kaho Kawatika in Japan.
Me m b e r : Western Arts Assoc. ; Pa-
lette and Chisel C; Illinois Manual Arts
Assoc. Formerly cartoonist on "Chi-
cago Record." Illustrated books and
magazine articles. Founder, director
and instructor, Chicago Academy of
Fine Arts.
WESSEL, Bessie Hoover (Mrs. H. H.
Wessel), care Art Academy, Cincinnati,
O.
P. — Member: Cincinnati Woman's AC.
WESSEL, Herman H., Art Academy,
Cincinnati. O.
P. — Member: Cincinnati A C.
Award: Hon. mention, Herron Art
Institute, 1916.
WESSELHOEFT, Mary Fraser, 407
Bleecker St., New York, N. Y.
P., I., C— Born Boston, Mass., 1873. Pu-
pil of Boston Museum School; Denman
W. Ross and Charles H. Woodbury in
Boston; Von Habermann in Munich.
Member: Copley S. 1892; Chicago SE;
S. Indp. A.
WESSER, Ethelyn H., 1226 Bushwick
Ave., Brooklyn, New York, N. Y. (P.)
WEST, Mrs. George Parsons. See Isa-
belle Percy.
WEST
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WHITE
WEST, Louise, The Montreal, Baltimore,
Md. (P.)
WESTERMAN, Harry James, 1661 Frank-
lin Park, South, Columbus, O.
Cartoonist, P., I,, T., W. — Born Parkers-
burg-, W. Va., Aug. 8, 1876. Pupil of
Columbus Art School. Member: Co-
lumbus Pen and Brush Co.; Lg. of
Columbus Artists. On staff "Ohio State
Journal" since 1897; cartoonist, McClure
Newspaper Syndicate.
WESTON, Morris, Weston Art Galleries,
622 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y.;
summer, Essex, Conn.
P., S.. W., T.— Born Boston, Mass., Nov.
22, 1858.
WETHERBEE, George, "White Cottage,"
18 Redington Road, Hampstead, N. W.,
London, England.
P.— Born Cincinnati, O., 1851. Pupil of
Royal academies, London and Antwerp.
Member: Royal Inst. Painters in
Water Color; R. I. Painters in Oil.
Awards : Silver medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; also Chicago and Paris,
Work: "Music of Pipe and Brook,"
Albright Art Gallery, Buffalo.
WETHERILL, E(lisha) Kent K(ane), 143
East 23rd St.; h. 142 East 18th St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Phoenicia,
N. Y.
P., E.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 1,
1874. Pupil of Thomas Anshutz, Whis-
tler, Laurens. Award : Gold Medal,
Panama-Pacific Exp., San Francisco,
1915.
WETiVIORE, iVlary Minerva, 511 West
Church St., Champaign, 111.
Port. P.— Born Canfield, O. Pupil of
Cleveland Art School; ASL of New
York under Chase, Cox; Julian Academy
in Paris under Constant and Laurens;
Colarossi Academy under Courtois and
Prinet. Member: Chicago SA; Chi-
cago AG; N. A. Women PS. Instructor
of painting at University of Illinois.
WETTERAN, Rudolf, Woodstock, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
WETZEL, George J(ulius), 1624 Univer-
sity Ave., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York, Feb. 8, 1870. Pu-
pil of ASL of N. Y. under Mowbray,
Beckwith, Cox and Chase. Member:
ASL of N. Y. (life) ; Nat. Fine Arts Soc.
Awards : Hon. mention, AC Phila. ;
hon. mention, Salma. C. Work:
"Edgar Allan Poe Cottage," Bronx
Museum of Science and Art, New York.
WEYAND. Mrs. Charles L. See Edith
Varian Cockroft.
WHEELER, Cleora (Clark), 1376 Summit
Ave., St. Paul, Minn.
I., C. — Born Austin, Minn. Pupil of
Julie Gauthier. Member: Amer.
Bookplate S.; Minn. State AS.
Award : First award in design,
Minn. State AS., 1913.
WHEELER, Clifton A., 5317 Lowell Ave.,
Indianapolis, Ind.
P., T.— Born Hadley, Ind., Sept. 4, i883.
Pupil of Forsyth in Indianapolis; Henri,
Miller and Chase in New York; also
studied in Europe. Work: "Twilight
in January," Herron Art Institute,
Indianapolis; Thorntown (Ind.) Public
Library; mural paintings in Indianapolis
City Hospital; St. Joseph's Convent,
Tipton, Ind.; Circle Theatre, Indianap-
olis. Mural in Brookside School, Whit-
tier School, Indianapolis, Ind.
WHEELER, Dora. See Mrs. Wm. Keith.
WHEELER, E. Kathleen, Hillside, Wis.
(S.)
WHEELER, Janet D., 1710 Chestnut St.;
h. The Belgravia, Philadelphia, Pa.
Port.P.— Born Detroit, Mich. Pupil of
PAFA; Bouguereau and Courtois in
Paris. Member: Fellowship PAFA;
Plastic C. Awards: Toppan prize,
PAFA; Mary Smith prize, PAFA 1901;
gold medal, ACPhila. 1902; silver medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904.
WHEELER, Laura, Brinton Cottage,
Cheney, Pa.; summer, 166 Marion St.,
Brooklyn, New York, N. Y.
P., I., C, T.— Born Hartford, Conn.
Pupil of W. M. Chase, Henry McCarter,
and Violet Oakley. Illustrated "The
Shadow," "The Upward Path."
WHEELOCK, Lila Audubon (Mrs. Howard
Wheelock), 2041/2 West 13th St., New
York, N. Y.
S.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
WHEELOCK, Warren, 131 Macdougal St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
WHELEN, Blanclie, 1812 West 24th St.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
P. — Born Los Angeles, Calif. Pupil of
Nicholas Haz. Member: Calif. AC;
Whitney Studio C.
WHIPPLE, Elsie R., 1505 Orchlee St.,
N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
WHITAKER, Mrs. Stella Trowbridge, 1654
Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Mass.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
WHITE, Alden, Acushnet Station, New
Bedford, Mass.
E. — Born Acushnet, Mass., Apr. 11, 1861.
Pupil of V. Preissig. Member: Chi-
cago SE; Boston SE; New Bedford AG.
WHITE, Belle Cady, 150 Steuben St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y. ; summer, R. F. D., Old
Chatham, N. Y.
P.- -Born Chatham, N. Y., 1868. Pupil
of Pratt Inst, in Brooklyn; Snell, Wood-
bury, Herbert Adams and Hawthorne.
Member: Brooklyn WCC. Instruc-
tor in Pratt Institute.
WHITE, C(larence) Scott, Belmont, Mass.
Ldscp.P., T. — Born Boston, Mass., March
14, 1872. Pupil of Chnrles H. Wood-
bury. Member: Boston SWOP;
Copley S.
WHITE, Mrs. Emma L. R., 3 Gordon
Place, New Brighton, S. I., N. Y.
P. — Member: N. A. Women PS.
WHITE, Henry C(ook), Waterford, Conn.
P.— Born Hartford, Sept. 15. 1861. Pu-
pil of D. W. Tryon and ASL of N. Y.
Member: Conn.AFA; NYWCC; The
Pastellists.
WHITE, Juliet M. See Mrs. Gross.
606
WHITE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WHITMOOR
WHITE, Lucy Schwab, 340 Edward St.,
New Haven, Conn.
P. — M ember: New Haven PCC.
WHITE, Margaret Wood (Mrs. V. G.
White), 337 West 23rd St., New York,
N. Y.; summer. East Hampton, L. I.,
N. Y.
P.— Born Chicago, 111.. Mar. 4, 1893.
Pupil of Biloul, Humbert, Richard Mil-
ler, Johansen, Bridgman. Member :
N. A. Women PS.
WHITE, Nelson C(ook), Waterford, Conn.
P. — Born Waterford, Conn., June 11,
1900. Pupil of Henry C. White and
NAD. Member: Conn, AFA.
WHITE. Orrin A., 1302 Stevenson Ave.,
Pasadena, Cal.
P.— M ember: Cal.AC.
WHITE, (Thomas) Gilbert, "Cowmoney
Lodge," Fairfield, Conn.
Mural P., I., W., L.., T.— Born Grand
Haven, Mich., July 18, 1877. Pupil of
Laurens, Twachtman, MacMonnies,
Member: N. Y. Arch. Lg. Dec-
orated by French Government. Mural
decorations in Kentucky State Capitol;
Hotel McAlpin; New Haven County
Court House; Federal Building, Gads-
den, Ala.; Peninsula Club, Grand Rap-
ids, Mich.; Utah State Capitol; "Por-
trait of Gov. McCreary of Kentucky,"
Pan-American Building, Washington.
WHITE, Victor (Gerald), 337 West 23rd
St., New York. N. Y.
P.— Born Dublin, Ireland, Feb. 28, 1892.
Pupil of Chase, Bellows, Henri; Biloul,
Lucien Simon and Richard Miller in
Paris.
WHITE, Walter C(harles) L(ewis), Farm-
er's and St. Marks Aves., St. Albans,
L. I.. N. Y.
P., T. — Born ShefReld, Yorkshire, Eng-
land, 'Sent. 15, 1876. Pupil of Carlson,
Beck, Bridgman, Dow, Pratt Inst.
Member: Phila. AC; Brooklyn
Society of Artists; Brooklyn WCC.
WHITE, W. D., Edgemoor, Del. (I.)
WHITEHAIM. (Edna) IVIay, 32 Holly St.,
Clarendon, Va.
P., I. — Born Scribner, Neb., Jan. 16,
1887. Pupil of Sara Hayden and Sey-
mour at Univ. of Neb; AIC. Mem-
ber: Lincoln AC. Award : Neb-
raska State Fair prizes.
WHITEHEAD, Margaret Van Cortlandt,
4S68 Ellsworth Ave.. Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — Member: Pittsburgh A A.
Award : First prize, Pittsburgh AA,
1912.
WHITEHEAD, Walter, care the Frank
■Seaman Agency, 470 Fourth Ave., New
York. N. Y.
I.. T.— Born Chicago, 111., Sept. 2, 1874.
■ Pupil of AIC and Howard Pyle. In-
^ structor Chicago Academy of Fine Arts.
Member: SI 1911; Salma.C.
WHITEHURST, Cameiia, 411 N. Charles
St.; h. 1501 Eutaw PI., Baltimore, Md.;
summer, Roland Park, Md.
P. — Born Baltimore, Md. Pupil of
Chase, Beaux. Member: Fellowship
PAFA; N. A. Women PS. Awards:
First prize. All Southern Exhibition,
Charleston, S. C, 1921; hon. men., N. A.
Women PS, 1920, 1921.
WHITEMAN, S(amuel) Edwin, The Ter-
races, Mt. Washington, Baltimore, Md.
Ldscp.P.,T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa.
Pupil of Boulanger, Constant and Le-
febvre in Paris. Instructor Johns Hop-
kins Univ. Member: Charcoal C.
WHITESIDE, Frank Reed, 1010 Clinton
St., Philadelphia, Pa.; summer, Ogun-
quit. Me.
Ldscp.P., T.— Born Philadelphia, Pa.
Aug. 20, 1866. Pupil of PAFA; Laurens
and Constant in Paris. Member:
Phila.Sketch C; Fellowship PAFA;
Phila. WCC; Phila. Alliance.
WHITFIELD, Emma M(orehead), 1800
Grove Ave., Richmond, Va.
P., T. — Born Greensboro, N. C, Dec.
5, 1874. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Raphael
Collin in Paris. Member: Richmond
AC. Work: Portraits in State Li-
brary, Richmond, Va.; Richmond Col-
lege, Richmond, Va. ; Carnegie Library,
Greensboro, N. C. ; State Capitols, Ra-
leigh, N. C, and Jackson, Miss.
WHITING, Almon C(Iark), care of Sal-
magundi Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P. — Born Worcester, Mass., March 5,
1878. Pupil of Mass. Normal Art School
in Boston; Constant, Laurens and
Whistler in Paris. Member: Paris
AAA; Salma.C. Director, Toledo Mu-
seum, 1901-03. Work: "Notre Dame,
Paris," Museum of Art, Toledo.
WHITING, Florence, 117 East Walnut
Ave., Merchantsville, N. J.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAPA.
WHITING, John D., 345 Whitney Ave.;
h. 291 Edwards St., New Haven. Conn.
P., I.— Born Ridgefield. Conn., July 20,
1884. Pupil of John H. Niemeyer, G.
A. Thompson, Lucius W. Hitchcock.
Member: New Haven Paint and Clay
C.
WHITLOCK. Frances J(eannette), 6G6
West 36th St., Los A^ngeles, Calif.
P., C, T. — Born Warren, HI.. Dec. 12,
1870. Pupil of Dow and Charles Mar-
tin. Member: Calif. AC.
WHITLOCK, (Mary) Ursula, Petrus Stuy-
vesant Club, 129 East 10th St., New
York, N. Y. ; summer, care of Cecilia
Beaux, Gloucester, Mass.
P., C, T.— Born Great Barrington,
Mass., Jan. 6, 1860. Pupil of J. Alden
Weir; Julian Academy in Paris. M e m-
b e r : N. A. Women PS.
WHITMER, Mrs. Helen C(ro2ier), 316
Spahr St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.. T.— Born Darbv. Pa.. .Tan. 6. 1870.
Pupil of Breckenridge. Anshutz. Henri.
Thouron. Vonnoh. Member: Pitts-
burgh AA; S. Indp. A.
WHITMOOR. Robert H(uston), R. R. 1,
Osborne, Ohio; h. 726 Superior Ave.,
Davton, Ohio.
P.. E., C. T.— Born Davton, O., Feb.
22, 1890. Pupil of H. M. Walcott, James
R. Hopkins. Member: Dayton So-
ciety of Etchers.
607
WHITNEY
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WIGAND
WHITNEY, Beatrice (Mrs. Van Ness), 91
Francis St., Brookline, Mass.
P. — Born Chelsea. Mass., March 24,
1888. Pupil of Tarbell, Benson, Hale
and Pratt. Awards : Julian A. Shaw
prize, NAD 1914; silver medal, P. -P.
Exp., San P., 1915.
WHITNEY, Gertrude V(anderbilt) (Mrs.
Harry Payne Whitney), 8 West 8th St.,
and 19 Macdougal Alley; h. 871 Fifth
Avenue, New York, N. Y. ; summer,
Old Westbury, L. I., N. Y.
S. — Born New York City. Pupil of
James E. Fraser and Andrew O'Connor.
Member: N. A. Women PS; NSS.
Awards : Hon. mention, Paris Salon,
1913; NAC prize, N. A. Women's PS
1914; bronze medal, P.-P.Exp., San F.,
1915.
WHITNEY, Mrs. Helen Reed, Moylan,
Rose Valley, Pa.; summer, Nantucket,
IVTS-SS
p. — Born Brookline, Mass., July 1, 1878.
Pupil of Boston School of Drawing and
Painting under Hale, Benson and Tar-
bell. Member: Plastic C; Phila.
Alliance.
WHITNEY, Isabel L., 337 Fourth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.; h. 114 Remsen St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y. ; summer, Greenwich,
Conn.
Mural P., I., C. — Born in Brooklyn.
Pupil of Arthur Dow, Howard Pyle,
Haley-Lever. Member : Brooklyn
SA; NAC; Alliance; S.Indp.A.
WHITNEY, Margaret Q., 147 Gates Ave.,
Montclair, N. J.
S.— Born Chicago, 111., Feb. 12, 1900.
Pupil of Charles Grafly. Member:
Philadelphia Alliance, Fellowship
PAPA.
WHITNEY, Philip R.. Moylan, Rose Val-
lev, Pa. ; summer, Nantucket, Mass.
P., A., T.— Born Council Bluffs, la..
Dec. 31, 1878. Pupil of Fred Wagner;
Dep. of Art, Mass. Inst, of Technology;
School of Fine Arts, University of Penn-
sylvania. Member: Phila. Sketch
C. ; Phila. AC; Phila. Alliance. Work:
"Winter," in Pennsylvania State College.
WHITSIT, Jesse, 411 West 115th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born Decatur, 111., May 11, 1874.
WHITTEKER, Lilian E., 2621 Glenview
Ave., Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's AC.
WHITTEMORE, Mrs. Grace Connor, 6
Morse Ave., East Orange, N. J.
P., C, T. — Born Columbia Co., Pa.,
Oct. 29, 1876. Pupil of Daingerfield and
Snell. Member: N. J. Soc. Arts and
Crafts.
WHITTEMORE, William J(ohn), 58
West 57th St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born New York. March 26, 1860.
Pupil in New York of Wm. Hart, NAD,
and ASL. under P.eckwith; Lefebvre and
Constant in Paris. Member: ANA
1897; AWCS; NYWCC: Am.S.Min.P.;
Salma. C. 1890; Lotos C. Awards:
Silver medal. Paris Exp., 1889; bronze
medal, Atlanta Exp., 1895; bronze medal,
Charleston Exp., 1902; Proctor prize,
NAD, 1917.
WHYTE, James, 334 West 28th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
WICKHAM, Julia M., Cutchogue, L.L N.Y.
P.— M ember: N. A. Women PS.
WICKS, Heppie En Earl, 710 Carnegie
Hall, 156 West 57th St., New York, N. Y.
Port. P.. L., T.— Born Le Roy, Genessee
Co., N. Y. Pupil of L. M. Wiles, Irving
R. Wiles, C. Y. Turner; Julian Academy
and Beaux-Arts in Paris.
WICKSON. Guest, 2723 Bancroft Way,
Berkeley, Calif. (P.)
WICKWIRE, Jere R., 130 West 57th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
WIECHMANN, Margaret H(elen), Wain-
scott, L. L, N. Y.
S.— Born New York, Sept. 29, 1886. Pu-
pil of A. Phimister Proctor, ASL and
NAD in New York. Specialty, small
bronzes of animals.
WIECZOREK, Max, 311 Hollingsworth
Bldg., Los Angeles, Cal.
P. — Born Breslau, Germany, Nov. 22,
1863. Studied in Italy and Germany;
pupil of Ferdinand Keller, Max Thedy.
Member: Calif. AC; Laguna Beach
AA; Art Alliance; Calif. WCS.
Awards: Silver medal, Pan. -Calif.
Exp., San Diego, 1915; Harrison popular
prize, Calif. AC, 1918; merit prize, Ari-
zona State Fair, 1920; merit prize,
Laguna Beach AA, 1920; A. J. Ackerman
prize, Calif. AC, 1920. Work: "Portrait
of George Chaff ey," Library Union Chaf-
fey High School, Ontario, Calif.; "Head
of Christ," Keotona Inst, of Theosophy,
Hollvwood, Calif.; "The Old Sycamore."
Engineers' Club, New York, N. Y.;
"Foothills," Los Angeles Athletic Club.
WIEDERSEIM, Mrs. Grace Gebbie. See
Mrs. Drayton.
WIEDHOPF, Etta L. W., 7 East 101st
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: S.Indp.A.
WIEGAND, Gustav (Adolph), 44 West
96th 'St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Bremen, Germany, Oct. 2.
1870. Pupil of Dresden Royal Academy
under Eugene Bracht; Chase in New
York. Member: Salma. C; Allied AA.
Awards: Bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; second Hallgarten prize,
NAD 1905.
WIESSLER, William, Jr., 419 East Lib-
erty St., Cincinnati, O. (P.)
WIGAND, A. Albright (Mrs. Otto WI-
gand), 1947 Broadway, New York, N. Y. ;
Woodside Ave., Stapleton, S. I., N. Y..
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
Awards: N. Y. Woman's AC prize,
1908; Shaw memorial prize, NAD, 1909;
Simpson prize, N. Y. Woman's AC. 1909;
NAC prize, N. Y. Woman's AC, 1912.
WIGAND, Otto Charles, 1947 BroadAvay,
New York, N. Y.; h. Woodside Ave.,
Stapleton, S. L, N. Y.
P. — Born New York. Pupil of ASL In
New York; Boulanger and Lefebvre In
Paris. Member: NYWCC.
608
WIGGINS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WILFORD
WIGGINS, Carleton, 108 West 57th St.,
New York, N. Y.; summer, Lyme,
Conn.
P. — Born Turner's, Orange Co., N. Y.,
March 4, 1848. Pupil of NAD and
George Inness in New Yorl^. Mem-
ber: ANA 1890, NA 1906; SAA 1887;
AWCS; Salma.C. 1898 (pres.); Lotos C;
Brooklyn AC; A.Fund S.; A. Aid S.
Awards: Gold medal, Prize Fund
Exhibition. New York, 1894; bronze
medal, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901.
Work: "A Holstein Bull," Metropol-
itan Museum, New York; "The Plow
Horse," Lotos Club, New York; "The
Wanderers." Hamilton Club, Brooklyn,
N. Y.; "October," Corcoran Gallery,
Washington; "Evening after a Shower,"
National Gallery. Washington; "Cattle
In Pond" and "Sheep and Landscape."
Brooklyn Institute Museum: "Lake and
Mountains" and "Moonrise on the
Lake," Art Institute of Chicago; "Sheep
and Landscape," Newark Museum.
WIGGINS, Guy C, Lyme, Conn.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Feb. 23, 1883.
Pupil of his father, Carleton Wiggins
and of NAD in New York. Mem-
ber: Salma. C; Conn. AFA.; ANA
1916; Lotos C; NAC; Lyme AA; Allied
AA. Awards : Dunham prize, Conn.
AFA, 1916; Turnbull prize, Salma. C,
1916; Harris bronze medal and prize
($300), AIC, 1917; hon. mention, Phila.
AC, 1917; Flagg prize ($100); Conn.
AFA, 1918; Isidor prize, Salma C.
1919. "Wo rk: "The Metropolitan
Tower," Metropolitan Museum. New
York; "Columbus Circle — Winter" and
"Gloucester Harbor," National Gallery,
Washington; "Berkshire Hills — June,"
Brooklyn Institute Museum; "Old North
Docks." Hackley Art Gallery. Muskegon.
Mich.; "Lightly Falling Snow," Chicago
Art Institute; "Fifth Avenue, Winter."
Dallas Art Association; "Fifth Ave. and
42nd St.," Los Angeles Museum; "Opal-
escent Days," Lincoln, Neb., AA;
"Winter Morning," Museum, Newark,
N. J.; "Through the Storm," Lotos
Club; "Madison Square." National Arts
Club. Represented in Syracuse Museum
and Reading Museum.
WIGGINS, Sidney IVl(iller), 601 "West
138th St., New York, N. Y.; summer,
New Haven, Oswego Co.. N. Y.
P., E. — Born New Haven, N. Y., Jan.
12. 1883. Pupil of John Sloan, Robert
Henri. Member: S. Indp. A.
WILCOX, Lois, Mountain Road, Engle-
wood. N. J., summer, Woodstock, N. Y.
P. — Born Pittsburgh, Pa. Pupil of
Raphael Collin. H. R. Poore. F. V. Du
Mond, Philip Hale, Willard L. Metcalf.
Member: N.A. Women PS.
WILCOX, Urquhart, 79 Allen St., Buffalo,
N. Y.
P., T. — Born New Haven, Conn., 1876.
Pupil of ASL of Buffalo. Awards:
Fellowship prize, Buffalo SA 1906; Hen-
gerer prize (first award), Buffalo SA
1911; Fellowship prize, Buffalo SA
1913. Director School of Fine Arts.
Albright Art Gallery, Buffalo. N. Y.
Work: "A Song." Albright Art
Gallery, Buffalo.
WILDER, Arthur B., Woodstock, Vt.
P.— Born Poultney, Vt., April 23, 1857.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Brooklyn Art
Guild School. Member: Boston WCC.
WILDER, Ralph (Everett), "Record-Her-
ald," Chicago, 111.; h. 2131 Tasso Place,
Morgan Park, 111.
Caricaturist. — Born Worcester, Mass.,
Feb. 23, 1875. Pupil of AIC and Art
Academy of Chicago. On staff of "Chi-
cago Record-Herald" since 1903.
WILDHACK, Robert J., R. F. D. 11, Box
179, Los Angeles, Calif.; h. La Crescenta,
Calif.
I.. P.— Born Pekin, 111.. Aug. 27, 1881.
Pupil of Robert Henri In New York;
Otto Stark in Indianapolis. Mem-
ber: SI 1910; Salma.C. Specialty,
posters.
WILDIVIAN, Miss M., 1639 Race St., Phil-
adelphia, Pa.
P.— M ember: Phlla. AA.
WILES, Gladys (Lee), (Mrs. W. R. Jep-
son), care of I, R. Wiles, 130 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
P.— Born New York. Pupil of Cox,
Chase, Johansen, Wiles. Member:
N. A. Women PS; MacD. C. Award:
Medal of French Museum, N. A. Wom-
en PS, 1919.
WILES, Irving R(amsey), 130 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.
Port. P.— Born Utica, N. Y., Apr. 8,
1861. Pupil of his father, L. M. Wiles;
of Chase and of Beckwith in New
York; Carolus-Duran in Paris. Mem-
ber: ANA 1889, NA 1897; SAA 1887;
AWCS; Nat.Inst.AL; Port.P.; Allied AA;
Mural P.; Century Assoc; Lotos C; Paris
AAA; NAC. Awards: Third Hall-
garten prize, NAD 1886; Clarke prize.
NAD 1889; hon. mention, Paris Exp.,
1889; medal, Col. Exp., Chicago, 1893;
Evans prize, AWCS 1897; medal, Ten-
nessee Centennial, Nashville, 1897; Shaw
prize, SAA 1900; bronze medal, Paris
Exp., 1900; gold medal. Pan- Am. Exp.,
Buffalo, 1901; first Corcoran prize,
S. Wash. A. 1901; gold medal, St. Louis
Exp., 1904; silver medal, Appalachian
Exp., Knoxville, 1910; gold medal,
Buenos Aires Exp., 1910; Proctor por-
trait prize, NAD 1913; gold medal,
P. -P. Exp., San F.. 1915; Morris prize,
Newport AA, 1917; Maynard portrait
prize, NAD. 1919. Work: Four
portrait panels, Hotel Martinique, New
York; "Lady Betty." City Art Mu-
seum, St. Louis; "Ex-Mayor Schie-
ren," City Hall, Brooklyn, New York;
"The Student." Corcoran Gallery,
Washington; "The Brown Kimono" and
"Russian Tea." National Gallery. Wash-
ington; "General Guy V. Henry," Mili-
tary Academy, West Point, N. Y.;
"L. M,. Wiles" and "George A. Hearn,"
Metropolitan Museum. New York.
WILEV, Frederick J., 139 West 55th St.,
New York. N. Y.
P. — Member: Century Assoc; Lotos
C. Award: Bronze medal, St. Louis
Exp.. 1904.
WILFORD, L. F., 4115 Forest Ave., Kan-
sas City. Mo. (P.)
609
WILHELM
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WILLIAMS
WILHELM, Arthur L., 981 Hague Ave.,
St. Paul, Minn.
P. — Born Muscatine, la., Dec. 14, 1881.
Pupil of C. C. Rosenkranz, and AIC.
Award: Special mention, Minn. State
exhibition, 1916.
WILIMOVSKY, Charles A., Fine Arts
Institute; 2110 East 30th St., Kansas
City, Mo.
P., E.— Born Chicago, III., 1885. Pupil of
AIC; J. C. Johansen, and Wm. M.
Chase. Member: Chicago ASL;
Alumni AIC; Chicago SE. Awards:
Dean prize ($50), Kansas City Fine Arts
Inst., 1916; silver medal, Oklahoma
Artists, 1917; prize ($100), Kansas City
Art Inst., 1920. Represented in Linds-
borg, Kan., University; Kansas City
Club.
WILKE, William H(ancock), 1130 Shat-
tuck Ave., Berkeley, Calif.; summer,
Villa Grande, Sonoma Co., Calif.
I., E., C. — Born at San Francisco.
Pupil of A. F. Mathews; Laurens and
Blanche in Paris. Member: Calif.
SE; Calif. PM. Award : Gold medal,
P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915.
WILKINSON, Edith L., Lovell Studio,
Brewater St., Provinctown, Mass. (P.)
WILKINSON, Tom, 1 Madison Ave., New
York. N. Y. _ T A
P.— M ember: Guild of Free Lance A.
WILL. Blanca, 340 Millville Ave., Palo
Alto, Calif.; 26 Portsmouth Terrace,
Rochester, N. Y.; summer, Birchlea
Studio, Bluehill Falls, Me.
S I — Born Rochester, N. Y., July 7,
1881. Pupil of Herbert Adams, James
Eraser G. G. Barnard, Sonia Rosental;
D. W. Tryon, John Alexander, Tryon in
Karlsruhe; Tuhrig in Dresden.
WILLARD, Theodora, 3 Berkeley Place,
Cambridge, Mass. - . i,
P_Born Boston, Mass. Pupil of Ab-
bott Graves and A. W. Biihler. Mem-
ber: Copley S. 1892.
WILLCOX, Mrs. Anita Parkhurst. See
Parkhurst.
WILLET, Annie Lee (Mrs. William Wil-
let), 2218 St. James Place, Philadelphia;
summer, 7902 Lincoln Drive. St. Mar-
tin's, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa.
p c,^ W.— Born at Bristol, Pa., Dec.
15, 1866. Pupil of PAFA; studied in
France and England. Member: St.
Dunstan's Guild, Boston; Fellowship
PAFA- Phila. Alliance. Author of articles
on stained glass. Work : Designer and
maker in collaboration with William
Willet of the Sanctuary and aisle win-
dows. West Point Military Chapel;
Great West Window, Post Graduate
College, Princeton; Mather Memorial,
Trinity Cathedral, Cleveland; Guthrie
Memorial, St. John's Church, Locust
Valley, L. I.; St. Paul's Cathedral,
Pittsburgh; Harrison Memorial, Calvary
Church, Germantown; mural paintings
in St. Alvernia's Convent, Pittsburgh;
Presbyterian Hospital Chapel, Pitts-
burg; Thaw Memorial, Third Presby-
terian Church, Pittsburgh; Buchanan
Memorial, St. Nathaniel's Church, Phila-
delphia; all windows in St. Matthews',
Conshohocken, Pa.; Chamberlaine Me-
morial, Fox Chase, Philadelphia; win-
dow in Torresdale P. E. Church, Pa.;
Harrison Memorial, Holy Trinity, Phila-
delphia; Herbert Hugh Riddle Memorial,
Chicago; memorials in Greenwood
Cemetery Chapel, New York; Trinity
Church, Syracuse; St. Paul's Church,
Halifax, N. S.
WILLETT, Arthur R(eginald), 489 Fifth
Ave., New York; h. Bronxville, N. Y.
Mural P.— Born England, Aug. 18, 1868.
Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1897; Mural
P.; A. Aid S.
WILLETT, J., 324 East 19th St., New
York, N. Y.
P.— Born Russia, June 22, 1882. Stud-
ied in Munich and Paris, and at the
Imperial Academy of Art in Petrograd.
WILLIAMS, Alyn, 230 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y.; h. Barrack's Hill,
Plimpton, Sussex, England; summer,
R. F. D. 37, South Norwalk, Conn.
P., W., L., T.— Born in Wales, Aug.
29, 1865. Pupil of Laurens and Cour-
tois in Paris. Member: R.S.M.P. ;
Pa. S. Min. P.; Royal Cambrian Acad-
emy. Work: Miniatures of King
Edward VII. and Queen Alexandra in
Guildhall, London, Art Gallery.
WILLIAMS, Mrs. Ada G., 1365 Chapel St.,
Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
WILLIAMS, Adele, 1009 West Ave., Rich-
mond, Va.
P.— M ember: NYWCC. Award:
Prize, Pittsburgh AA 1912.
WILLIAMS, Adele Fay, 111 Bliss St.,
Joliet, 111.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh Art Assoc.
Award : Prize, Pittsburgh AA, 1912.
WILLIAMS. Charles D., 118 East 28th
St., New York, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI.
WILLIAMS, Charles Sneed, 408 South
Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111.; h. 654
Fourth Ave., Louisville. Ky.
P.— Born Evansville, Ind., May 24, 1882.
Studied in Louisville, New York and
London. Member: Union Interna-
tionale des Beaux-Arts; Louisville AA;
Wash. AC. Award : Four-year resi-
dent scholarship at Allan-Praser Art
College, Scotland, 1902.
WILLIAMS, Clara Elsene Peck (Mrs.
J. Scott Williams), South Dwight
Place, Englewood, N. J.
P., I.— M e m b e r : SI 1912 (assoc);
NYWCC; N. A. Women PS; Fellowship
PAFA. Award : Watrous prize, N. Y.
Woman's AC 1912.
WILLIAMS, Dwight, 44 Albany St., Ca-
zenovia, N. Y.
Ldscp.P., T. — Born Camillus, Onondaga
Co., N. Y., Apr. 25, 1856. Pupil of
John C. Perry. Member: Central
N.Y.Soc.A, Work: "Landscape,"
Hamilton College; "Landscape," Ca-
zenovia Public Library.
610
WILLIAMS
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WILLOUGHBY
WILLIAMS, Eleanor Palmer (Mrs. Car-
roll R. Williams), 3708 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.; summer. New Hope,
Bucks Co., Pa.
P. — Born Baltimore, Md. Pupil of
Maryland Inst, in Baltimore; George H.
Smillle, B. West Clinedlnst and Hugh
Newell in New York; Margaret Lippin-
cott in Philadelphia. Member:
Phila. WCC; Plastic C; Phila. Alliance.
WILLIAMS, Florence Alston, 728 Mont-
gomery St.; h. 1925 Octavia St., San
Francisco; summer, Monterey. Calif.
P. — Born 'San Francisco, Calif., Sept.
30, 1890. Pupil of N. Y. ASL and PAFA.
Member: San F. A A.
WILLIAMS. FCrederick) Ballard, 27 West
67th St., New York, N. Y.; h. Glen
Ridge, N. J.
P.— Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 21, 1871.
Pupil of Cooper Union and NAD in New
York. Member: ANA 1907, NA
1909; NYWCC; Lotos C; Salma.C. 1898;
NAC. Awards : Bronze medal, Pan.-
Amer. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; Inness prize,
Salma. C, 1907; Isidor gold medal, NAD.
1909. Work: "A Glade by the Sea"
and "Conway Hills," National Gallery.
Washington; "Happy Valley" and
•'L' Allegro," Metropolitan Museum, New
York; "Vivacetto," Albright Art Gal-
lery, Buffalo; "Chant d' Amour," Brook-
lyn Institute Museum; "Old Viaduct at
Little Falls, N. J." and "Sea Echoes,"
Art Museum, Montclair, N. J.; "Grand
Canyon," Hackley Art Gallery, Muske-
gon. Mich.; "Spring," Brooklyn Institute
Museum; "A Glimpse of the Sea," City-
Art Museum, St. Louis; represented in
collections of Dallas Art Association;
Lotos Club, New York; National Arts
Club. New York; Quinnipiack Club,
New Haven.
WILLIAMS, Gaar, The Indianapolis
News, Indianapolis, Ind. (I.)
WILLIAMS, George Alfred, Kennebunk-
port, Me.
P.— Born Newark, N. J., July 8, 1875.
Studied under Chase and Cox. Award:
Silver medal, P.-P. Exp., San F., 1915.
Work: "The Drama of Life— The
Marginal Way," Art Institute of Chi-
cago; 6 decorative paintings, "Tristan
and Isolde," in Newark Museum.
WILLIAMS, Henrietta, 17 Bedford Ave.,
Grafton, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
WILLIAMS, John A(lonzo), 51 West 10th
St.; h. 39 West 67th St., New York, N. Y.
I. — Born Sheboyan, Wis., March 23,
1869. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. and Met-
ropolitan Museum School. Member:
SI 1910; Salma.C.; NAC.
WILLIAMS, J(ohn) Scott, 8 East 66th
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer, Rose-
field Gardens, R. F. D. No. 2, Plainfield,
N. J.
P., I., E., C. — Born Liverpool, Eng.,
Aug. 18, 1877. Pupil of AIC. Mem-
ber: AWCS; NYWCC; Salma. C;
SI; N. Y. Arch. Lg.; Phila. Sketch C;
Guild of Free Lance A.; Alumni Asso.
AIC. Awards : Shaw black and
white prize, Salma. C, 1912, Vezin
prize, Salma. C, 1914; Isidor prize,
Salma. C, 1919. Represented by mural
and glass work in Bush Terminal Sales
Bldg., New York, N. Y.
WILLIAMS, Kate A., 1264 Boston Rd.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: N. A. Women PS.
WILLIAMS, May, 5722 Baum Blvd.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
WILLIAMS, Reed, 1111 Central Bldg., Los
Angeles, Calif.
E. — M ember: Los Angeles Print
Makers.
WILLIAMS, Walter Reid, 3158 North Hal-
sted St.. Chicago, 111.
S. — Born Indianapolis, Ind., Nov. 23,
1885. Pupil of Charles Mulligan, Bela
Pratt; Paul Bartlett and Merci6 in
Paris.
WILLIAMS, Mrs.. W. N., 52 West Maiden
St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
WILLIAMSON, Ada C, care of Art Al-
liance, 18th and Walnut Sts., Philadel-
phia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA;
Plastic C. Award Shillard- Smith
gold medal, Plastic C. 1913.
WILLIAMSON, Mrs. A. W., 1936 Madison
Rd., E., Cincinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
WILLIAMSON, J. Maynard, Jr., h. 514
So. Linden Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P., I.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., June 7,
1892. Pupil of F. V. Du Mond. Mem-
ber: Pittsburgh AA. Award : Prize,
Pittsburgh AA 1911.
WILLIAMSON, Margaret T., 514 South
Linden, St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
WILLIAMSON, Shirley (Mrs. Edward
Lincoln Williamson), 425 Treehaven
Apts., Berkeley, Calif.; Carmel, Calif.
P. — Born New York. Pupil of Arthur
Dow, ASL in New York; Constant and
Rodin in Paris. Member: N. A.
Women PS.
WILLING, John Thomson, 171 Madison
Ave., New York, N. Y.; h. 5909 Wayne
Ave., Germantown, Pa.; summer, Henry-
ville, Munroe Co., Pa.
P., C, W., L.— Born Toronto, Canada,
Aug. 5, 1860. Pupil of Ontario School
of Art. Member: Am. Inst, of
Graphic A.; Royal Canadian Academy
(assoc); Art Directors' C; SI. Editor,
Motion Play Magazine.
WILLIS, Albert Paul, 4703 Springfield
Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.; summer, Bailey
Island, Casco Bay, Me.
Ldscp.P., T.— Born Philadelphia, Nov.
15, 1867. Pupil of Frank V. Du Mond.
Member: Phila.WCC; Phila.Sketch C.
WILLOUGHBY, Alice Estelle, The Rock-
ingham, Washington, D. C.
P.— Born Groton, N. Y. Pupil of Wash-
ington Art Lg. ; Corcoran Art School.
Member: Wash. WCC; Wash. AC.
611
WILLSON
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WIN SLOW
WILLSON, Martha B(uttrick) (Mrs.
Howard D. Day), 88 Congdon St., Provi-
dence, R. I.
Min. P. — Born Providence, R. I., Aug.
16, 1885. Pupil of Lucia Fairchild Ful-
ler. Member: Providence AC.
WILMES. Frank, 1560 Elm St., Cincin-
nati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati AC (sect.).
WILMOT, Alta E., 939 Eighth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P.— M ember: SPNY.
WILSON, Beatrice Hope, 973 Park Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
WILSON, Charles, 2310 Beaumont Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
WILSON, Claggett, 111 East 62nd St.,
New York, N. Y. ; summer, Squirrel
Island, Me.
P. — Born Washington, D. C, Aug. 3,
1887. Pupil of F. Luis Mora, Richard
Miller, and Laurens in Paris. Mem-
ber: S.Indp.A.
WILSON, Edward A., 31 West 67th St.,
New York, N. Y.; h. 524 Watchung Rd.,
Bound Brook, N. J.
I. — Born Glasgow, Scotland, Mar. 4,
1886. Studied AIC, and with Howard
Pyle. Member: SL 1912; Salma. C;
Guild of Free Lance Artists; Art Di-
rectors' Club.
WILSON, Frederick, Briarcliff Manor.
Westchester Co., N. Y.; and 35 West
82nd St., New York, N. Y.
P., I., C— Born Great Britain, Nov. 3,
1858. Pupil of Charles Wilson in Eng-
land. Member: N.Y.Arch.Lg. 1911; AC
Phila. Award: Gold medal, Paris, 1900.
Work: Mural painting and glass,
Cuyahoga County Court House, Cleve-
land, O.; "Christ Reigning from Cross,"
reredos St. Clement's Church, Phila-
delphia; "Memorial to Chinese Gor-
don," Manchester Cathedral, England;
cartoons for "Wade Memorial," mosaic,
Cleveland, O.; cartoons for "Morgan
Dix Memorial," Staten Island, N. Y.;
"Farragut Memorial," Annapolis Naval
Academy, etc.
WILSON, Mrs. Grace, 5857 Ellsworth
Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
WILSON, Helen, 1928 E Street, Lincoln,
Neb.
P., C, T.— Born Lincoln, Neb.. Oct. 26,
1884. Pupil of AIC; Charles W. Haw-
thorne. Member: Chicago ASL.
WILSON, Henrietta. Art Academy, Cin-
cinnati, O. ; h. 3912 Spencer Ave., Nor-
wood, O.
P., T. — Born Cincinnati, O. Pupil of
Cincinnati Art Academy. Member:
Cincinnati Woman's AC. Instructor,
Cincinnati Art Academy.
WILSON, Kate, 3912 Spencer Ave., Nor-
wood. O.
P. — Born Cincinnati. O. Pupil of Louis
Rebisso at Cincinnati Art Academy.
M e m h e r ; Cincinnati Woman's AC.
WILSON, Mrs. Lucy Adams, Conserva-
tory of Art and Music; h. 219 Eighth
St., Miami, Fla.
P.— Bi?rn Warren, O., in 1855. Pupil
of Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis;
ASL of N. Y.; William Forsyth and T.
C. Steele. Member: Chicago WCC.
Represented in Herron Art Inst.; Con-
servatory of Art and Music, Miami, Fla.
WILSON, Mrs. Rose Cecil O'Neil, Bonne-
brook, Day P. O., Tanney Co., Mo.;
and 62 Washington Sq., New York,
N. Y.
I. — Born Wilkes -Barre, Pa. Member:
Soc.des Beaux-Arts (assoc), Paris; SI
1912 (assoc).
WILSON, Sarah C, Quay Sq., Beaver, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
WILSON, Vaux, 143 22nd St., Elmhurst,
L. I., N. Y. (I.)
WINCH ELL, Ward, 219 Union Oil Bldg.,
Los Angeles, Cal.
P. — M ember: Cal. AC.
WINEBRENNER, Harry, Venice, Cahf.
P.— Member: Calif. AC.
WING, Anna Belle. See Mrs. Kindliind.
WINGERT, Edward Oswald, Oak Lane,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Feb. 29, 1864.
Pupil of Hovenden, Anshiitz and Porter
in Philadelphia. Member: Fellow-
ship PAFA.
WINKLER, John W., 728 Pine St., San
Francisco, Calif.
P., E.— Member: Calif. PM. ; Chi-
cago SE. Awards : Logan prize,
Chicago SE, 1918; purchase prize, Calif.
SE, 1919. Work in: Chicago Art
Institute.
WINN, James H(erbert), Fine Arts Bldg.,
410 South Michigan Ave.; h. 9562 Pros-
pect Ave., Chicago, 111.
P., S., C, W., T. — Born Newburyport,
Mass., Sept. 10, 1866. Pupil of AIC.
Member : Chicago SA; Chicago WCC;
Cliff Dwellers C; Alumni AIC.
Awards : Arthur Heun prize, AIC,
1910; first prize and gold medal. Woman's
Convention Exhibition, Knoxville, Tenn.,
1913. Instructor, Jewelry and Metal
Work, Art Inst., Chicago.
WINNER, Margaret F., 1619 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P., I., T. — Born Philadelphia. Pupil of
PAFA and Howard Pyle. Member:
Plastic C.
WINSLOW, Earle B., 21 Bennett Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born North ville, Mich., Feb. 21,
1884. Pupil of Detroit Fine Arts School;
ASL of N.Y. Member: Salma. C.
WINSLOW, Mrs. Eleanor C. A., 1190
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Norwich, Conn., May, 1877.
Pupil of ASL of N.Y.; studied in Paris.
Award : Third Hallgarten prize, NAD
1907. Member: N. A. Women PS;
Conn. AFA; Norwich AA,
612
WIN SLOW
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WOLFE
WINSLOW, Henry, 10 Fitzroy St.. Lon-
don. W.. England.
P., E., Engr. — Born Boston, Mass., 1874.
Pupil of Whistler in Paris. Member:
Chicago SE: AI Graphic A. Work in:
British Museum, London; Bibliotheque
Nationale. Paris: Boston Museum of
Fine Arts; New York Public Library.
WINSTANLEY, John Breyfogle, care of
Dentists' Supply Co., 220 West 42nd
St., New York, N. Y.
P., W.. I. — Born Louisville, Kv. Pupil
of PAFA . Member: NYWCC; Fel-
lowship PAFA. Award : Bronze
medal, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915.
WINTER, Alice Beach (Mrs. Charles A.
Winter). 53 East 59th St.. New York,
N. Y. : summer, 135 Mt. Pleasant Ave.,
East Gloucester, Mass.
P.. S.. I. — Born Green Ridge, Mo., March
22, 1877. Pupil of St. Louis School of
Fine Arts and ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: N. A. Women PS; S. Indp. A.
Specialty. childhnAt^ subjects.
WINTER, Charles Arilan), 53 East 59th
St., New York. N. Y.
P., I.— Born Cincinnati, O.. Oct. 26.
1869. Pupil of Cincinnati Art Academy
under Noble and Nowottny; Julian
Academy in Paris under Bouguereau
and Ferrier. Award: Foreign
scholarship from Cincinnati Art Acad-
emy, 1894.
WINTER, Ezra (Augustus), 7 MacDougal
Alley, New York, N. Y.
P.. I. — Born Manistee, Mich., March 10,
1886. Pupil of Chicago Academy of
Fine Arts; American Academy in Rome.
Member: Palette and Chisel C,
Chicago; Mural P.; N. Y. Arch. Lg. ;
American Academy at Rome Scholar-
ship, 1911-14. Work: Decorations in
offices of Guaranty Trust Co., New
York; Great Hall and Vestibule, (IJunard
Bldg., New York.
WINTER. Milo (Kendall), 621 Sheridan
Road, Evanston, 111.
I. — Born Princeton, 111.. Aug. 7. 1888.
Pupil of AIC. Member: AWCS: Cliff
Dwellers, Chicago. Illustrated "Nights
with Uncle Remus." "Aesop's Fables."
"Alice in Wonderland," "Billy Pop-
Gim." etc.
WINTER, Raymond, Fairhaven, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
WINTRINGHAM, Frances M., 6 Charles
St., New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Brooklyn, N. Y., Mar. 15, 1884.
Pupil of George Bellows, Kenneth Hayes
Miller, Robert Henri and Charles Haw-
thorne. Member: S. Indp. A.; Lg.
of N.Y.A.
WIRE, Melville T., 409 Center St., Ore-
gon City, Ore.
P.— Born Austin, 111., Sept. 24, 1877.
WIRTH. Anna M(aria). 518 North Lake
Ave., Pasadena, Calif.; h. 248 Barron
Ave.. Johnstown. Pa.
I.. W. — Born Johnstown. Pa., Nov. 12.
1868. Pupil of PAFA; Phila. School of
Design for Women. Illustrated "Pro-
gressive Pennsvlvania," by .1. M. Swank.
Author and illustrator of "The King's
Jester,' etc.
WIRTZ, William, 2129 St. Paul St., Bal-
timore, Md.
P. — M ember: Charcoal C.
WISE, Louise Waterman (Mrs. Stephen
Wise). 23 West 90th St.. New York,
N. Y. ; summer. Lake Placid, N. Y.
Port.P., W.— Born New York. Pupil of
Kenyon Cox, Robert Henri, George
Bellows. M e m b e r : N. A. Women
PS; S. Indp. A.
WISE. William G., 3431 North 21st St.,
Philndelphia. Pa.
P.— Member: Fellowship PAFA.
WITHENBURG, Mrs. Virginia Thomas,
Glendale, O.
P.— M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
WITTMARK, Edgar F., 106 W. 55th St.,
New York, N. Y. (I.)
WITTIVIER, Henry, 407 Park Bldg., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
WOELFLE, Arthur W., 261 Madison Ave.,
Flushing, L. I., N. Y.
P.— Born Trenton, N. J., Dec. 17, 1873.
Pupil of ASL of N. Y. under Mowbray,
Beckwith, Cox and Twachtman; NAD
under Will Low and C. Y. Turner; Carl
Marr and Diez in Munich. Member:
ASL of N. Y.; SalmaC, 1902. Awards:
Hon. mention, Munich; scholarship,
Brooklyn Institute. Work: Murals in
Court House at Youngstown, O.; Court
House of Coshocton, O.; also ten por-
traits of judges in the Court House at
Youngstown, O.
WOLCOTT, Frank, 1377 East 57th St.,
Chicago, 111.
P., S., E., C— Born McLeansboro, 111.
Pupil of AIC, Lawton Parker. Mem-
ber: Chicago SA.
WOLCOTT, Katherine, 5222 Blackstone
Ave.. Chicago, 111.
Min. P.— Born Chicago, 1880. Pupil of
AIC; Virginia Reynolds; Lawton Parker;
H. B. Snell. Member: Chicago SA;
Alumni AIC; Chicago S.Min.P. ; Chicago
AC.
WOLEVER, Adeleine, Fenway Studios,
30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.
P., I., T.— Born Belleville, Ont.. Can-
ada, April 8, 1886. Pupil of Tarbell.
Benson, Hale, Paxton, Woodbury and
Noyes. Work : Theatre drawings in
the Boston Transcript.
WOLF, Eva M. Nagel (Mrs. Addison
Wolf), 129 North 20th St.. Philadelphia,
Pa.
P.. L, C— Born Chicago, 111., Oct. 10,
1880. Pupil of Maryland Inst, in Balti-
more; PAFA.
WOLF, Fay Miller, Box 765, Woodmere,
L. L, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S. Indp. A.
WOLF, Max. 93 Second Ave.; h. 86 Sec-
ond Ave.. New York, N. Y.
P.. T. — Born Vienna, Austria, Oct. 22,
1885. Pupil of Veith, Schauer, Heller.
WOLFE, Ada A., 2007 Willow Ave.. N..
MinTieapolis. Minn.
P.— Born Oakland. Cal. Pupil of Minne-
anolis School of Fine Arts; NY. School
of Art under Chase. A av a r d s : First
613
WOLFE
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WOODBURY
prize, Minn. State Art Soc, 1914; hon.
mentions, Minn. State Art Soc. In-
structor, Minneapolis School of Fine
Arts.
WOLFE, George E., 334 West 56th St.,
New York, N. Y. (I.)
WOLFF, Gustave, 508 West 162d St.,
New York, N. Y.
P.— Born in Germany, March 28, 1863.
Came to America when three years old.
Pupil of St. Louis School of Fine Arts
under Paul Cornoyer; studied in Eu-
rope. Member: St. Louis AG; St.
Louis 2x4 Soc. Awards : Silver
medal, Portland, Ore., 1905; first Dolph
prize, Competitive Ex., St. Louis, 1906.
Work: "The Brook," City Art Mu-
seum, St. Louis.
WOLFF, Otto, 245 West North Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
P., I., C, W., L., T.— Born Cologne,
Germany, July 30, 1858. Studied in
Paris. Member: Chicago SA; Chi-
caero AC. Award: Hon. mention,
Paris Salon, 1888.
WOLFSON, William, 5714 Melvin St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
WOLINSKI, Joseph, 32 Moore Park Road,
Sydney, Australia.
P.— Born July 13, 1873. Pupil of Royal
Art Society of New South Wales; Cola-
rossi in Paris. Member: Royal Art
Society, New South Wales. Work:
"After Life's Fitful Fever He Sleeps
Well," "An Interior," two head studies
in charcoal and "Summer" in National
Art Gallery of New South Wales.
WOLKIN, Harry, 837 Estella St., Pitts-
burgh. Pa.
P. — M ember : Pittsburgh AA.
WOLTZ, George W., 61 West 37th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: Salma. C.
WOMRATH, A(ndrew) K(ay), Menton,
Alpes-Maritimes, France.
P., I., D. — Born Frankford, Philadelphia.
Pa.. Oct. 25. 1869. Pupil of ASL in New
York under Twachtman and J. Alden
Weir; Grasset and Merson in Paris;
Westminster School of Art, London.
Member: N. Y. Arch. Lg., 1902;
NAC.
WOOD, E(ila) Miriam, 7014 St. Charles
Ave., New Orleans, La.; summer. Box
176, Covington, La.
P. — Born Birmingham, Ala., Feb. 18,
1888. Pupil of Ellsworth Woodward,
Henry McCarter, Hawthorne, Chase,
Newcomb School of Art, New Orleans;
PAFA. Member: N.O. AG: N.O.
Arts and Crafts C. Awards: Second
prize, "Mississippi AA, Jackson. Work:
"The Fisherman's Dory," Mississippi Art
Assoc.
WOOD, Franklin T., Rutland, Mass.; 486
Bovlston St.. Boston. Mass.
E. — Member: Chicago S B.
Award: Bronze medal, P. -P.Exp.,
San F.. 1915. Represented in Chicago
Art Institute.
WOOD, Grant, Kenwood Park, la.
P., S. — Born Anamosa, la., Feb. 13,
1892. Pupil of AIC; Minneapolis Han-
dicraft School of Design. Work: "De-
mocracy," mural painting, Harrison
School, Cedar Rapids; life membership
medal, bas-relief, for Cedar Rapids Art
Assoc. ; decoration in National Masonic
Research Bldg., Anamosa, Iowa.
WOOD, Jessie Porter, 2005 Columbia Rd.,
Washington, D. C.
P., I., C, T.— Born Syracuse, N. Y.,
Feb. 27, 1863. Pupil of J. Carrol Beck-
with, George de Forest Brush, Walter
Shirlaw, J. Ward Stimson, and others.
WOOD, Katheryn Leone, 6 Van Nest PI.,
New York, N. Y.
P., W. — Born Kalamazoo, Mich., July
25, 1885. Pupil of Frederick Freer,
Lawton Parker and others. Work:
Miniature of Mrs. J. C. Burrows, Con-
tinental Memorial Hall, Washington,
D. C.
WOOD, M. Louise. See Mrs. Wright.
WOOD, Margaret. See White, Mrs. V. G.
WOOD, Mary Earl, 404 Fenway Studios,
30 Ipswich St., Boston, Mass.
P. — Born Lowell, Mass. Pupil Boston
Museum School under Tarbell, Benson
and DeCamp. Member: Copley S.
WOOD, Virginia Margraves, 58 West 57th
St., New York, N. Y.; h. Ivy Depot,
Albemarle, Va.
P., E., T.— Born near St. Louis, Mo.
Pupil of Chase, Du Mond, Hawthorne,
and studied abroad. Member: N. A.
"Women PS. Work : Mural decora-
tions in Broadway Cafe; illustrated
several books.
WOOD, Waddy B., 816 Connecticut Ave.,
N. W., Washington, D. C. (P., A.)
WOOD, William S., 1727 Land Title Bldg.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
P. — M ember: Fellowship PAFA.
WOODBURY, Charles H(erbert), 16 Ar-
lington St., Boston, Mass.; and Ogun-
quit. Me.
Marine P. — Born Lynn, Mass., July 14,
1864. Pupil of Mass.Inst.of Technology
in Boston; Julian Academy in Paris
under Boulanger and Lefebvre. Mem-
ber: SAA 1899; ANA 1906, NA 1907;
AWCS; Boston WCC (pres.); NYWCC;
St. Botolph C; Copley S. 1900; Bos-
ton GA. Awards: Third prize, Bos-
ton AC; gold medal, Atlanta Exp.,
1895; second prize, Tennessee Centen-
nial, Nashville, 1897; two medals. Me-
chanics' Fair, Boston; bronze medal,
Paris Exp., 1900; bronze medal, Pan-
Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901; first prize,
Worcester Museum, 1903; silver medal,
St. Louis Exp., 1904; hon. mention,
C.I.Pittsburgh, 1905; second prize, Wor-
cester, 1907; silver medal, Buenos Aires
Exp.. 1910: Evans prize, AWCS 1911;
second W. A. Clark prize ($1,500) and
Corcoran silver medal, 1914; gold medal
for oil painting and medal of honor for
water colors. P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915.
Work: "The Clilf." Carnegie Insti-
tute, Pittsburgh; "The Steamer," "San-
gus Marsh," "Fishing Nets" and "The
Green Wave," Rhode Island School of
614
WOODBURY
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WOOLF
Design, Providence; "Off the Florida
Coast," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston;
"The North Atlantic," Worcester Mu-
seum; "At Sea," Herron Art Institute,
Indianapolis: "Porcoises," and "The
Rainbow." City Art Museum. 'St. Louis.
WOODBURY, J. C, 155 Medway St.,
Providence, R. I.
P. — Member: Providence WCC.
WOODMAN, Florence, 4201 South Michi-
gan Ave., Chicago, III. (P.)
WOODROFFE, Eleanore G., 9 Jane St.,
New York. N. Y.
P.— Member: N. A. Women PS.
WOODRUFF, Corice (Mrs. Henry S.
Woodruff), 2017 Pleasant Ave., Minne-
apolis, Minn.
S., P. — Born Ansonia, Conn., Dec. 26,
1878. Pupil of Minneapolis School of
Fine Arts under Robert Koehler; Kunte
Akerberg; ASL of N. Y. Member:
Artists Guild, Chicago; Attic C,
Minneapolis. Awards : First prize for
sculpture, Minnesota State Art Society,
second prize, 1914; hon. mention for
sculpture, St. Paul Institute, 1916.
Specialty, small sculpture.
WOODRUFF, Julia S., 1703 15th Ave.,
Seattle, Wash. (P.)
WOODS. Alice. See Mrs. Paul Ullman.
WOODS, Lilla Sorrenson (Mrs. E. B.
Woods), 26 Ocean Ridge, Hanover, N. H.
P.— Born Portage, Wis., April 27, 1872.
Pupil of Lydia Ely in Kilburn, Wis.;
AIC; summer class at Delavan, Wis.;
Miss Hawley at Rijsvard in Holland;
Laurens in Paris; Corcoran School of
Art in Washington; Helen Todd Ham-
mon in Boston. Member: Minne-
sota State Art Society.
WOODSIDE, Annie J., 5146 Liberty Ave.,
Pittsburgh. Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
WOODSON, Marie L., 832 So. Pearl St.,
Denver, Colo.
P.. C, T.— Born Selma, Ala., 'Sept. 9,
1875. Pupil of AIC; Ochtman; N. Y.
School of Fine and Applied Art. Mem-
ber: Alumni Asso. AIC; Denver AA;
Art Commission, City and County of
Denver. Award: Prize for "Wel-
come Arch" for Denver. Work:
Mural decoration in Denver Public Li-
brary; illustrated "Tunes for Tiny
Tots," by Antoinette Freneauff. Di-
rector of Art Education, Denver Public
Schools.
WOODWARD, Miss Dewing, Blue Dome
Fellowship, P. O. Box 1232, Miami. P'la.
P., T. — Born Williamsport, Pa. Pupil
of PAFA; Julian and Colarossi Acad-
emies in Paris. Awards : Silver
medal, Marseilles Exp., 1903; diplome
d'honneur, City of Paris, 1904; gold
medal, Nantes, 1904.
WOODWARD, Ellsworth, Newcomb Col-
lege; 1316 Pine St., New Orleans, La,
P., I., T., C— Born Bristol Co., Mass.,
July 14, 1861. Pupil of R.I.School of
Design in Providence; Carl Marr In
Munich. Member: Art Assoc. of New
Orleans; Boston SAC; La. State Art
Teachers' Assoc. Award: Gold
medal. Art Association of New Orleans.
Director of Art Education, Newcomb
College, since 1890. Represented in
Delgado Museum of Art, New Orleans.
WOODWARD, J. Douglas, 199 Weyman
Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y.
I.— M ember: SI.
WOODWARD, Loila Grace, National Park
Seminary, Forest Glen, Md.
P., T.— Born Coldwater. Mich., May 2,
1858. Studied in Boston, Chicago, Eng-
land, Holland, Rome and Venice, and
under Du Mond, Merson, Collin and
Whistler in Paris. Member: Minne-
apolis Soc. of Fine Arts.
WOODWARD, Mabel May, 36 Belvedere
Blvd., Providence, R. I.
P. — Born Providence, R. I., Sept. 28,
1877. Pupil of Chase, Du Mond and
Cox in New York. Member: Provi-
dence AC; Providence WCC; Province-
town AA. Instructor. Rhode Island
School of Design, Providence.
WOODWARD, Robert Strong, Shelburne
Falls, Mass.
P. — ^Born Northampton, Mass., May 11,
1885. Mostly self taught. Member:
Salma. C; Boston AC. Awards:
First Hallgarten prize, NAD, 1919; hon.
mention, Concord AA, 1920.
WOODWARD, Stanley W(ingate), 198
Dartmouth St., Boston, Mass.; h. 48
Abbott Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass.
P., I., E.— Born Maiden, Mass., Dec. 11,
1890. Pupil of Eric Pape, Frank Ben-
son, Philip Hale, Joseph Pearson, Chas.
Woodbury and Edwin Blashflield.
Member: Chicago SE; Concord AA;
Brooklyn SE; Copley S.; Calif. P.M.;
Fellowship PAFA; Boston ^WCC.
Award : Hon. men., Concord AA.
1919.
WOODWARD, William, Tulane Univer-
sity, New Orleans. La.
P., Arch., C. — Born Seekonk, Mass., May
1, 1859. Pupil of R.I.School of De-
sign in Providence; Mass. Normal Art
School in Boston; Boulanger in Paris.
Member: Louisiana Art Teachers
Assoc, (ex-pres.); Louisiana Chapter
AIA; Art Assoc, of New Orleans (ex-
vice-pres.); AIA 1897 (hon.). Professor
of drawing and painting, Tulane Uni-
versity, New Orleans.
WOODWELL, Elizabeth, 7008 Penn Ave.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pitts. AA.
WOODWELL, W. E., 201 Wood St., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
WOOLF, S(amuel) J(ohnson), 154 West
55th St.; h. 457 West 123d St., New
York, N. Y.
Port. P., W.— Born New York, Feb. 12,
1880. Pupil of ASL and NAD under
Cox and Brush. A V7 a r d s : Third
Hallgarten prize, NAD 1904; medj^l,
Appalachian Exp., Knoxvllle, 1910.
Work: "Dr. Finley," College of the
City of New York; "Mark Twain,"
Brook Club: "Dr. Hunter," Normal
College; "Cardinal Logue," Catholic
Club, New York. Author: "A Short
615
WOOLLEY
WHO'S WHO IN ART
WRIGHT
History of Art." As special corre-
spondent with American Expeditionary
Force, painted portraits of Joffre,
Pershing, and other commanders.
WOOLLEY, A. B., 435 North School St.,
Avalon, Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh AA.
WOOLRYCH, Bertha Hewit (Mrs. F.
Humphry Woolrych), 3855 Hartford
St., St. Louis, Mo.; summer, Sherman,
Mo.
P., I. — Born in Ohio in 1868. Pupil of
St. Louis School of Fine Arts; Morot,
Collin and Courtois in Paris. Mem-
ber: St. Louis AG (treas., 1905-1909);
St. Louis Art Students' Association.
Awards : Medal, Lewis and Clark
Exp., Portland, 1905; gold and silver
medals, St. Louis School of Fine Art;
silver medal, 1908, St. Louis District,
General Federation of Women's Clubs.
WOOLRYCH, E. Humphry W., 1411 In-
ternational Life Bldg.; h. 3855 Hartford
St., St. Louis, Mo.; summer, Sherman,
Mo.
P., I. — Born Sydney, Australia. Pupil
of Royal Academy, Berlin; Ecole des
Beaux Arts, Colarossi Academy, Collin,
Courtois and Purvis de Chavannes in
Paris. Member: Hellas Art Club,
Berlin; St. Louis AG; Brush and
Pencil C; 2x4 Soc; St. Louis Arch.C.
Awards : Bronze medal, Portland
Exp., 1905; medal for portrait. Mo.
State Fair, Sedalia, 1913. Work:
Water color in St. Louis Public Library.
WORCESTER, Albert, 467 West Canfield
Ave., Detroit, Mich.
P., E. — Born West Campton, N. H., Jan.
4, 1878. Pupil of Luc-Olivier Merson
and Jean Paul Laurens in Paris.
WORDEN, Laicita Warburton, 4141 North
• Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.. S., I.— Born Philadelphia, Sept. 25,
1892. Pupil PAFA. Member: Fel-
lowship PAFA.
WORDEN, Sara A. See Mrs. Hinton S.
Lloyd.
WO RES, Theodore, Bohemian Club; h.
1722 Buchanan St., San Francisco, Cal.
P., I., T. — Born San Francisco, Cal.
Aug. 1, 1860. Pupil of Alex. Wagner
and Duveneck in Munich. Member:
Century Assoc. Award : Gold medal,
Alaska-Yukon Exp., 1909. Instructor at
San Francisco Art Institute, 1907-1912.
WORKMAN, David Tice, 1210 First Ave.,
North, Minneapolis, Minn.
E.— Born Wahpeton, N. D., 1884. Pupil
of Benson and Hale in Boston; Pyle in
Wilmington; Brangwyn and Swan in
London. Member: Chicago SE; At-
tic C, Minneapolis; Minneapolis SA.
Award : First prize, Minnesota State
Art Commission, 1914. Wo r k : Mural
decorations, Irving School, and East
Side High School, Minneapolis, Minn.;
Lincoln High School, Hibbing, Minn.
WORMAN, Eugenia A., 1712 Summit
Ave., Seattle, Wash. (P.)
WORTHINGTON, Mary E., 1455 Hum-
boldt St.. Denver, Colo.
P. — Born Holyoke, Mass. Studied with
Constant, Laurens and F. V. DuMond
in Paris, and Henry Read in Denver.
Member: Denver AA.
WRAY, Henry Russell, 33 West Willa-
mette Ave., Colorado Springs, Colo.
P., E., W.— Born Philadelphia, Pa., Oct.
3, 1864. Member: Phila. Sketch C;
Colorado 'Springs Art Society.
WRENN, Charles L(ewis), 364 West 23rd
St., New York, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Cincinnati, O., Sept. 18,
1880. Pupil of Chase and ASL of N. Y.
Member: SI; Salma. C.
WRIGHT, Alice Morgan, 393 State St., Al-
bany, N. Y.; and 28 West 8th St., New
York, N. Y.
S.— Born Albany, N. Y. Member:
N. A. Women PS; S. Indp. A.
WRIGHT, (Mr.) Alma Brockerman, L. D.
S. U., Salt Lake City, Utah.
P.— Born Salt Lake City, Nov. 22. 1875.
Pupil of Bonnat, Laurens, Ecole des
Beaux-Arts and Julian and Colarossi
academies in Paris. Member: Soc.
of Utah Artists; Paris AAA. Awards:
State prize. 1904; medal of honor, Utah
Art Inst., 3 905.
WRIGHT, Bertha Stevens, (Mrs. Law-
rence Wright), Lawrence, L. I., N. Y.
P.— Born Astoria, L. I., N. Y. Self-
taught. Member: Alliance; S.
Indp. A.; Lg. of N.Y.A.
WRIGHT, Charles H., Room 309, 1931
Broadway, New York, N. Y. ; 27 Willow
Ave., Larchmont, N. Y.
P., I. — Born Knightstown, Ind., Nov. 20,
1870. Pupil of ASL of N. Y. Mem-
ber: SI 1914; Salma. C. ; NYWCC;
Guild of Free Lance Artists.
WRIGHT, Charles Lennox, Bayside, L. I.,
N. Y. ; summer. West Rockaway, N. Y.
P., I., T.— Born Boston, Mass., May 28,
1876. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.; Dagnan-
Bouveret in Paris.
WRIGHT, Emma R., 1233 Chapel St., New
Haven, Conn.
P. — M ember: New Haven PCC.
WRIGHT, Fred W., 15 West 67th St., New
York. N. Y.
P.— Born Crawfordsville, Ind., Oct. 12,
1880. Pupil of Julian Academy and P.
Marcel-Baronneau in Paris; J Otis
Adams. Member: Salma. C. ; Lg.
of N. Y. A.
WRIGHT, George H(and), Salmagundi
Club, 47 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.;
h. Westport, Conn.
P., I.— Born Fox-Chase, Pa., Aug. 6,
1872. Pupil of PAFA and Spring Gar-
den Inst. Member: SI 1901; Salma.
C; S. Indp. A.; Guild of Free Lance
Artists.
WRIGHT, Mrs. Gladys Yoakum, 606 West
Third St., Fort Worth, Texas.
P., W.— Born Greenville, Tex. Pupil of
McLeod School of Art in Los Angeles.
WRIGHT, M. Louise (Mrs. John Wright),
2 Cheltenham Terrace, London, S. W.,
England.
P., I.— Born Philadelphia, 1875. Pupil
of PAFA; Whistler and Julian Academy
in Paris; F. W. Jackson in England.
616
WRIGHT
WHO'S WHO IN ART
YARROW
Member: Phila.WCC; NYWCC; Fel-
lowship PAFA. Award: Bronze med-
al, St. Louis Exp., 1904.
WRIGHT, Margaret Harden (Mrs. James
Hayden Wright), 371 Harvard St.,
Cambridge, Mass.
Etcher. — Born Newton, Mass., March
28, 1869. Pupil of Mass. Inst, of Tech-
nology in Boston; W. H. W. Bicknell;
Merson in Paris. Member: Chicago
SE; Copley S; Boston SE. Specialty,
bookplates. Represented in New York
Public Library.
WRIGHT, William, 2203 Los Angeles Ave.,
Beechview, Pittsburgh, Pa.
P.— M ember: Pitts. AA.
WUERPEL, Edmund H(enry), St. Louis
School of Fine Arts, Washington Uni-
versity; h. 9 Walinca Terrace, Clayton,
Mo.
P., T,, W., L.— Born St. Louis, May 13,
1866. Pupil of St. Louis School of Fine
Arts; Julian Academy and Ecole des
Beaux- Arts in Paris under Bouguereau,
Robert-Fleury, Ferrier and Aman-Jean.
Member: St. Louis AG (life; pres.
1909); St. Louis Municipal A. L. (chair-
man, Art Com.); 2x4 Soc. (pres. 1906-
1908); Paris AAA (hon.). Awards:
Bronze medal, Nashville Exp., 1897;
silver medal, Missouri Building, Lewis
and Clarke Exp., Portland, Ore., 1905;
hon. mention, Buenos Aires Exp., 1910;
St. Louis AG life membership prize,
1914; hors concours (jury of awards).
P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915. Director,
•St. Louis School of Fine Arts since
1909. Work: "In the Hollow," City
Art Museum, St. Louis; "An Evening
Idyll," Herron Art Institute," Indianapo-
lis; "An Evening Song." Public Library,
St. Louis; "Night," High School, St.
Louis. Work in: Church of the Unity,
St. Louis; Murals in Missouri Athletic
Club.
WUHL, Edna Dell, 9 Lansing Ave., Troy
N. Y. (P.)
WULFF, Timothy Milton, 2245 Turk St.,
San Francisco, Cal.
P. — Born San Francisco, Cal., Oct. 13,
1890. Pupil of Frank Van Sloun.
Member: San P. AA. Work:
"The Laughing Buffoon," in the Palace
of Fine Arts, San Francisco.
WUNDERLY, August, Wood and Oliver
Aves.. Pittsburgh. Pa.
P. — M ember: Pittsburgh A A.
WYAND, Mrs. Charles L. See Cockcroft,
Edith Varian.
WYER, Raymond, Art Museum, Worces-
ter, Mass.
P., W., L. — Born in London, Eng. Stud-
ied in London and Brussels; in Paris
at Academie Delecluse and under Bou-
guereau and Benjamin-Constant. Mem-
ber: Artists' Soc. and Langham C,
London; Archeological Inst, of Am.;
Amer. Assoc. Museums; NAC; St. Bo-
tolph C; Boston; Fellow Royal Soc.
of Arts, London. Director Plackley
Gallery Muskegon 1912-16; Worcester
Museum, 1918. Lecturer and writer
on art and sociology.
WYETH, N. C, Needham, Mass.
P., I.— Born Needham, Ma.ss., Oct. 22,
1882. Pupil of Howard Pyle. Member:
SI 1912; Phila. Sketch C; Salma.C. 1908;
Fellowship PAFA. Awards: Beck
prize, Phila.WCC, 1910; gold medal,
P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915. Murals in:
Missouri State Capitol; Hotel Traymore,
Atlantic City; Reading Museum of Fine
Arts; Federal Reserve Bank of Boston;
New York Public Library; Hotel Utica,
Utica, N. Y.
WYLIE, Samuel B., Woodstock, N. Y.
P.— M ember: Salma. C.
WYMAN, Florence. See Ivins.
XERON, John, 129 West 12th St., New
York, N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
YAEGER, William L,, 4024 Westminster
Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
P.— Me m b e r : Phila. AA.
YAFFEE, Edith Widing, 91 Walker Road,
Swampscott, Mass.
P. — Born Helsingfors, Finland, Jan. 16,
1895. Pupil of Paxton, Hale and PAFA.
Awards : Chaloner Paris-American
prize, 1920; European traveling Scholar-
ship, PAFA, 1921.
YAFFEE, Herman, Cousins Island, Me.;
h. Walker Rd., Swampscott, Mass.
P. — Born Knoxville, Tenn., June 20,
1897. Pupil of School of Museum of
Fine Arts, Boston; PAFA studied in
Paris and Spain.
YALE, (Charlotte) Liila, 208 West Main
St., Meriden, Conn.
P., T. — Born Meriden, Conn., Mar. 14,
1855. Pupil of D. F. Wentworth in
Hartford; George de Forest Brush;
Chase; ASL of N. Y. Member:
Meriden Arts and Crafts Association.
YANDELL, Enid, 133 East 40th St., New
York, N. Y. ; Edgartown, Mass.
S., T.— Born Louisville, Ky., Oct. 6,
1870. Pupil of Cincimati Art School;
Philip Martiny in New York; MacMon-
nies and Rodin in Paris. Member:
NSS 1898; N.Y.Munic. AS; N.Y. WCC.
Awards : Designer's medal, Colum-
bian Exp., Chicago, 1893; silver medal,
Tennessee Exp., Nashville, 1897; hon.
mention, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
bronze medal St. Louis Exp., 1904;
Officier de I'Academie, French Govern-
ment, 1906. Organized, 1907. Branstock
Summer School of Art at Edgartown.
Work: "Carrie Brown Memorial
Fountain," Providence; bust, "Dr. W.
T. Bull," Col. Physicians and Surgeons,
New York; "Emma Willard Memorial,"
Albany, N. Y. ; "Hogan Fountain" and
"Boone Monument," Louisville. Ky.
YARROW, William H(enry) K(emble),
care Daniel Gallery, 2 West 47th St.,
New York, N. Y.
P. — Born Glenside, Pa., Sept. 24, 1891.
Pupil of Henry R. Rittenberg; PAFA;
Colarossi and Grande Chaumi^re Acad-
emies in Paris. Member: Fellowship
PAFA; Phila. AC; Allied AA: Salma. C;
S. Indp. A. Awards: Silver medal,
P. -P.. San F.. 1915; portrait prize. New-
port, 1916; gold medal, Phila. AC, 1916.
617
YATES
WHO'S WHO IN ART
YOUNG
Wo r k : "In the Orchard," Pennsyl-
vania Academy of the Fine Arts; "Still
Life," Philadelphia AC. Editor, Ameri-
can Art Library.
YATES, CuIIen, The Van Dyck Studios,
939 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y.; h.
Shawnee-on-Delaware, Monroe Co., Pa.
Ldscp.P.— Born Bryan, O., Jan. 24, 1866.
Pupil of NAD, Chase and Ochtman In
New York; Ecole des Beaux-Arts,
Colarossi and Julian academies under
Laurens and Constant in Paris. M e m-
ber: ANA, 1908; NA, 1919; AWCS;
NYWCC; NAC; Lotos C; Salma.C. 1899;
NAC aife); Allied AA. Awards:
Bronze medal, 'St. Louis Exp., 1904; In-
ness prize, Salma. C. 1907; Isidor prize,
Salma. C, 1921. Work: "Rock-
Bound Coast — Cape Ann," National
Gallery, Washington; "Gloucester Har-
bor," City Art Museum, St. Louis;
"Rye Field — Shawnee - on - Delaware,
Pa.," Seattle (Wash.) Gallery; "Early
Evening," Art Club, Philadelphia;
"Near Gloucester Harbor," Montclair
(N. J.) Gallery; "Landscape," Brook-
lyn Institute Museum; "The Harbor,"
Art Museum, Montclair, N. J., "Moun-
tain Stream," Youngstown (O.) Mu-
seum.
YATES, Elizabeth M., 374 McKinley
Parkway, Buffalo, N. Y.
P., T. — Born Stoke-on-Trent, Stafford-
shire, England, May 13, 1888. Pupil of
Pratt Institute. Member: Buffalo
GAA.
YEATS, John B(utler), 61 Marlborough
Road, Donnybrook, Dublin, Ireland.
P. — M ember: Hibernian Academy;
S. Indp. A.
YENS, Karl (Julius Heinrich), Laguna
Beach, Calif.
P., I., E., T. — Born Altona, Germany,
Jan. 11, 1868. Pupil of Max Koch in
Berlin; Constant and Laurens in Paris.
Member: Calif. AC: Calif. Teachers'
A. ;Calif P.M. Awards : Bronze and
silver medals, Pan-Calif, Int. Exp., San
Diego, 1915; second Black prize, Calif.
AC, 1919. Work: Mural decorations
in City Hall, Altona, Germany; Country
Club House, Brookline, Mass.; and in
Duquesne Club, Pittsburgh, Pa.
YEOMANS, Walter C, care of Art Dept.,
Hawtin Engraving Co.; h. 1261 North
Dearborn St., Chicago, 111.
P., I.— Born Avon, 111., in 1882. Pupil
of AIC. Member: Palette and
Chisel C; Chicago SE.
YETO, Genjiro. See Katoaka.
YEWELL, George H(enry), 51 West 10th
St., New York, N. Y. ; summer. Diamond
Point, Warren Co., N. Y.
P. — Born Havre-de-Grace, Md., Jan. 20,
1830. Pupil of Thomas Hicks in New
York; Couture in Paris. Member:
ANA 1862, NA 1880; A.Fund S. (ex-
sec); Century Assoc. Work: "In-
terior of St, Mark's Church, Venice,"
Metropolitan Museum, New York;
"Santa Maria della Salute — Venice,"
Louisville (Ky.) Art Gallery; "Interior
of St. Mark's Church — Venice," Wads-
worth Athenseum, Hartford; portraits —
Ex-Governor of Iowa, Samuel J. Kirk-
wood; Major General Grenville M.
Dodge and Hon. John F. Dillon, His-
torical Department, Des Moines, la.;
Cornelius R. Agnew, Academy of Medi-
cine, New York, N. Y.; William H. Pax-
ton, D.D., Presbyterian Building, New
York.
YOHN, F(rederlck) C(offay), Norwalk,
Conn.
I. — Born Indianapolis, Ind., Feb. 8, 1875.
Pupil of Indianapolis Art School; ASL
of N. Y. under Mowbray. Member:
SI 1901; Guild of Free Lance Artists.
YOUNG, Arthur, 9 East 17th St., New
York, N. Y.; summer, Bethel, Conn.
Cartoonist. — Born Stephenson Co., 111.,
Jan. 14, 1866. Pupil of Julian Academy
and Bouguereau in Paris. Cartoons and
illustrations in "Life," "Collier's Week-
ly." "Puck." "Metropolitan Magazine,"
"The Liberator."
YOUNG, Charles) Jac, 114 Highpoint
Ave., Weehawken Heights, N. J.
P., E.— Born Bavaria, Dec. 21, 1880.
Pupil of E. M. W^ard, C. Y. Turner.
Member: Brooklyn SE. ; Calif. PM. ;
Salma. C.
YOUNG, Charles Morris, Radnor, Pa.
Ldscp.P. — Born Gettysburg, Pa., Sept.
23, 1869. Pupil of PAFA; Colarossi
Academy in Paris. Member: ANA.
Awards : Toppan prize, PAFA; hon.
mention, Pan-Am. Exp., Buffalo, 1901;
silver medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904; gold
medal, ACPhila. 1908; hon. mention,
C.I.Pittsburgh, 1910; silver medal, Buenos
Aires Exp.. 1910; gold medal, P.-P.Exp.,
San F., 1915; Sesnan gold medal, PAFA,
1921. Work: "Winter Morning
after Snow," Pennsylvania Academy,
Philadelphia, Pa.; "The North Wind,"
Corcoran Gallery, Washington. Repre-
sented in Boston Art Club; St. Louis
Art Club; Budapest National Gal-
lery; Albright Art Gallery, Buffalo;
Rochester Art Gallery; National Gallery,
Santiago, Chile.
YOUNG, Eliza Middleton Coxe, Radnor,
Pa.; summer, "Windy Hill," Drifton,
Luzerne Co., Pa.
P.— Born Philadelphia, Nov. 7, 1875.
Pupil of Anshutz, Charles Morris
Young. Work: "Garden Study,"
Herron Art Inst., Indianapolis.
YOUNG, Grace, Art Academy, Cincin-
nati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
YOUNG, Helen, 333 South Third Ave., Mt.
Vernon, N. Y. (P.)
YOUNG, Mahonrl M., 148 Prospect St.,
Leonia, N. J.
S., Etcher.— Born Salt Lake City, Utah,
Aug. 9, 1877. Pupil of ASL In New
York; Julian Academy In Paris. Mem-
ber: ANA 1912; NSS 1910; Paris AAA;
Soc.of Utah Artists (ex-pres.); N. Y.
Arch.Lg. 1911; Chicago SE; NYWCC;
N. Y. SE; Eclectics; P-G. Awards:
Hon. mention for etching, Paris AAA;
618
YOUNG
WHO'S WHO IN ART
ZIMMERMAN
I
Barnett prize, NAD, 1911; silver medal
for sculpture, P. -P. Exp., San F., 1915.
Work: Etchings and "Man with
Pick," Metropolitan Museum, New York;
Hopi and Apache groups, American
Museum of National History, New
York; bronzes, "A Laborer" and "The
Rigger," and etchings, Newark Museum;
etchings, New York Public Library;
"Sea Gull Monument, Salt Lake City;
bronze, Peabody Institute, Baltimore,
Md.; Rhode Island School of Design,
Providence; painting and sculpture. Art
Institute of Utah, Salt Lake City. In-
structor Art Students' League of New
York.
YOUNG, Mary L(ouise), 160 Milhem Road,
Baldwin, L. I., N. Y.
P. — Born . St. Louis, Mo. Pupil of
Twachtman. Member: Greenwich
SA.
YOUNG, Myrtle M., 2027 Hyde St., San
Francisco, Cal. (P.)
YOUNG, William Crawford, Comstock
Hill, Norwalk, Conn.
I. — Born Cannonsburg, Mich., March 26,
1886. Pupil of AIC and Chicago Art
Academy. Member: AI Graphic A.
Staff contributor to "Life," and "N. Y.
Herald."
ZARING, Louise E(leanor), 9 Poplar
St., Greencastle, Ind.
P., S., C— Born Cincinnati, O. Pupil
of Oliver Merson, John Twachtman, Mc-
Monnies, L. R. Garrido, Charles Haw-
thorne; ASL of N. Y. Member:
Paris Woman's AA; Provincetown AA;
ASL of N. Y.; Wash. A. C. W^ o r k :
First hon. mention, Richmond Art Asso.;
1900 and 1919.
ZARINI, E. MazzonI, 9 Bisarno, Barriera
S. Niccolo, Florence, Italy.
E.— M ember: Chicago SE.
ZEIGLER, Lee Woodward, New Windsor-
on-Hudson. N. Y. (P. O. Newburgh,
N. Y.).
P., I., T.— Born Baltimore, Md., May 7,
1868. Self-taught. Member: Char-
coal C. Award: Gold medal for paint-
ing, St. Paul Inst., 1915. Director. St.
Paul Institute School of Art, 1910-18.
Work : "Wake Thee, Titania," Mary-
land Institute, Baltimore; "The Knight
Errant," St. Paul vMinn.) Institute;
"The Apocalypse," altar piece. Church
of St. John the Evangelist, New York;
"Adoration of the Cross," decoration,
St. Thomas' Church, New Windsor;
decorations on ceiling of St. Paul Pub-
lic Library; illustrations for de luxe edi-
tions of Kingsley, Gautier and Balzac.
ZEITLIN, Alexandre, 141 East 21st St.,
New York, N. Y.
S.— Born Tiflis, Russia, July 15, 1872.
Member: Wash. AC.
ZELL, Ernest N(egley), 119 Westwood
Ave., Grandview, Columbus, O.
P.— Born in Dayton, O., Oct. 16, 1874.
Pupil of Columbus Art School; Cincin-
nati Art Academy; Shinnecock Sum-
mer School; summer school, Ohio State
University at Columbus; under Chase
in Holland. Member: Pen and Pen-
cil C, Columbus; Columbus AL. Direc-
tor of Art, School for the Deaf, Colum-
bus, O.
ZENSKY, J., 9G0 Simpson St., New York,
N. Y.
P. — M ember: S.Indp.A.
ZENNER, Rose, 2947 Gilbert Ave., Cin-
cinnati, O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati Woman's
AC.
ZETTLER, Emil Robert, 4 East Ohio St.,
Chicago, 111.
S.— Born Chicago. Studied at AIC; Royal
Academy of Berlin; Julian Academy in
Paris. Awards : Hon. mention, AIC,
1912; medal, Chicago SA, 1915; bronze
medal, P.-P.Exp., San F., 1915; silver
medal, AIC, 1915; Potter Palmer gold
medal, AIC, 1916; Logan medal, AIC,
1917. Work: Municipal Art Collec-
tion.
ZIEG, Mrs. W. W., 5739 Northumberland
Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. (P.)
ZIEGLER, Eustace Paul, The Red
Dragon, Cordova, Alaska.
P., I., W., L.— Born Detroit, Mich.,
July 24. 1881. Pupil of Ida Marie Per-
rault, Yale School of Fine Arts. Illus-
trates for "The Spirit of Missions."
ZIM, Marco, 64 Edgecombe Ave., New
York, N. Y.
P., S., Etcher. — Born Moscow, Russia,
Jan. 9, 1880. Pupil of ASL of N. Y.
under George Gray Barnard; NAD
under Ward and Maynard; Ecole des
Beaux-Arts in Paris under Bonnat.
ZIMM, Bruno Louis, Woodstock, N. Y.
S., A.— Born New York, Dec. 25, 1876.
Pupil of J. Q. A. Ward, Augustus Saint
Gaudens and Karl Bitter. Member:
NSS. Award: First mention, col-
laborative competition, N. Y. Arch. Lg.,
1913; silver medal, Paris Exp.. 1900.
Work: Slocum Memorial and Memo-
rial Fountain, New York: Finnegan
Memorial, Houston; Murdoch Memorial,
Wichita; Sculpture in rotunda of Art
Bldg., San Francisco; bust of Robert
E. Lee, Baylor College, Belton, Texas;
panels of Sergt. York and Paul Revere,
Seaboard National Bank, New York.
ZIMMELE, Mrs. Margaret, Garber Gal-
leries, 1210 18th St., h. 2612 Connecticut
Ave., Washington, D. C. ; summer. Great
Barrington, Mass.
P., S., I.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept. 1,
1872. Pupil of Chase, Shirlaw. Whitte-
more, Lathrop, Carlson, Hawthorne.
Member: S. Wash. A.; Pittsburgh
AA.; Wash. SA.
ZIMMERMAN, Eugene ("Zim"), Horse-
heads, Chemung Co., N. Y.
Caricaturist. — Born Basel. Switzerland,
May 25, 1862. On staff of "Puck"
since 1882; "Judge" since 1884. Author
of "This and That About Caricature,"
"Cartoons and Caricatures," "Home
Spun Philosophy." Conducts corre-
spondence school of caricature, cartoon-
ing and comic art.
ZIMMERMAN, M(ason) W., 1518 Waverly
■St.; h. 1522 Locust St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
619
ZINSER
WHO'S WHO IN ART
ZY LIN SKI
P. — Born Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 4, 1861.
Pupil of Julian Academy. Member :
Phila. WCC; Phila. Sketch C; Salma,
C; Phila. Alliance; AWCS.
ZINSER, Frank, 118 East 4th St., Cincin-
nati. O.
P. — M ember: Cincinnati AC.
ZINSER, Paul R., 3229 Sheffield Ave.; h.
Highland Apts., Chicago, 111.
P., S., L, C— Born Wildbad, Germany,
April 4, 1885. Pupil of J. Hopkins
Adam. Member: Cincinnati AC.
Work: "Evening," Cincinnati Art
Museum.
ZIRNBAUER, Franz (Seraph), Rue Ma-
dame 67, Paris, France.
P., T.— Born Pittsburgh, Pa., Oct. 10,
1860. Pupil of Laurens, Blanche, Richr
ard Miller, Gervaix, in Paris, and stud-
ied in London and Dublin.
ZOGBAUM, R(ufus) F(airchild), 125 West
87th St., New York, N. Y.
Naval P., I.— Born Charleston, S. C, Aug.
28, 1849. Pupil of ASL in New York;
Bonnat in Paris. Member: AWCS;
Century Assoc. Award : Medal, Co-
lumbian Exp., Chicago, 1893. Mural
decorations: "First Minnesota Regiment
at Battle of Gettysburg," State Capitol,
St. Paul; "Battle of Lake Erie," Federal
Building, Cleveland; "Hail and Fare-
well," Woolworth Bldg. Portraits: "Rear
Admiral Taylor," Naval War College,
Newport; "Dr. Henry Loomis Nelson,"
Williams College, Williamstown, Mass.;
"Dr. St. Clair Smith," Flower Hospital,
New York. Illustrations for "Horse,
Foot and Dragoons," "All Hands,"
"Ships and Sailors."
ZOLNAY, George Julian, 1738 N St., N.
W., Washington, D. C.
S., T.— Born July 4, 1863. Pupil of
Imperial Academy of Fine Arts in
Vienna; National Academy of Bucharest.
Member: St. Louis AG (ex-pres.);
Wash. AC; Union Inter, des Arts et
Sciences, Paris; S. Wash. A. Awards:
Gold medal, St. Louis Exp., 1904;
gold medal, Portland Exp., 1905.
Decorated by the King of Roumania with
the Order "Bene Merenti" first class.
Work: "Pierre Laclede Monument,"
and Confederate monument, St. Louis,
Mo.; "Winnie Davis" and "Jefferson
Davis" monuments, Richmond, Va.;
"Soldiers Monument" and "Sam Davis
Monument," Nashville, Tenn.; "Gen.
Bartow" and "Gen. McLaws" monu-
ment, Savannah, Ga.; "Soldiers Monu-
ment," Owensboro, Ky. ; pediment of
"Edgar Allan Poe Monument," Uni-
versity of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.;
colossal, "Lions," on City Gates, Uni-
versity City, Mo.; main group, U. S.
Customs House, San Francisco, Cal. ;
Labor Monument, New Bedford, Mass.;
'Sequoyah Statue, U. S. Capitol, Wash-
ington; War Memorial, and sculpture of
the Parthenon, Nashville, Tenn. Repre-
sented in the Bucharest Royal Institute;
St. Louis Museum; Herron Art Institute,
Indianapolis.
ZORACH, Marguerite, care of The Daniel
Gallery, 2 West 47th St., New York,
N. Y.
P.— Born Santa Rosa, Calif. Studied in
Paris.
ZORACH, William, care of The Daniel
Gallery, 2 West 47th St., New York,
N. Y.
P. — Born in Russia; came to U. S. when
4. Studied at NAD in New York and
in Paris.
ZYLINSKI, Andrew, Box 195, Ebenezer,
N. Y.
P., T. — Born Zaile, Lithuania gov. Su-
valki. May 29, 1869. Pupil of Woj-
ciech, Gerson, and Warsaw (Poland)
School of Design. Member: St.
Louis AL. Work: "Early Morning,"
Delgado Art Museum; "Mark Twain,"
Commercial Club, Hannibal, Mo.
620
List of Sculptors
For addresses and biographical notes see section beginning page 329
Abbate, Paolo S.
Abel, Louise.
Adams, Herbert.
Aitken, Robert I.
Akeley, Carl E.
Albrecht, C. J.
Albright, H. J.
Alexander, Julia Standish.
Allen, F. W.
Allen, Gregory S.
Allen, Louise.
Amateis, Edmond R.
Andersen, Hendrick Christian.
Angela, Emilio.
Apel, Mrs. Marie.
Applegate, Frank G.
Appleton, Mrs. Eliza B.
Atkins, Albert H.
Atkins, Florence E.
Avery, Hope.
Azzi, Marius A.
Bach, Florence J.
Baker, Bryant.
Bakos, Joseph G.
Ball, Mrs. Caroline Peddle.
Ball, Ruth Norton.
Barnard, George Grey.
Barnhorn, Clement J.
Bartlett, Madeline A.
Bartlett, Paul Wayland.
Bartlett, Truman H.
Bateman, John M.
Bathhurst, Clyde C.
Baughman, Mary B.
Baylos, Zelma.
Bayman, Leo.
Beach, Chester.
Beck, Raphael.
Bedore, Sidney.
Bennett, Mrs. Emma.
Berge, Edward.
Bilotti, Salvatore F.
Binns, Elsie.
Bjurman, Andrew.
Blumenschein, Mrs. Mary Shepard Greene.
Bock, Richard W.
Boericke, Johanna M.
Booth, James Scripps.
Borglum, Gutzon.
Borglum, Solon H.
Borgord, Martin.
Bowditch, Mary O.
Boyle, Gertrude.
Braddcck, Effie F.
Brasz, Arnold F.
Brauner, Olaf M.
Bregler, Charles.
Brenner, Victor D.
Brewster, Mrs. Anna R.
Brewster, George T.
Brindesi, Olympio.
Bringhurst, Robert P.
Brooks, A. F.
Brown, Irene.
Bryant, Mrs. Nanna M.
Buchanan, Ella.
Buck, Charles C.
Buck, Emma G.
Burnham, Roger Noble.
Burt, Frederick.
Burton, Samuel.
Bush-Brown, Henry K.
Butensky, Jules Leon.
Calder, Alexander.
Calder, Alexander Stirling.
Calewaert, Louis H. S.
Carr, Alice R.
Castello, Eugene.
Cavacos, Emmanuel A.
Cecere, Gaetano.
Chace, Dorothea.
Chamberlin, F. Tolles.
Chard, Walter.
Charman, Laura B.
Ciavarra, Pietro.
Clark, Allan.
Cohen, Nessa.
Cole, Emily Beckwith.
Coltman, Ora.
Comstock, Frances B.
Conkling, Mrs. Mabel.
Conkling, Paul.
Ccnley, Sarah Ward.
Conlon, George.
Conner, Jerome.
Conway, John S.
Conway, William John.
Cook, May Elizabeth.
Cook-Smith, Jean Beman.
Coonsman, Nancy.
Coppini, Pompeo.
Corbett, Mrs. Gail Sherman.
Cornwell, Martha Jackson.
Couper, Mrs. B. King.
Couper, William.
Coy, C. Lynn.
Crenier, Henri.
Crosby, Katharine V. R.
Crowell, Margaret.
Crunelle, Leonard.
Daggett, Grace E.
Daggett, Maud.
Dallin, Cyrus E.
Davidson, Jo.
Dawley, Herbert M.
De Beukelaer, Mrs. Laura H.
De Boyeden, O. H.
De Francisci, Anthony.
De Kosenko, Stepan.
Dellfant, Max.
Deming, E. W.
Denslow, Dorothea H.
Diederich, Hunt.
Dietsch, C. Percival.
Di Filippo, A.
Donato, Giuseppe.
Dougherty, Louis R.
Doyle, Alexander.
Drevfuss, Albert.
Duffy, Richard H.
Dunbar, Ulric S. J.
Duncan, Frederick A.
Dundas, Verde V.
Dunn, Emeline A.
621
622
LIST OF SCULPTORS
Eberhard, Robert G.
Eberle, Abastenia St. Leger.
Edstrom, David.
Ellerhusen, Ulric H.
Ellis, Joseph B.
Elmendorf, Stella.
Elwell, F. Edwin.
Elwell, John H.
Ennis, Mrs. Georgia L.
Enquist, Mary B.
Erskine, H. P.
Evans, Rudulph.
Everett, Herbert E.
Eyre, Louisa.
Fairbanks, Avard Tenneson.
Farnham, Sally James.
Fasano, Clara.
Fenton, Beatrice.
Ferguson, Eleanor M.
Ferrari, Febo.
Finkle, Melik.
Fiorato, Noe.
Fisk, Mary Stella.
Fjelde, Paul.
Flanagan, John.
Fleming, Henry S.
Fletcher, Calvin.
Foster, Enid.
Frank, Herman.
Franklin, Dwight.
Eraser, James E.
French, Daniel C.
Frey, Erwin F.
Friedlander, Leo.
Frishmuth, Harriet Whitney.
Fromen, Agnes Valborg.
Fry, Sherry.
Fuchs, Emil.
Gafill, Mrs. J. J.
Gage, Robert M.
Ganiere, George Etienne.
Gardin, Laura.
Garrett, Mrs. Clara P.
Garrison, Robert.
Gelert, Johannes.
Gendrot, Felix Albert.
George, Margaret.
Gleeson, Mrs. Adele S.
Glenny, Mrs. Alice Russell.
Glinsky, Vincent.
Goddard, Ralph.
Goldbeck, W. D.
Goodelman, Aaron.
Goodwin, Frances.
Gosselin, L. H.
Gotthold, Rozel.
Grabach, John R.
Grafly, Charles.
Graham, Miss Payson.
Gregory, John.
Griffith, Mrs. C. F.
Grimes, Frances.
Grub, Henry.
Gruppe, Karl H.
Gudebrod, Louis A.
Guernsey, Eleanor L.
Haag, Charles.
Hale, Mrs. , William.
Hall, Mrs. Frances D.
Hall, Susan.
Hammer, Trygve.
Hammon, Walter E.
Hammond, Edith.
Hannaford, Mrs. Alice Ide.
Harley, Charles R.
Hartley, Joseph.
Harvey, Eli.
Harwood, Sara B.
Haswell, Ernest Bruce.
Hawks, Rachel Marshall.
Hayes, Louisa.
Hazen, Wilhelmina.
Heber, Carl A.
Heidel, Mrs. Edith O.
Heinzelmann, Samilla.
Heller, Eugenie M.
Helmuth, Jessie L.
Hering, Mrs. Elsie Ward.
Hering, Henry.
Herzel, Paul.
Hibbard, Frederick C.
Hibben, Helene.
Higgins, Eugene.
Hill, Clara.
Hinton, Charles Louis.
Hiramoto, M.
Hitchcock, D. H.
Hoard, Margaret.
Hoffman, Malvina.
Hoffman, Maximilian A.
Hollister, Antoinette B.
Holm, Victor S.
Holsman, Elizabeth T.
Holzer, J. A.
Holzhauer, Emil.
Honig, George H.
Hopkins, Mark.
Hovenden, Martha.
Howland, Edith.
Hubbell, Katherine.
Humphreys, Albert.
Humphriss, Charles H.
Hunt, Esther.
Hunter, David.
Hyatt, Anna Vaughn.
Jackson, Mrs. May H.
Jacobs, Michel.
Jaegers, Albert.
Jaegers, Augustine.
Jennewein, Paul.
Jenny, .Charles O.
Jewett, Mrs. Edward H.
Jirouch, Frank L.
Johnson, Mrs. Adelaide.
Johnson, Burt W.
Johnson, Grace Mott.
Johnston, Winant P.
Joseph, Adelyn L.
Judd, Neale M.
Jusko, Jeno.
Kagann, Theo.
Kaldenberg, F. R.
Karfunkle, David.
Kaufman, Jean F.
Keck, Charles.
Kelly, James E.
Kendall, Elisabeth.
Kendall, William Sergeant.
Kern, Josephine N.
Keyser, Ephraim.
Keyser, Ernest Wise.
Kilenyi, Julio.
Kimball, Isabel M.
Kitson, Henry Hudson.
Kitson, Theo Alice Ruggles.
Klauder, Mary.
Knight, Charles R.
Kohler, Rose.
Kohlmann, Mrs. Rena Tucker.
Kohus, Frank.
Konti, Isidore.
Korbel, Mario Josef.
Kownatzki, Hans.
Kuemmel, Cornelia A.
LIST OF SCULPTORS
623
Ladd, Mrs. Anna Coleman.
Laessle, Albert.
Lalonde, J. W.
Lang, Charles M.
Langley, Mrs. Sarah.
Langton, Mrs. Berenice Frances.
Lathrop, Elinor L.
Laurent, Robert.
Laurie-Wallace, John.
Lawrie, L. O.
Lawson, Jessie M.
Lawson, Mrs. Katharine Stewart,
Laybourn-Jensen, L. P.
Lee, Arthur.
Lentelli, Leo.
Lenz, Alfred David.
Linding, Herman N.
Link, B. Lillian.
Livezey, W. E.
Lober, Georg J.
Long, Ellis B.
Longman, Evelyn B. (Mrs. Batchelder.)
Lorenzani, Arthur E,
Lovett-Lorski, Boris.
Lucas, Albert P.
Lucius, Florence G.
Lukeman, Augustus.
Luther, Jessie.
MacDonald, Harold L.
MacMonnies, Frederick W.
MacNeil, Mrs. Carol Brooks.
MacNeil, Hermon A.
Mahoney, John H.
Manship, Paul H.
Marafifi, Luigi.
Marqulies, Pauline.
Martino, Michel.
Martiny, Philip.
Matthews, Anna Lou.
Matzen, Herman N.
Matzkin, Meyer.
May, Beulah.
Mayer, Casper.
Mayer, Louis.
Mayor, Mrs. Harriet Hyatt.
Mazur, Wladyslaw.
McCartan, Edward.
McClure, Maud Quinby.
McCormack, Mrs. Nancy.
McKenzie, R. Tait.
McKinstry, Grace E.
Meagher, M. T.
Mege, Violette.
Meliodon, Jules Andre.
Mellon, Eleanor.
Meyenberg, John C.
Meyer, A. W.
Meyer, Enno.
Mielziner, Leo.
Mikkelson, Gwendolyn.
Milione, Louis.
Miller, Joseph Maxwell.
Milroy, Harry C.
Miserendino, Vincenzo.
Mish, Charlotte R.
Mitchell, Eva B.
Mitchell, Mrs. Gladys Vinson.
Montana, Pietro.
Moore, Mrs. Lou Wall.
Morahan. Eugene.
Morse, Jean H.
Mott-Smith, May.
Mowbray-Clarke, John F.
Muller, Mrs. Olga Popoff.
Mundy, Ethel F. (Wax Portraits.)
Murphy, M. Thomas.
Murray, Samuel.
Musselman-Carr, Myra V.
Myers, Mrs. Ethel.
Nadelman, Eli.
Neal, Grace P.
Neandross, Sigurd.
Nebel, Berthold.
Needham, Charles Austin.
Newman, Allen G.
Nichols, Peggy.
Nicolosi, Joseph.
Niehaus, Charles H.
Noble, W. Clark.
Norton, Elizabeth.
Novani, Cossado.
Novani, Guilio.
O'Connor, Andrew, Jr.
Operti, Albert.
Ormond, M. Georgia.
Packer, Francis H.
Paddock, Willard D.
Paeff, Bashka.
Paine, Richard G.
Paolo, C. S.
Paramino, John F.
Parker, John F.
Parsons, Mrs. E. B. Stevens.
Partridge, William Ordway.
Patigian, Haig.
Paulding, John.
Pell, Ella Ferris.
Perera, Gino.
Perry, Clara G.
Perry, R. Hinton.
Perry, Walter Scott.
Peterson, Mrs. Elsa Kirpal.
Philbin, Clara.
Piccirilli, Attilio.
Piccirilli, Furio.
Pierce, Rowena Elizabeth.
Pietz, Adam. (Medalist.)
Pitkin, Caroline W.
Pogany, W. A.
Polasek, Albin.
Pollia, Joseph P.
Pope, Alexander.
Porter, Bruce.
Porter, James.
Porter, Raymond Averill.
Portnoff, Alexander.
Potter, Edward C.
Potter, Nathan D.
Poupelet, Jane.
Pousette-Dart, Nathaniel J.
Prahar, Renee.
Prasuhn, John G.
Prendergast, Charles E.
Proctor, A. Phimister.
Putnam, Arthur.
Putnam, Brenda.
Quinn, Edmond T.
Raab, George.
Rannus, A. W.
Rathbone, Edith K.
Raul, Harry Lewis.
Ray, Man.
Rea, John L.
Recchia, Richard H.
Reinhart, Stewart.
Renzetti, Aurelius.
Rhind, J. Massey.
Ricci, Ulysses A.
Rice, William C.
Richards, Lee Greene.
Richards, Mrs. Lucy.
Richards, Myra R.
Ricketson, Walton.
Rider, Charles Joseph.
624
LIST OF SCULPTORS
Rieppel, Edwig.
Ripley, Lucy Perkins.
Risque, Caroline Everett.
Riswold, Gilbert P.
Robinson, Alonzo Clark.
Robinson, H. L.
Robinson, Kathleen B.
Romano, Nicholas.
Rosenstein, A.
Roth, F. G. R.
Ruckstull, F. W.
Rumsey, Charles Cary.
Russell, Charles M.
Ryden, Henning.
Ryerson, Mary M.
Sabatini, Raphael.
Sahler, Helen.
Saint Gaudens, Annetta Johnson.
Saint Lanne, Louis.
Salerno, Vincent.
Salvatore, Victor.
Sanford, Edward F.
Sargent, Margarett W.
Saville, Bruce Wilder.
Sawtelle, Mildred.
Sawyer, Edward W.
Scarpitta, G. S. Cartaino.
Schaafif, Anton.
Schlesinger, Louis.
Schoenfeld, Lucille.
Schonhardt, Henri.
Schuler, Hans.
Schweizer, J. Otto.
Scofield. William B.
Scott, Charles T.
Scudder, Janet.
Serrao, Mrs. Luella Varney.
Severance, Julia G.
Sherwood, Ruth.
Shonnard, Eugenie F.
Shrady, Henry M.
Shramm, Paul H.
Sievers, F. William.
Simmons, Will.
Simons, Amory C.
Sims, Ralph.
Skoog, Karl F.
Sleeth, Mrs. L. MacD.
vSloman, Joseph.
Smith, Ishmael.
Snyder, Corydon G.
Sorenscn-Dieman, Mrs. Clara B. L.
Spencer, Edna I.
Spicer-Simson, Theodore.
Stackpole, Ralph.
Stagg, Jessie A.
Stamato, Frank.
Stanson, George C.
Stea, Caesar.
Stearns, Mrs. Neilson.
Stephens, George Frank.
Sterling, Mrs. Lindsey Morris.
Sterne, Maurice.
Stetson, Katherine B.
Stimscn, Anna K.
Stokes, Frank W.
Stone, Frank F.
Storrs, John.
Stouffer, J. Edgar.
Stout, Ida McClelland.
Strunk, Herbert.
Taake, Daisy.
Taft, Lorado.
Tew, Marguerite.
Theobald, Mrs. Elisabeth S.
Thompson, Frederic L.
Thompson, Nellie L.
Tilden, Douglas.
Torrey, Mrs. Mable L.
Troubetzkoy, Paul.
Tudor, Rosamond.
Turnbull, Grace H.
Tyson, Carroll S., Jr.
Urich, Louis J.
Usher, Leila.
Vagis, P. G.
Valentien, Albert R.
Valentien, Anna M.
Valentine, Edward V.
Van Wart, Ames.
Vedder, Elihu.
Von der Lancken, Frank.
Vonnoh, Mrs. Bessie Potter.
Wagner, Frank H.
Wagner, Mary North.
Walker, Mrs. Marian D. B.
Walker, Nellie V.
Walker, Sophia A.
Ward, Winifred.
Warrick, Mrs. Meta Vaux.
Washburn, Mary.
Weber, F.
Webster, Mary H.
Weinert, Albert.
Weinger, Maria P.
Weinman, Adolph A.
Weir, John F.
Wells, Charles S.
Wells, Newton A.
Wendt, Mrs. Julia M. Bracken.
Weston, Morris.
Wheeler, E. Katharine.
Wheelock, Mrs. Lila Audubon.
Whitney, Mrs. Gertrude V.
Whitney, Margaret K.
Wiechmann, Margaret H.
Will, Blanca.
Williams, Walter Reid.
Winn, James H.
Winter, Mrs. Alice B.
Wolcott, Frank.
Wood, Grant.
Woodruff, Mrs. Corice.
Worden, Laicita W.
Wright, Alice Morgan.
Yandell, Enid.
Young, Mahonri M.
Zaring, Louise E.
Zeitlin, Alexandre.
Zettler, Emil Robert.
Zim, Marco.
Zimm, Bruno Louis.
Zimmele, Mrs. Margaret.
Zinser, Paul R.
Zolnay, George Julian.
List of Illustrators
For addressess and biographical notes, see section beginning page 329
Including etchers, engravers, cartoonists.
Abbott, Mrs. Elenore Plaisted.
Abbott, S. N.
Abdy, Mrs. Rowena Meeks.
Abrahamsen, Christian.
Addams, Clifford. (Etcher.)
Ahrens, Ellen W.
Aid, George C. (and Engr.)
Aikman, Walter M. (Wood Engr.)
Albright, Mrs. Gertrude P. (Etcher.)
Aldrich, G. Ames. (Etcher.)
Aldrich, Mrs. Cornelia W.
Allenderj Mrs. Nina E.
Alexander, C. Grear.
AUiscn, Merle.
Ament, R. S. (Etcher.)
Amick, Robert.
Andersen, Martinus.
Andersen, Ellen Graham, (and Etcher.)
Anderson, Frederic A.
Anderson, Harold.
Anderson, Karl.
Anderson, Percy E.
Anderson, Ronald.
Andreasen-Lindborg, Mrs. I. (Etcher.)
Andrew, Richard. (Etcher.)
Ansbacher, Jessie. (Etcher.)
Arlent-Edwards, S. (Engr.)
Armfield, Maxwell.
Armington, Frank M. (Etcher.)
Armington, Mrs. Caroline H. (Etcher.)
Arms, John Taylor. (and Etcher.)
Armstrong, 'Sam.
Armstrong, Voyle N.
Arnold, F. Mcintosh.
Arthurs, Stanley M.
Asanger, Jacob. (Etcher.)
Ashe, Edmund M.
Aspell, S. B.
Avinoff, A. (Etcher.)
Aylward, William J.
Babcock, E. J.
Babcock, R.
Baer, Herbert M. (Engr.)
Bailey, Henry Lewis. (Etcher.)
Bailey, Henry T.
Bailey, Minnie M.
Bailey, Vernon Howe.
Bains, Ethel F. B.
Baker, George O.
Balano, Mrs. Paula.
Balcom, Lowell, (and Etcher.)
Baldridge, C. L.
Baldwin, B. C.
Balfour, Mrs. Helen.
Balink, H. C. (Etcher.)
Ball, Linn B.
Ball, Robert.
Ballinger, H. R.
Bancroft, Milton H.
Barclay, McClelland.
Barile, X. J. (and Etcher.)
Barns, Cornelia.
Barone, Antonio. (Etcher.)
Barr, William.
Barratt, Watson.
Barry, John J. (Etcher.)
Bartlett, Dana, (and Etcher.)
Bartlett, Minnie E.
Barton, Loren. (Etcher.)
Barton, Ralph.
Batchelor, C. D.
Bates, Mrs. Bertha Corson Day.
Baum, Walter E.
Baumann, Gustave. (Engr. and I.)
Bayha, Edwin F.
Beall, C. C.
Beard, Alice.
Beard, Daniel Carter.
Beard, Lina.
Beatty, John W. (Etcher.)
Becher, Arthur E.
Beck, Raphael.
Becker, R. C. (Cartoonist.)
Belcher, Hilda.
Belcher, Mrs. Martha W. (Etcher.)
Benda, W. T.
Bender, R. T.
Beneker, Gerrit A.
Bennett, Francis I.
Benson, Frank W. (Etcher.)
Benson, Leslie L.
Benton, Harry Stacy.
Berninghaus, Oscar E.
Berryman, Clifford Kennedy.
Bettis, Charles H.
Betts, Anna Whelan.
Bevans, M. T.
Bevans, Mrs. M. T.
Bicknell, W. H. W. (Etcher.)
Biesel, H. Fred.
Bigelow, Charles C.
Biggs, Walter.
Birch, Reginald B.
Bird, L. P.
Bishop, Harold S. (Etcher.)
Black, Norman I.
Blair, E. R.
Blake, Donald.
Blake, James Henry.
Bleil, Charles. (Etcher.)
Blondheim, Adolphe W. (and Etcher.)
Blum, Alex. A. (Etcher.)
Blumenschein, Ernest L.
Blumenthal, M. L.
Boebinger, Charles W.
Boger, Fred.
Bohnert, Herbert.
Bonsall, Elizabeth F.
Bonsall, Mary W.
Booth, Franklin.
Booth, Hanson.
Borein, Edward. (Etcher.)
Borglum, Gutzon.
Bosworth, Winifred. (Etcher.)
Both, Armand.
Both, W. C. (Etcher.)
Botke, Mrs. Jessie Arms.
Bouclie, Louis. (Etcher.)
Bowdoin, Harriette.
Bower, M. L.
Boyd, Rutherford.
Bradbury, Charles Earl.
Bradley, Will.
Brandegee, Robert B.
625
626
LIST OF ILLUSTRATORS
Bransom, Paul.
Brasz, Arnold F. (and Etcher.)
Braunhold, Louis. (Etcher.)
Braxton, William E.
Break, Joseph.
Bredin, Christine S.
Brehm, George.
Brehm, Worth.
Breitmayer, M. V. (Etcher.)
Bremond, Jean Louis. (Etcher.)
Brennen, Charles.
Brett, Harold M.
Breuer, H. J.
Breul, Harold G.
Brewster, Mrs. Anna Richards,
Bridge, Mrs. Evelyn. (Etcher.)
Briggs, C. A. (Cartoonist.)
Brigham, William Edgar.
Brinkerhofif, Robert Moore.
Britton, James, (and Engr.)
Brock, Emma L.
Brodzky, Horace, (and Etcher.)
Broedel, Max.
Brooks, Amy.
Broun, Aaron.
Brown, Arthur _ William.
Brown, Benjamin C. (Etcher.)
Brown, Bolton. (Etcher.)
Brown, Mrs. Charlotte Harding.
Brown, Ethel P.
Brown, Grace E.
Brown, G. M.
Brown, Harold Haven.
Brown, Howard V.
Brown, Howell C. (Etcher.)
Brown, Ray.
Brown, Roy H.
Brown, Ted. (Cartoonist.)
Brown, Walter Francis.
Browne, Belmore.
Browne, George E. (Etcher and Lith.)
Browne, Margaret F.
Browning, G. Wesley.
Brubacker, J. O.
Brundage, William T.
Brunner, F. Sands.
Buck, C. C. (Etcher.)
Budd, Charles Jay.
Budd, Katherine Cotheal.
Budell, Ada.
Buffington, Eliza.
Buffum, Katharine G.
Bull, Charles Livingston.
Bunner, Rudolph F.
Burd, Clara M.
Burdick, Doris.
Burleigh, Sydney R.
Burlingame, Charles A.
Burnham, Mrs. Anita W. (Etcher)
Burr, George Elbert, (and Etcher.)
Burton, S. C. (and Etcher.)
Button, Albert Prentice.
Buzby, Rosella T.
Byram, Ralph S.
Cady, Harrison.
Cahan, Samuel.
Cahill, Arthur.
Caldwell, C. H.
Calewaert, Louis. (Etcher.)
Calkins, Loring Gary. (Etcher.)
Cameron, W. R.
Campbell, Floy.
Campbell, Heyworth.
Carleton, Clifford.
Carlsen, John H. (Etcher.)
Carlson, Mrs. Margaret M.
Carnell, Althea J.
Carpenter, D. S.
Carpenter, Mrs. Helen Knipe.
Carr, Gene.
Carr, Michael Carmichael. (Engr.)
Carter, Pruett A.
Caseau, Charles H.
Caser, Ettore. (Etcher.)
Casey, F. deSales.
Casey, John.
Cassatt, Mary. (Etcher.)
Cassell, John H. (Cartoonist).
Cassidy, I. D. Gerald.
Catalano, Guiseppi. (Etcher.)
Chamberlin, F. Tolles. (Etcher.)
Chambers, C. Bosseron.
Chambers, Charles.
Chambers, Robert W.
Chandler, George W. (Etcher.)
Chandler, Helen C. (and Etcher.)
Chapin, Archibald B. (and Cartoonist.)
Chapman, Carlton T.
Chapman, C. Durand.
Chapman, Charles S.
Chapman, Kenneth M.
Chase, Edward L.
Chase, Mrs. Elsie R. (and Etcher.)
Chase, Sidney M.
Chase, Wendell W. (Etcher.)
Cheney, Mary Moulton. (Des.)
Chouinard, N. M.
Christy, Howard Chandler.
Church, Frederick S. (and Etcher.)
Churchhill, Francis G. (and Etcher.)
Clapp, William H. (Etcher.)
Clark, Alson Skinner.
Clark, Herbert F. (and Etcher.)
Clark, Sarah L.
Clarke, Mrs. Corneille. (Des.)
Cleland, T. M.
Clement, Carl F.
Clinedinst, B. West.
Closson, William B. (Wood Engr.)
Clute, Mrs. Beulah Mitchell.
Coan, Helen E.
Coe, Ethel Louise.
Cole, Timothy. (Wood Engr.)
Coleman, Glenn O.
Coleman, Ralph P.
Coles, Ann C.
Colson, Frank V. (Etcher.)
Colwell, Elizabeth, (and Etcher.)
Comstock, Enos.
Comstock, Frances B.
Conley, Sarah Ward.
Conneley, Marc.
Conrey, Lee F.
Cook-Smith, Jean Beman.
Cooke, Edna.
Cooke, Jessie Day.
Coolidge, John.
Cooper, F. G.
Cootes, F. Graham.
Copeland, Charles.
Cornwell, Dean.
Corson, Mrs. Katherine Langdon.
Cotton, John W. (I. and Etcher.)
Coulter, Mary J.
Covey, Arthur S. (Etcher.)
Cowen, Perc.
Cowles, Edith V.
Cowles, Genevieve A.
Coxe, Reginald. (Etcher.)
Coyne, Will, (and Etcher.)
Cram, Allen Gilbert, (and Etcher.)
Cramer, Conrad. (Etcher.)
Crampton, R. McM.
Crank, James H.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATORS
627
Crawford, Mrs. Brenetta H.
Crawford, Earl Stetson.
Crawford, Isabel.
Crise, S. S.
Cronenwett, Clare (Etcher.)
Crooks, Forest C.
Crosby, Raymond M.
Crossman, W. H. (Etcher.)
Crowell, Margaret.
Crummer, Mary. (Etcher.)
Cucuel, Edward.
Culbertson, Queenie.
Culter, Richard.
Currier, Cyrus B.
Currier, Walter Barron. (Etcher.)
Curtis, William Fuller.
Dahlgreen, Charles W. (Etcher.)
Daingerfield, Elliott.
Daland, Katharine Maynadier.
Damianakes, Cleo. (Etcher.)
Damrosch, Helen T.
Darling, Jay Norwood.
Dart, Harry G.
Daughertv, James, (and Etcher.)
Davis, Charles Percy.
Davis, Stuart.
Davis, William S. (Etcher.)
Davis, W. Triplett.
Dawson-Watson. (Engr.)
Dayton, F. E.
Dayton, Mrs. Helena.
Decker, Mrs. E. Bennett.
De Cordoba, Mathilde. (Etcher.)
De Kruif, Henri G. (Etcher.)
De Land, Clyde Osmer.
de Leslie, Paul.
De Mar, John L.
De Maris, Walter.
Deming, Edwin W.
Deremeaux, Irma.
Desch, Frank H.
De Thulstrup, Thure.
Detwiller, F. K. (I. and Etcher.)
Dewey, Alfred J.
Dewey, Mrs. Julia Henshaw.
De Witt, Jerome P.
De Wolf, Wallace L. (Etcher.)
Dial, May.
Diedricksen, Theodore, Jr. (and Etcher).
Dielman, Frederick, (and Etcher.)
Dieterich, Waldemar F.
Dillaye, Blanche (and Etcher.)
Dinsmore. E. J.
Dismant, Marion.
Dixon, Maynard.
Dodd, M. D. (Etcher.)
Dodge, Chester L.
Dodge, Ozias. (Etcher.)
Donahey, James H. (and Cartoonist.)
Donaldson, Alice W.
Donlevy, Alice H.
Doolittle, Harold L. (Etcher.)
Doran, Robert C. (Etcher.)
Doskow, Israel.
Dow, A. W. (Etcher.)
Drake, Frank C.
Drake, Will H.
Drayton, Mrs. G. G.
Dreyfuss, Byron G.
Dryden, Helen.
Drysdale, A. J.
Du Brau, Gertrud.
Du Mond, F. Melville.
Du Mond, Frank Vincent.
Dunbar, Harold C.
Duncan, Charles W.
Duncan, Geraldine R. (Etcher.)
Dunn, Harvey T.
Dunton, W. Herbert.
Duphiny, Wilfred.
Dupre, E.
Dwiggins, W. A. (Etcher.)
Dyer, H.
Easley, Jo.
Eastman, Ruth.
Eaton, Hugh M.
Eaton, Mrs. Margaret Fernie.
Eby, Kerr, (and Etcher.)
Eddy, H. B.
Edholm, C. L.
Edrop, Arthur N.
Edwards, Edward B.
Edwards, George Wharton.
Edwards, Harry C.
Edwards, Robert.
Eland, John Shenton. (and Etcher.)
Elder, Arthur J.
Elliott, Elizabeth Shippen Green.
Elliott, Hannah.
Elwell, John H. (Etcher.)
Emerson, Arthur W. (and Etcher.)
Emerson, C. Chase.
Emerton, James H.
Emmet, Lydia Field.
Emrich, Harvey.
Engler, Arthur. (Engr.)
Enright, Mrs. Maginel Wright.
Enright, Walter J.
Ertz, Edward F. (and Etcher.)
Ertz, Gordon.
Eskridge, Robert L. (Etcher.)
Essig, George Emerick.
Evans, Grace L.
Evans, John W. (Wood Engr.)
Fairbanks, J. Leo. (Etcher.)
Fairchild, C. Willard.
Falls, Charles Buckles.
Falls, De Witt Clinton. (Comic.)
Fangel, Henry Guy.
Fangel, Mrs. Maud Tousey.
Paris, Ben Howard.
Farnham, Paul.
Farnung, Helen M. (Etcher.)
Farrell, Mrs. Katherine Levin. (Etcher.)
Fassett, Truman E.
Faulkner, Herbert W. (and Engr.)
F'ay, Clark
Fay, Nancy.
Felker, Ruth Kate.
Fellows, A. P. (Etcher.)
Fenderson, Mark.
Ferguson, Elizabeth F.
Fernbach, Agnes B. (Etcher.)
Ferriss, Hugh, (and Etcher.)
Field, Hamilton Easter. (Etcher.)
Fincken, James H. (Etcher.) •
Fink, Denman.
Fiorentino-Valle, Mrs. Maude.
Firestone, I. L.
Fischer, Anton Otto.
Fischer, Mrs. M. E. S.
Fisher, Bud.
Fisher, Harrison.
Fisher, William E.
Fisk, H. T.
Fiske, Gertrude. (Etcher.)
Fitsch, Eugene C. (Etcher.)
Fitts, Mrs. Clara Atwood.
Fitzpatrick, Daniel Robert. (Cartoonist.)
Flagg, James Montgomery.
Fleming, Henry S.
Fogarty, Thomas.
628
LIST OF ILLUSTRATORS
Foote, Mary.
Forbell, Charles.
Forbes, Helen K. (Etcher.)
Foringer, A. E.
Foster, Ralph L.
Foster, W. F.
Forsythe, Clyde.
Fournier, Alexis J.
Fox, Fontaine. (Cartoonist.)
France, J. L.
Frantz, Marshall.
Eraser, Malcolm.
Frederick, Edmund.
French, Frank, (and Wood Engr.)
Fries, Charles Arthur.
Frost, Arthur B.
Frost, John.
Frueh, Alfred J.
Frye, Mary H.
Fuertes, Louis Agassiz.
Fuhr, Ernes':.
Fuller, Arthur D.
Fuller, Ralph Briggs.
Furlong, Charles.
Gag, Wanda H.
Gage, George W.
Gaghon, Clarence A. (Etcher.)
Gale, Walter R.
Gallagher, Sears. (Etcher.)
Galli, Alfredo.
Garbett, Mrs. Cornelia B.
Gardiner, Eliza D. (Engr.)
Gardner, Donald.
Gardner, Hamlin.
Garratt, Arthur.
Garrett, Anna.
Garrett, Edmund H. (and Etcher.)
Garrett, Theresa A. (Etcher.)
Gasbarro, Nicola.
Gaul, C. G.
Gaul, Gilbert.
Gaylor, Wood. (Etcher.)
Gearhart, Frances H. (Etcher.)
Gearhart, May. (Etcher.)
Gerstle, Miriam Alice, (and Etcher.)
Getchell, Edith Loring. (Etcher.)
Gettier, C. R.
Gibbs, George.
Gibson, Charles Dana.
Giddings, Albert F. (Etcher.)
Giddings, Frank.
Gieberich, O. H. (Etcher.)
Gilbert, C. Allen.
Gilbert, Caroline. (Etcher.)
Giles, Howard.
Gillespie, Jessie.
Gilmore, Ada. (Wood Engr.)
Glackens, William J.
Gleeson, C. K. (Etcher.)
Goddard, Florence M. (Etcher.)
Godwin, Frank.
Goetsch, Gustav F.
Goldbeck, Walter Dean. (Etcher.)
Goldberg, R. L. (Cartoonist.)
Goldthwaite, Anne. (Etcher.)
Goodwin, Arthur Clifton.
Goodwin, Philip R.
Gordon, F. C.
Gore, Thomas H. (Des.)
Goss, John.
Graeff, Robert A.
Graham, Miss Payson.
Grant, Blanche C. (and Etcher.)
Grant, Frederic M. (and Etcher.)
Grant, Gordon H.
Green, Bernard I. (Etcher.)
Green, H. H. (and Etcher.)
Green, Mildred C.
Greenberg, Maurice.
Greenberg, Morris. (Etcher.)
Greend:, Albert V.
Greening, Harry Cornell.
Greenleaf, Ray.
Greer, Blanche.
Griflfin, James Martin. (Etcher.)
Griffith, Louis Oscar. (Etcher.)
Grigware, Edward T.
Groome,- Esther M, (Etcher.)
Grosbeck, Dan.
Grosvenor, Thelma C.
Grcut, H. L.
Grub, Henry.
Gruppe, Emile A.
Guarino, S. A. (Etcher.)
Guenther, Lambert.
Guerin, Jules,
Gunn, Archie.
Gutmann, Bernhard.
Hackett, Grace E.
Hafifner, F. J.
Haines, B. Aylesworth.
Haines, Marie B.
Hake, Otto E.
Hale, Robert. (Etcher.)
Halladay, Milton R.
Hallowell, George H.
Hambidge, Jay.
Hamilton, George T.
Hamilton, John McLure.
Hamilton, Norah. (Etcher.)
Hamilton, W. D.
Hammersmith, Paul. (Etcher.)
Handy, Ray D. (Clartoonist).
Hanna, Thomas King.
Hansen, Armin Carl. (Etcher.)
Hanson, Henry.
Hapgood, Alice H.
Harbeson, Mrs. Georgiana N.
Harding, George.
Hardy, Charles.
Hardy, Walter M.
Hare, J. Knowles.
Harer, Frederick W. (Etcher.)
Harhberger, Mrs. F. E. S.
Harrison, L. Birge.
Harriton, Abraham. (Etcher.)
Harshe, Robert B. (Etcher.)
Harting, G. W.
Hartman, Sydney K.
Hartwell, George K.
Harvey, George W. (Etcher.)
Haskell, Ernest. (Etcher.)
Hassam, Childe. (Etcher.)
Hatherell, W.
Haweis, Stephen. (Etcher.)
Hayes, Lee. (Etcher.)
Hazell, Frank.
Hazeltcn, I.
Hazen, Bessie E. (Etcher.)
Heath, Howard.
Heil, Charles E.
Heintzelman. A. W. (Etcher.)
Hekking, William M.
Held, Jack, (and Etcher.)
Helwig, A. M.
Heinzman, Samilla.
Heming, Arthur.
Hencke, Albert.
Hendrickson, David.
Henry, J.
Hentschel, W. E. (Etcher.)
Herman, Leonora O. (Etcher.)
Herzel, Paul.
Hess, Alexander.
i
LIST OF ILLUSTRATORS
629
Heuermann, Magda.
Heustis, Louise L.
Heyer, H.
Heyler, Mrs. Mary P. G.
Higgins, Eugene. (Etcher.)
Hilder, G. Howard.
Hill, Pearl L.
Hill, R. Jerome.
Hill, Sara B. (Etcher.)
Hill, W. E.
Hiller, Le Jaren.
Hinchman, Margaretta S.
Hintermeister, Henry.
Hinton, Charles Louis.
Hirschberg, Carl.
Hitchcock, D. Howard.
Hitchcock, Lucius W.
Hittle, Margaret A. (Etcher and I.)
Hoban, Frank J.
Hobart, Clark. (Etcher.)
Hoffman, G. A. (Etcher.)
Holloway, Edward Stratton.
Holloway, Mrs. Ida H.
Holmes, Mrs. Harriet M. (Etcher.)
Holmes, Ralph.
Honore, Paul, (and Etcher.)
Hooper, Mrs. Annie Blakeslee.
Hooper, Will Phillip.
Hopkins, C. E. (Etcher.)
Hopkins, Edna Boies. (Engr.)
Hoppe, Leslie F. (Des.)
Hopper, Edward.
Hopson, William F. (Etcher and Engr.)
Hornby, Lester G. (and Engr.)
Horter, Earl.
Howard, Eloise. (Etcher.)
Howitt, John Newton.
Hubbard, C. D.
Hubbard, Kin.
Huf, Karl.
Hufifington, John C.
Hull, Mrs. Marie A.
Humphrey, David W.
Hunt, Leigh. (Etcher.)
Hunt, Mrs. Una Clarke.
Hunter, Isabel.
Hurley, E. T. (Etcher.)
Hurst, L. E.
Hurtt, Arthur R.
Hutaf, August W.
Hutchison, D. C.
Hyde, Russell Taber. (Etcher.)
Illian, George.
Ingham, Mrs. Elizabeth.
Inglis. John J.
Ingraham, George H. (Etcher.)
lorio, Adrian J. (Etcher.)
Ireland, William.
Irvin, Rea.
Ivins, Mrs. Florence W. (Engr.)
Ivory, P. V. E.
Jackson, Chevalier.
Jackson, Elbert M.
Jackson, John E.
Jacoby, Helen Eaton.
Jacques, Bertha E. (Etcher.)
James, Arthur E.
Jameson, Arthur E.
Jemne, Mrs. Elsa L.
Jenkins, Mattie M.
Jessup, Josephine.
Johnson, Frank Tenney.
Johnson, Herbert.
Johnson, Margaret.
Johnson, Merle De Vore.
Johnson, P. D.
Johnson, Robert.
Johnston, Robert E.
Jones, Bayard.
Jones, Seth C.
Joseph, Adelyn L.
Junge, Carl S.
Justice, Martin.
Kaiser, August.
Karfunkle, David. (Etcher.)
Katoaka, Genjiro.
Katzieff, Julius D. (Etcher.)
Kauffman, G. F.
Kaufman, Jean Francois. (Etcher.)
Kearfott. Robert.
Keeler, Charles B. (Etcher.)
Kehrer, F. A.
Keister, Roy C.
Keith, Mrs. Dora Wheeler.
Keller, Arthur I.
Keller, Marie.
Kellogg, Edmund P.
Kelly, James E.
Kelman, Ben.
Kemble, E. W.
Kemp, Oliver.
Kendall, Elisabeth.
Kerns, Fannie.
Kevx, George.
Ketten, Maurice.
Keys, Harry J.
Kidder, B. I.
Kimball, Alonzo Myron.
Kimball. Katharine, (and Etcher.)
King, Charles B. (Etcher.)
King, Hamilton.
King, James S. (Etcher.)
King, W. B.
Kinney, Mrs. Margaret West.
Kinney, Troy, (and Etcher.)
Kirby, C. Valentine. (Etcher.)
Kirkpatrick, W. A.
Klages, Frank H.
Klein, Isidore. (Etcher.)
Klepper, Frank X. (Etcher.)
Kline, George.
Kline, Hibbard.
Kline, William F.
Klopper, Zan D.
Knecht, K. K. (Cartoonist.)
Knight, Charles R.
Knight, Clayton.
Knowles. F. McG.
Koch, William.
Roller, E. Leonard.
Krehbiel, Mrs. Dulah Evans.
Kroll, Elise M.
Kromer, E. A.
Kurtz, Wilbur G.
Kusche. Carlton J.
Lahey, Richard F.
Lamb, Mrs. Ella Condie.
Lang, Charles M.
Langlev, Mrs. Sarah.
Larsen, Charles P. (Etcher.)
Lauber. Joseph, (and Etcher.)
Laurie-Wallace, John.
Lazzell, Blanche. (Etcher and Engr.)
Leach, Bernard. (Etcher.)
Leake, Gerald.
Learned, Arthur G.
Le Blanc, Marie de Hoa.
Lee, Homer. (Engr.)
Lee. Selma V. P. (Etcher.^
Leich, Chester. (Etcher.)
Leigh, William R.
Leitner, Leander.
Lemos, Frank B. (Etcher.)
Lemos, Pedro J. (and Etcher.)
630
LIST OF ILLUSTRATORS
Leppert, Rudolph E.
Lester, William H. (and Etcher.)
Lever, Hayley. (Etcher.)
Levering, Albert.
Levy, Alex O.
Levy, Beatrice S, (Etcher.)
Levy, William Auerbach. (Etcher.)
Lewis, Allen, (and Etcher, Engr.)
Leyendecker, Frank X.
Leyendecker, G.
Leyendecker J. C.
Lincoln, F. Foster.
Lindenmuth, Tod. (Etcher.)
Lindsley, E. E.
Linson, Corwin Knapp.
Litle, Arthur.
Little, Philip. (Etcher.)
Litzinger, Dorothea M. (Etcher.)
Livezey, Will E.
Lloyd, Mrs. Lucile. (Etcher.)
Locke, Charles W. (and Etcher.)
Loeb, Dorothy. (Etcher.)
Logan, Maurice.
Logan, Robert Fulton.
Loomis, Chester.
Lorraine, Helen. (Medical.)
Lothrop, Gertrude Fay.
Louderback, Walter.
Loven, Frank W.
Low, Will H.
Lowell, Orson.
Lowenheim, F.
Lum, Mrs. Bertha. (Etcher.)
Lund, Harold.
Lundborg, Florence.
Lungren, Fernand.
Luquiens, Hue. M. (Etcher.)
Lynd, J. Norman.
Macdonald, Arthur N. (Engr.)
Macdonald, Frank E.
MacDonald, Harold L.
MacDonall, Angus.
MacGregor, Mrs. Sara Newlin.
MacKenzie, Roderick D.
MacLaughlin, Donald S. (Etcher.)
MacLellan, Charles A.
MacLeod, A. S. (Etcher.)
Mackall, R. McGill. (Etcher.)
Mackay, William A.
Mahony, Felix.
Malm, Gustav N.
Malone, Mrs. Laetitia H.
Manley, Thomas R. (Etcher.)
Manoir, Irving K.
Mansfield, Louise B.
Mansfield. Mrs. Blanche McManus.
Manual, Margaret. (Etcher.)
Marcus, Edwin. (Cartoonist.)
Marcus, Peter. (Etcher.)
Margulies, Joseph. (Etcher.)
Marin, John. (Etcher.)
Marr, Carl.
Mars, Ethel. (Engr. and Wood Blocks.)
Marschener, Arthur A. (Etcher.)
Marsh, Charles H. (Etcher.)
Marshall, Frank W.
Martinez, Xavier. (Etcher.)
Mason, Robert Lindsay.
Masters, Frank B.
Mathews, F. S.
Mathews, Mrs. Lucia K.
Mathieu, Hubert.
Mathus, Henry. (Lith.)
Matthews, Anna Lou.
Mattocks, Muriel.
Matzke, Albert.
May, Thomas. (Cartoonist.)
Mayer, "Hy." (Caricaturist.)
Mayfield, Robert B. (Etcher.)
Mayhew, Nell Brooker. (Etcher.)
McAlister, R. F.
McAllister, Ethel Louise.
McBey, James. (Etcher.)
McBurney, James E.
McCarter, Henry.
McCarthy. C. J.
McCay, Winsor. (Cartoonist.)
McClellan, Mary,
McComb, M. L.
McConnell, Emlen.
McCormick, Howard. (and Engr.)
McCormick, Katherine H.
McCouch, Gordon Mallet. (Etcher.)
McCutcheon, John T. (Caricaturist.)
McEwen, Alexandrine.
Mclntire, Katherine A. (Etcher.)
McKell, James C.
McKernan, Frank.
McKinnon, Mrs. Mary.
McLaughlin, Charles J.
McLellan, Ralph. (Etcher.)
McManus, George. (Cartoonist.)
McMein, Neysa M.
McMillen, Mildred. (Wood Engr.)
Mears, Henrietta Dunn.
Meinshausen, George, (and Wood Engr.)
Meissner, Alfred.
Melcher, Mrs. Bertha Corbett.
Mente, Charles.
Mentel, Lillian.
Mero, Lee.
Merrick, Arthur T.
Merrill, Hiram C. (Wood Engr.)
Merrill, Katharine. (Etcher.)
Merritt, Mrs. Anna Lea. (Etcher.)
Meteyard, Thomas B.
Meyer, Enno.
Meyer, Herbert.
Meyerowitz, William. (Etcher.)
Meyers, Harry M.
Meylan, Paul J.
MeyTier, Walter.
Micks, J. Rumsey.
Mielziner, Leo.
Milhau, Zella de. (and Etcher.)
Miller, Richard E.
Miller, William. (Wood Engr.)
Mills, Thomas Henry, (and Etcher.)
Milne, David B.
Minard, Florence H.
Mish, Charlotte.
Mitchell, G. Bertram.
Moch, Gladys A. (Etcher.)
Modjeska, Marylka H. (Etcher.)
Monahan, P. J.
Moore, Benson B.
Moore, Cecil G.
Moore, Edwin A. (Etcher.)
Moore, Guernsey.
Moorepark, Carton.
Mora, F. Luis.
Moran, E. Percy. (Etcher.)
Moran, Thomas. (Etcher and Engr.)
Morey, Bertha G. (Etcher.)
Morgan, F. Townsend. (and Etcher.)
Morgan, Lynn T.
Morgan, Wallace.
Morrison, Zaidee.
Morse, Anne Goddard.
Mowat, H. J.
Mulford, Stockton.
Munro, Albert A.
Mura, Frank.
Murphy, Mrs, Ada C.
I
LIST OF ILLUSTRATORS
631
Murphy, H. Dudley.
Murphy, Mrs. Nelly L.
Musser, Byron J. (and Etcher.)
Mutton, Hilda. (Etcher.)
Myers, Mrs. Ethel.
Myers, E. E. (Etcher.)
Myers, O. Irwin.
Nankivell, Frank A.
Nash, Edgar S.
Needham, Charles Austin.
Neill, Frances I. (Etcher.)
Neill, Tohn R.
Nell, Miss Tony.
Nelson, G. Patrick.
Neubauer, Frederick A.
Newell, Peter.
Newhall, Harriot B. (Etcher.)
Newman, Anna M.
Nicholls, Mrs. Rhoda Holmes.
Nichols, H. D.
Nichols, Hobart.
Nichols, John W. (Etcher.)
Nichols, Spencer B.
Nicolson, Mrs. Edith R.
Nikolaki, Z. P. (and Etcher.)
Niven, Frank R.
Noll, Arthur H. (Etcher.)
Nordfeldt, B. J. O. (Engr. and Etcher.)
Norris, W. J.
Northcote, Stafford M. (Wood Engr.)
Norton, Clara M.
Nosworthy, Mrs. Florence England.
Nuderscher, Frank, (and Etcher.)
Nuyttens, J. P. (Etcher.)
Nye, Elmer L. (Etcher.)
Oakley, Thornton.
Oakley, Violet.
Oberhardt, William. (and Etcher.)
O'Connor, Henry M. (Etcher.)
Ogden, H. A.
Ogden, Lyman G.
Operti, Albert.
Opper, Frederick Burr. (Comic.)
Organ, Marjorie (Mrs. Henri.) (Cartoonist.)
Orr, Alfred E.
Orwig, Louise.
Osborn, Frank. (Etcher.)
Osgood, Harry H. (Etcher.)
Otis, S. D. (and Etcher.)
Outcault, Richard F. (Comic.)
Palmer, Herman.
Pancoast, Morris Hall.
Pape, Eric.
Parker, Cora.
Parker, Cushman,
Parker, Emma A.
Parkhurst, Mrs. Anita.
Parkhurst, C. E.
Parkhurst, Thomas Shrewsbury.
Parrish, Mrs, Clara Weaver. (Etcher.)
Parrish, Maxfield.
Parrish, Stephen. (Etcher.)
Partridge, Roi. (Etcher.)
Pattee, Elsie Dodge.
Patterson, Margaret.
Paul, Charles R.
Pauli, Corinne.
PauUin, Telford.
Paulus, Francis P. (Etcher.)
Paxon, Edgar S.
Paxson, Mrs. Ethel.
Pearce, Edgar L. (Etcher.)
Pearson, Ralph M. (Etcher.)
Peck, Mrs. Anne Merriman.
Peck, Henry J.
Peets, Orville H. (Etcher.)
Pegram, Fred.
Peirce, H. Winthrop.
Peixotto, Ernest C.
Pell, Ella Ferris.
Penfield, Edward.
Pennell, Joseph. (and Etcher.)
Perard, Victor S. (and Etcher.)
Percy, Mrs. Isabelle Clark.
Perkins, Mrs. Lucy Fitch.
Perrett, A. Louise.
Perrett, Galen J.
Perry, Raymond.
Pescheret, Leon R. (Des.)
Peters, C. F.
Peters, Clinton.
Petremont, Clarice M.
Peugeot, George I.
Peyton, Alfred C.
Peyton, Mrs. Ann Moon.
Pfeiffer, Fritz.
Pfiefer, Herman.
Phelps, Edith C.
Phillips, Bert.
Phillips, John Henry.
Piazzoni, Gottardo F. P. (Etcher.)
Pierce, Anna Harriet.
Pirson, Elmer W.
Plaschke, Paul A.
Plowman, George T. (I. and Etcher.)
Plummer, Mrs. Ethel M.
Pogany, W. A. (and Etcher.)
Polley, Frederick. (Etcher.)
Pooke, Marion L.
Poole, Bert.
Poole, F. V.
Poole, H. Nelson, (and Etcher.)
Poore, Henry R.
Pope, Mrs. Marion H.
Popini, Alexander.
Post, May Audubon.
Potter, H. S.
Potthast, Edward H.
Pousette-Dart, Nathaniel. (Etcher.)
Powell, Caroline A. (Wood Engr.)
Powell, Doane.
Powers, John M.
Prather, Ralph Carlyle.
Pratt, Philip H.
Prendergast, Charles E. (Etcher.)
Prendergast, Maurice B.
Preston, Mrs. Mary Wilson.
Price, Edith B.
Price, Margaret E.
Price, Norman.
Prince, William Meade.
Prior, Charles M. (Des. and Etcher.)
Pullinger, Herbert.
Putnam, Stephen G. (Wood Engr.)
Quinlan, Will J. (Etcher.)
Rae, John.
Rakeman, Carl.
Raleigh, Henry.
Ramsey, L. A.
Randall, D. Ernest.
Randall, Paul A.
Randolph, Lee. (Etcher.)
Rannells, Will.
Raschen, Carl M.
Rau, William.
Raymond, F. W. (Engr. and Etcher.)
Reade, Frank E.
Reed, Earl H. (Etcher.)
Reich, Jacques. (Etcher.)
Reid, Albert Turner.
Reindel, William G. (Etcher.)
Reinhart, Stewart. (Etcher.)
Relyea, Charles M.
Resler, George Earl. (Etcher.)
632
LIST OF ILLUSTRATORS
Reuterdahl, Henry.
Reynard, Grant.
Reynolds, Frederick. (Etcher.)
Rhead, Louis.
Rice, William C
Rice, William S.
Richards, George M.
Richards, Harriet R.
Richards, Lee Greene.
Richardson, Clara V.
Richardson, Frederick.
Richardson, Marion. (Etcher.)
Richter, Wilmer S.
Riesenberg, Sidney.
Rigby, Joseph P.
Riis, Anna M. (Des.)
Rion, Mrs. Hanna.
Robbins, F. W. (Etcher.)
Robbins, John W. (Etcher and Cartoonist.)
Roberts, Mrs. Violet K.
Robinson, Boardman.
Robinson, David.
Roche, M. Paul. (Etcher.)
Rochon, Louise.
Rockwell, Norman.
Roderick, Lulu Zita.
Rogers, Barksdale.
Rogers, John A. (Etcher.)
Rogers, Louise De G. (Etcher.)
Rogers, William Allen. (Caricaturist.)
Rohn, Ray.
Root, Robert M.
Rosenmeyer, B. J.
Rosenthal, Albert. (Etcher.)
Rosenthal, David.
Ross, Gordon.
Roth, Ernest David. (Etcher.)
Roth, Herbert.
Rowe, Clarence, (and Etcher.)
Rubins, H. W. (Etcher.)
Rungius, Carl.
Rush, Olive.
Russell, Charles M.
Ruyl, Louis H. (and Etcher.)
Ruzicka, R. (and Etcher and Wood Engr.)
Ryan, Douglas.
Ryan, Edward.
Ryden, Henning.
Ryder, Worth. (Etcher.)
Ryerson, Margery. (Etcher.)
Ryland, Robert K.
Sacker, Amy M.
Saint, Lawrence. (Etcher.)
Saint John, J. Allen.
Sandzen, S. Birger. (Etcher.)
Sanger, William. (Etcher.)
Sarg, Tony.
Sarka, Charles.
Sartain, Emily. (Engr.)
Sawyer, Wells M.
Sax, Carol M. (Des.)
Schabelitz, R. F.
Schell, F'. Cresson.
Schick, Fred G.
Schiffer, Mrs. Ethel B. (and Etcher and Engr.)
Schilling, A. O.
Schmidt, O.
Schmidt, O. F.
Schmitt, Carl. (Etcher.)
Schnackenberg, Henry E. (Etcher.)
Schneider, Arthur.
Schneider, Otto J. (and Etcher.)
Schoonover, Frank E.
Schwab, Eloise M. (Etcher.)
Schwankovsky, Frederick J.
Schwartzkopf, Earl C.
Scott, John G.
Seawell, H. W.
Seipp, Alice.
Selden, Miss Dixie.
Senecal, Ralph L.
Senseney, George. (Etcher.)
Seton, Ernest Thompson.
Severance, Julia G. (Etcher.)
Seymour, Ralph F. (I. and Etcher.)
Shafer, L. A. (and Etcher.)
Shannon, Howard J.
Sharp, J. H.
Sharpe, Julia G. (Des.)
Shaver, J. R.
Sheffer, Glen C.
Shepherd, C. G.
Shepherd, Clinton.
Shepherd, J. C.
Sheridan, Frank J., Jr.
Sheridan, John E.
Sherwood, Mary Clare.
Sherwood, William. (Etcher.)
Shilling, Alexander. (Etcher.)
Shinn, Florence Scovel.
Shope, Henry B. (Etcher.)
Shorey, George H.
Shrader, E. Roscoe.
Shramm, Paul H.
Shuster, William H.
Sibert, Edward S. (Etcher.)
Siemsen, Frederick F.
Simmons, Will, (and Etcher.)
Simpson, Mrs. Clara Davidson.
Simpscn, Maxwell S.
Sindelar, Thomas A.
Skelton, Leslie J.
Skidmore, Lewis P.
Skidmore, Thornton D.
Sloan, J. Blanding. (and Etcher.)
Sloan, John, (and Etcher.)
Sloman, Joseph.
Small, F. W.
Smedley, Will Larymore.
Smillie, George F. (Engr.)
Smith, Albert A.
Smith, Albert E.
Smith, Alice R. H. (Engr. and Etcher.)
Smith, Dan.
Smith, Duncan.
Smith, E. Boyd.
Smith, F. Berkeley.
Smith, Howard.
Smith, Ishmael.
Smith, J. Andre. (Etcher.)
Smith, Jessie Willcox.
Smith, W. Granville.
Smith, Wuanita.
Smyth, S. G.
Snapp, Frank.
Snead, Mrs. Louise W.
Snyder, Corydon G. (and Etcher.)
Sommer, Julius G.
Sonn, Albert H.
Sonnichsen, Yngvar.
Sottek, Frank, (and Etcher.)
Southwick, Katherine.
Spackman, Cyril. (Etcher.)
Spader, W. E.
Sparks, H. L.
Sparks, Will. (Etcher.)
Speakman, Mrs. Anna.
Spencer, Edna I.
Spencer, Guy Raymond. (Cartoonist.)
Spencer, Hugh.
Spero, M. J.
Spradling, Frank.
Squire, Maud H. (and Etcher.)
Squires, C. Clyde.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATORS
633
Stackpole, Ralph. (Etcher.)
Stahr, Paul C.
Stanlaws, Penrhyn.
Stanley, Frederic.
Stark, Otto.
Stebbins, Roland S.
Steele, Frederic Dorr.
Steele, Mrs. Z. de L.
Stephens, Mrs. Alice Barber, (and Wood Engr.)
Stern, Ethel Louise. (Etcher.)
Sterne, Maurice. (Etcher.)
Sterner, Albert.
Stevens, Dalton.
Stevens, Dorothy. (Etcher.)
Stevens, E. D.
Stevens, Mrs. Helen B. (Etcher.)
Stevens, Thomas Wood. (Etcher.)
Stevens, W. D.
Stevens, Will Henry. (Dcs.)
Stewart, Le Conte.
Stewart, Robert W.
Stimson, John Ward.
Stoddard, Frederick L.
Stone, Walter King.
Stoner, Harry.
Stoops, Herbert M.
Storrs, John. (Etcher.)
Stover, Allan James.
Stowell, M. Louise.
Strahan, Alfred W.
Straus, Mitteldorfer.
Street, Frank.
Stringfield, Vivian F.
Strohl, Clififord H.
Strothman, Fred.
Stroud, Clara.
Stroud, Mrs. Ida W. (Des.)
Stubbs, Mary H.
Stuever, Celia M. (Etcher.)
Sturgeon, Ruth. (Etcher.)
Sturges, Dwight C. (Etcher.)
Sturges, Lee. (Etcher.)
Sturtevant, Louisa C.
Suhr, F. J.
Sullivant, T. S.
Summers, Dudley.
Summers, Ivan F.
Swain, Francis W. (Etcher.)
Swan, Florence W.
Sweeney, W. K.
Swift, Ivan. (Etcher.)
Swift, Ted S. (and Etcher.)
Swisher, P. M.
Sykes, C. H.
Tafts, C. H.
Tallmadge, Thomas E. (Etcher.)
Taylor, Charles J.
Taylor, Edgar J.
Taylor, H. W.
Taylor, William F.
Taylor, W. L.
Teague, W. D.
Telling, Elizabeth. (Etcher.)
Ten Eyck, John A. (Etcher.)
Thiede, Henry A.
Thiem, Herman C.
Thompson, F. Leslie. (Etcher.)
Thompson, G. A. (Des.)
Thompson, Hannah. (Etcher.)
Thompson, John Edward.
Thomson, Rodney.
Thomson, William T.
Thrasher, Leslie.
Thum, Patty P.
Titcomb, M. Bradish.
Tittle, Walter.
Titus, Aime B.
Tobin, George T.
Tolman, R. (Etcher.)
Tolson, Norman. (and Etcher.)
Townsend, Harry E. (and Etcher.)
Train, H. Scott.
Trask, J. E. D.
Treidler, Adolph.
Triggs, Floyd W. (Cartoonist.)
True, Allen Tupper.
Tschudy, H. B.
Tuttle, Mrs. Mildred J.
Tyler, Ernest F. (Des.)
Tyler, James G.
Ullman, Mrs. Alice Woods.
Ulp, Clifford M.
Underwood, Clarence F.
Upton, Florence K.
Valentine, DeAlton.
VanBuren, Rae.
Van Dresser, William.
Van Gorder, L. Emerson.
VanSloun, Frank J. (Etcher.)
VanWerveke, George.
Varian, George.
Varian, Lester E. (Etcher.)
Vedder, Elihu.
Venanzi, Carlo Gino. (Etcher.)
Ver Beck, Frank.
Verbeek, Gustave. (Etcher.)
Verheyden, Francois. (Etcher.)
Verrees, J. Paul. (Etcher.)
Vetter, Mrs. Cornelia C. (Etcher.)
Vice, H. S.
Vivian, Calthea. (Etcher.)
Voight, Charles A.
Von der Lancken, Frank.
Vondrous, John C. (and Etcher.)
Von Gottschalck O. H.
Von Hofsten, H.
Von'Schmidt, Harold.
Wack, Henry W.
Wadsworth, Wedworth.
Wager-Smith, Miss Curtis.
Wagner, Frank H.
Wagner, Mary N.
Wagner, Rob.
Walker, A. B.
Walker, Dugald S.
Walker, Sophia A. (Etcher.)
Walker, William H. (Caricaturist.)
Walkowitz, Abraham. (Etcher.)
Wall, Bernhardt. (Etcher.)
Ward, E. F
Wargy, Armand. (Etcher.)
Warner, Everett L. (Etcher.)
Warren, Harold B.
Warrick, Mrs. Meta Vaux.
Washburn, Cadwallader. (Etcher.)
Watkins, W. Reginald.
Watson, Agnes M.
Watson, Amelia Montague.
Watson, Ernest W.
Watson, Mrs. Eva Auld.
Watson, Henry S.
Watt, Barbara H.
Watt, William G. (Wood Engraver.)
Waugh, Coulton. (Etcher.)
Waugh, Frederick J.
Webb, Margaret Ely. (and Etcher.)
Weber, F. (Etcher.)
Weber, Mrs. Sarah S. S.
Webster, Harold T.
Webster, Herman A. (Etcher.;
Weddell, Iris. (Etcher.)
Weedell, Hazel, (Etcher.)
Weill, Edmond. (Etcher.)
Weinrich, Agnes. (Etcher.)
634
LIST OF ILLUSTRATORS
Weldon, Charles D.
Wells, Newton A.
Welsh, H. Devitt. (and Etcher.)
Wentworth, Adelaide E. (Etcher.)
Werntz, Carl N.
Wesselhoeft, Mary Eraser.
Westerman, Harry James. (and Cartoonist.)
Wetherell, E. K. K.
Wheeler, Cleora.
Wheeler, Laura.
White, Alden. (Etcher.)
White, Gilbert.
Whiteham, May.
Whitehead, Walter.
Whiting, John D.
Whitmoor, Robert H.
Whitney, Isabel L.
Wiggins, Sidney. (Etcher.)
Wilder, Ralph. (Caricaturist.)
Wildhack, Robert J.
Wilimovsky, Charles A. (Etcher.)
Wilke, William H. (Etcher.)
Will, Blanca.
Williams, Mrs. Clara Elsene.
Williams, Charles D.
Williams, Gaar.
Williams, John A.
Williams, John Scott. (Etcher.)
Williams, Reed. (Etcher.)
Williamson, J. Maynard, Jr.
Wilson, Edward A.
Wilson, Frederick.
Wilson, Mrs. Rose C. O'Neil.
Wilson, Vaux.
Winkler, John W. (Etcher.)
Winner, Margaret F.
Winslow, Mrs. Eleanor C.
Winslow, Henry. (Engr. and Etcher.)
Winstanley, John B.
Winter, Mrs. Alice Beach.
Winter, Charles A.
Winter, Ezra.
Winter, Milo.
Wirth, Anna M.
Wittmark, Edgar F.
Wolever, Adeleine.
Wolcott, Frank. (Etcher.)
Wolf, Mrs. Eva M. N.
Wolfe, George.
Wolflf, Otto.
Womrath, A. K.
Wood, Franklin T. (Etcher.)
Wood, Jessie P.
Wood, Virginia H. (Etcher.)
Woodbury, C. O.
Woodward, Ellsworth.
Woodward, J. Douglas.
Woodward, Stanley W. (and Etcher.)
Woolrych, Mrs. Bertha H.
Woolrych, F. Humphrey W.
Worcester, Albert. (Etcher.)
Worden, Laicita W.
Wores, Theodore.
Workman, David Tice. (Etcher.)
Wray, Henry R. (Etcher.)
Wrenn, Charles L.
Wright, Charles H.
Wright, Charles L.
Wright, George H.
Wright, Margaret Harden. (Etcher.)
Wright, Mrs. M. Louise.
Wyeth, N. C.
Yens, Karl (and Etcher.)
Yeomans, Walter C. (Etcher.)
Yohn, F. C.
Young, Arthur. (Cartoonist.)
Young, C. Jac. (Etcher.)
Young, Mahonri M. (Etcher.)
Young, William C.
Zarini, E. Mazzoni. (Etcher.)
Zeigler, E. P.
Zeigler, Lee Woodward.
Zim, Marco. (Etcher.)
Zimmele, Mrs. Margaret.
Zimmerman, Eugene. (Caricaturist.)
Zinser, Paul R.
Zogbaum, Rufus F.
List of Portrait Painters
For addresses and biographical notes, see section beginning page 329
Adam, David L.
Albright, Adam E.
Allen, Greta.
Allen, Mrs. Marion B,
Anderson, A. A.
Archambault, A. MargarettJ
Baer, William J.
Baker, Mrs. E. G.
Barnard, Elinor M.
Baxter, Martha W.
Beaux, Cecilia.
Beck, Otto Walter.
Belcher, Hilda.
Bellows, George.
Benson, Frank W.
Benziger; August.
Betts, Louis.
Blackman, Mrs. Carrie.
Blum, Alex. A.
Bohm, Max.
Bonsall, Mary W.
Borie, Adolphe.
Boston, Joseph H.
Boynton, G. R.
Brandegee, Robert.
Breckenridge, Hugh.
Bredin, R. Sloan.
Brewer, N. R.
Brush, G. de Forest.
Bryant, Wallace.
Burbank, E. A.
Burd, Clara M.
Burdette, Hattie M.
Burdick, Doris.
Burdick, Horace R.
Bush-Brown, Mrs. H. K.
Cahill, Arthur.
Caliga, I. H.
Calvert, E.
Campbell, Blendon R.
Campbell, Mrs. H. E. O.
Cauldwell, Leslie G.
Chambers, C. B.
Chapin, Lucy C.
Chase, Mrs. Adelaide C.
Chase, Joseph C.
Chittendon, Alice B.
Clark, Adele.
Clarkson, Ralph E.
Claus, W. A. J.
Cole, Griffith B.
Cole, Thomas C.
Cole, Timothy.
Coles, Anne C.
Colles, Gertrude.
Comins, Eben.
Conkling, Mrs. Mabel.
Conrow, Wilford.
Cotton, William.
Cox, Mrs. Louise.
Crampton, R. McN.
Crawford, Mrs. Brenetta.
Crawford. Earl Stetson.
Curran, Charles C.
Curtis, Constance.
Davey, Randall.
Davis, Cecil Clark.
DeCamp, Joseph.
DeGroot, Adriaan.
Dieterich, L. P.
Dieterich, W. F.
Dunbar, Harold C.
Duphiney, Wilfred.
Edwards, Kate F.
Emerson, Edith.
Emmet, Lydia F.
Farjeon, Eliot.
Fehrer, Oscar.
, Fellows, Mrs. Cornelia.
Foote, Mary.
Franzen, August.
Frechette, Marie M.
French, Frank.
Funk, Wilhelm.
Geer, Grace W.
Gerrer, Robert G.
Gies, Joseph W.
Gilbert, Caroline.
Gimeno, P.
Griffith, Mrs. C. B. V.
Haines, Marie B.
Hamilton, John McLure.
Hart, Letitia B.
Hasselbusch, Louis.
Hawthorne, Charles W.
Hazard, Arthur M.
Hecht, Victor D.
Henri, Robert.
Herter, Albert.
Holsman, Elizabeth T.
Honig, George H.
Hopkins, James R.
Hopkinson, Charles S.
Horter, Earl.
Hulbert, Charles A.
Hutchens, Frank T.
Hyde, William H.
Ingham, Elizabeth H.
Ipsen, Ernest.
Jacobs, Michel.
Jacobson, Oscar B.
James, Alexander R.
Jongers, Alphonse.
Kahili, Joseph B.
Kaufifmann, Jean F.
Kelly, J. Redding.
Ketcham, Susan M,
King, Albert F.
Kiralfy, Verona A.
Kopman, Benjamin.
Lang, Charles M.
Lathrop, Mrs. Ida P.
Laughlin, Alice D.
Leisenring, Mrs. Mathilde.
Levy, William A.
Lichtenauer, J. M-
Lloyd, Mrs. Mary W.
Lockman, DeWitt.
Loomis, Chester.
Low, Mrs. Mary F.
Lynch, Anna.
MacChesney, Clara T.
MacKay, Edwin.
McKinstry, Grace E.
635
636
LIST OF PORTRAIT PAINTERS
McLane, Jean. (Mrs. Johansen.)
Maesch, Ferdinand.
Maynard, Richard F.
Meiss.ner, Alfred.
Melvill, Mrs. Antonia.
Meyerowitz, Mrs. Jennie.
Meyvis, Aime L.
Miller, Richard E.
Miller, William H.
Moch, Gladys A.
Mohlte, J. A.
Montague, MJrs. H. L. T.
Mora, F. Luis.
Nave, Royston.
Nelson, George L.
Newman, Anna Mary.
Newman, Mrs. Willie B.
Nitzsche, Elsa K.
Nyholm, Arvid F.
Olinsky, Ivan G.
Page, Mrs. Marie D.
Paolo, C. S.
Parker, Lawton.
Patterson, Ambrose.
Paxton, William M.
Peck, Mrs. Anne M.
Perkins, Mrs. Mary S.
Perry, Mrs. Lilla C.
Philipp, Robert.
Place, Mrs. Vera C.
Piatt, Alethea H.
Poole, Abram.
Poole, Frederic V.
Pope, Alexander.
Raditz, Lazar.
Rand, Mrs. Filing G. E.
Ravenscroft, Ellen.
Reaser, Wilbur.
Reevs, George M,
Reid, Robert.
Reynolds, Wellington.
Richardson, Frank H.
Richardson, Margaret F.
Richardson, Mary Neal.
Rittenberg, Henry R.
Rockwell, Evelyn E.
Rogers, Louise.
Root, Robert Marshall.
Rouland, Orlando.
Saint, Lawrence.
Sandona, Matteo.
Sargent, John Singer.
'Schevill, W. y.
Scott, Katharine.
Seideneck, George.
Sherman, Mrs. Ella B.
Shulz, Mrs. Ada W.
Simpson, M. Stewart.
Smith, F. Carl.
Smith, Howard.
Smith, Jessie Wilcox.
Solomon, Harry.
Sonnichsen, Yngvar.
Speicher, Eugene.
Stanton, Lucy May.
Stearne, Maurice.
Sterner, Albert.
Story, George H.
Streatfeild, Josephine.
Taggart, George H.
Taylor, Ida C.
Thomas, P. K. M.
Thomas, S. S.
Thompson, Juliet.
Thorne, William.
Tidden, John C.
Timmons, E. J.
Tolman, Stacy.
Troccoli, G. B.
Trotta, Guiseppe.
Tschudi, Rudolf.
Turner, Helen M.
Tuttle, Ruel C.
Tyler, Bayard H.
Ufer, Walter.
Ullman, Eugene P.
Volk, Douglas.
Vonoh, Robert.
Vcs, Hubert.
Vysekal, Mrs. Ella B.
Wager-Smith, Miss Curtis.
Wagner, Frank Hugh.
Walker, Ferdinand G.
Walker, H. O.
Walker, Sophia A.
Walter, Martha.
Weir, John F.
Wetmore, M. M,
Whitfield, Emma M.
Whittemore, _W. J.
Wicks, Heppie En Earl.
Wieczorek, Max.
Winter, Mrs. Alice E.
Woelfle, Arthur W.
Woolf, S. J.
Woolrych, F. H. W.
Wright, George.
Yeweli, George H.
Zcgbaum, R. F.
Zylinsky, Andrew,
Who's Who Among Art Dealers
NEW YORK CITY
Abbott, W. H., 46 Greenwich Ave.
Tablets.
Ackerman Galleries, 10 E, 46th St.
Sporting- paintings and prints.
Aimone Galleries, 42 East 49th St.
Paintings.
AINSLIE GALLERIES,
615 Fifth Ave., at 49th St.
Paintings by
George Inness
Advertigcment Page XI
Albert's Art Shop, 306 Columbus Ave.
Etchings, Frames.
Allen, Louis L., 521 Madison Ave.
Antiques.
AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION,
AMERICAN ART GALLERIES,
Madison Square South,
Entrance 6 E. 23rd St.
Public Sales and Appraisals of
Art and Literary Property.
AMERICAN ART NEWS CO., Inc.,
786 Sixth Ave.
Publishers of "The American Art
News," weekly newspaper of the
art world. Subscription $4.00; single
copies 15 cents. Advertising rates
on application.
ANDERSON, GALLERIES, THE,
Park Avenue and 59th St.
Auction sales of paintings, books,
prints, furniture and all classes of
art objects. Expert appraisals for
insurance and tax purposes.
Appleton & Cox., 1 S. William St.
Insurance.
Arden Gallery (Arden Studios, Inc.),
599 Fifth Ave. Decorative Antiques,
Objects d' Art.
ARLINGTON GALLERIES,
274 Madison Ave. bet. 39th and 40th
Sts. Important American and For-
eign Paintings. Special Exhibitions
during the season.
Art House, Inc., The, 12 E. 41st St.
Chinese Porcelains; American Por-
traits.
Artists' Framing Co., 57 E. 59th St.
Artists' Packing and Shipping Co., 139
W. 54th St.
Atkinson Mentzer & Co., 80 E. 11th
St. Art Publishers.
BABCOCK, E., C.
Est. by John Snedecor
19 East 49th Street
FINE PAINTINGS
Restoring, Regilding, Artistic Fram-
ing, Bi-weekly Exhibitions of work
by American Artists.
Baumann, A. O., 54 W. 37th St Ivory.
Beers Brothers, 110 W. 30th St.,
Frames.
Belmaison Gallery, Wanamaker's,
Broadway and 9th St.
Binney & Smith Co., 81 Fulton St.
Crayons and Chalks for every use.
Bohne, J., 34 W. 28th St. Framer,
Restorer.
Bonaventure, E. F., 536 Madison Ave.
Pictures, Objects of Art.
Boswell-Frankel Agency, 786 Sixth
Ave. Art Publicity Service.
Bourgeois, Stephan, 668 Fifth Ave.
Paintings.
Bower, A. C, 665 Fifth Ave. Old
Drawings, Paintings.
Bradley, Milton, 23 Wash. Place. Sup-
plies.
Braus Galleries, 358 Fifth Ave. and
422 Madison Ave. Pictures, Frames.
Brentano, Fifth Ave. and 27th St.
Books, Photographs.
Brown, Mrs. Lucy Fletcher, 22 E. 60th
St. Japanese Prints.
Brown-Robertson Co., 415 Madison
Ave. Pictures, Prints, Frames.
Brummer, Joseph, 43 E. 57th St.,
Antique Sculpture, French and
American Modern Paintings,
BUDWORTH, W. S. and Son, 424 W.
52d St. Telephone Circle 7510.
Collecting, Packing and Shipping
Exhibitions a Specialty. Paintings,
Sculpture, Bric-a-Brac, etc., care-
fully handled. Agents for The
American Federation of Arts.
Burlingham, H., 6 E. 49th St. Oriental
Objects.
Busse, George, 20 E. 48th St. Prints.
BUTLER, D. B. & Co., 601 Madison
Ave.; bet. 57th and 58th Sts.
Mezzotints, Etchings and Color
Prints (limited editions) by noted
engravers. Artistic Framing of all
Periods. Regilding. Paintings cleaned,
varnished, restored and transferred.
637
638
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
New York City — Continued
Cabaret, Paul E., & Co., 126 Eleventh
Ave. Bronze Works.
Caldarazzo of Naples, 130 E. 54th St.
Rugs, Tapestries.
Calo, D., & Sons, 128 W. 49th St.
Paintings, Frames.
Canessa, C. & E, 1 West 50th St.
Antiques.
Carvalho Brothers of Portugal, 520
Madison Ave. Antique Textiles.
Casteras Brothers, 667 Lexington Ave.
Plaster Casts.
Chait, S.,
Antiques.
E. 41st St.
Chinese
An-
Charles of London, 2 W. 56th St
tiques.
Chiantelli, Charles, 678 Lexington Ave.
Restoration of Paintings, Reproduc-
tion of carved furniture and frames.
Cipriani, H., 518 Madison Ave. Old
Paintings and Furniture.
Clarke's Art Rooms, 42 E. 58th St.
Auctioneer.
CLAPP & GRAHAM CO.,
420 Madison Avenue.
Antiques,
Paintings.
Cluny Gallery, 1 E. 47th St.
antiques.
French
Collectors' Galleries, 40 E. 50th St.
CONSIGNiVIENT ARTS, INC.,
A. J. Halow, President,
222 West 59th St.
Objects of Art,
Paintings, Rugs, etc.
Crichton Brothers, 636 Fifth Ave. Old
English silver and Reproductions.
Daniel, Charles, 2 West 47th St.
American paintings.
Dawson, H. F., 9 E. 56th St. Tapes-
tries, Antiques.
Day & Meyer, Murray & Young, Inc.,
304 E. 61st St. Packing and Ship-
ping.
Detroit Publishing Co., 471 Fifth Ave.
Photographs.
DEVOE & RAYNOLDS CO., INC.,
101 Fulton St., New York.
The oldest and largest
Manufacturers of Artists* Materials.
Established 1754.
Fifth Avenue.
68 W. 58th St.
De Zayas, M., 630
Paintings.
Dillon, Charles F, P.,
Restorer.
Di Salvo Brothers, 443 Madison Ave.
Antique Furniture.
Dreher & Co., 507 W. 43rd St. Frames.
Dubernet, L. A., 44 E. 8th St. Minia-
ture Frames and Cases.
DUDENSING GALLERIES,
MODERN PAINTINGS
Water Colors
45 West 44th Street New York
Durand-Ruel
ings.
Duveen Brothers, 720 Fifth Ave.
tiques.
12 E. 57th St., Paint-
An-
EHRICH GALLERIES,
707 Fifth Avenue
0\t Masiitxsi
Advertisement Page VIII
English Antique Co., 578 Madison Ave,
ELMORE STUDIOS,
Edward N. Elmore,
3-5 West 28th Street.
Garden Furniture,
Antiques and Reproductions.
FARMER, EDWARD I., Inc.,
Chinese Antiques
and Arts,
Lamps and Shades,
15 East 56th St. New York
Favor, Ruhl & Co., 43 W. 23rd St.
Artists' Materials.
DEMOTTE OF PARIS,
8 East 57th Street.
Works of Art of
the Middle Ages.
Advertisement Page VI
FEARON GALLERIES,
25 West 54th St., New York.
PORTRAITS, PRIMITIVES,
LANDSCAPES, DRAWINGS.
Walter P. Fearon,
Successor to Cottier & Co. Founded 1873.
Advertisement Page IX
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
639
New York City — Continued
PENNING, JOHN,
15 East 39th Street
PAINTINGS
AVORKS OP ART
FERARGIL GALLERIES,
(T. H. Russell, F, N. Price)
607 Fifth Avenue
American Paintings,
Tapestries and Works of Art.
Fifth Avenue Auction Rooms, 333
Fourth Ave.
Fishel. Adler and Schwartz Co., 338-
342 E. 59th St. Engravings.
FOLSOIVI GALLERIES,
104 West 57th Street
American Paintings
H. G. Dearth, L. P. Dessar. Bruce
Crane, J. Alden Weir, Emil Carlsen,
W. H. Singer, etc.
Gordon, W. Lindsay, 1931 Broadway.
Photographs, Pictures, Prints.
FRENCH AND COMPANY,
6 East 56th Street,
Antique Tapestries,
Furniture, Textiles
Advertisement Page V
FRIDENBERG, ROBERT, 22 West
56th Street.
Engravings. Largest stock in the
world of old portraits, historical
documents, autographs. Broadsides,
etc.
H. & A. C, 9 Central
Artists' Materials,
Friederichs, E.
Park West.
Frames.
FRINK, I. P., INC., 239-43 Tenth Ave.,
at 24th St.
Individual Picture Reflector. Gallery
Reflectors. Picture Lighting Stand-
ards. Special attention given to the
lighting of individual paintings.
Send for catalague 422.
Getz, Edward G., 390 Madison Ave.
Chinese Porcelains.
GALLERIE INTIME, Anne Pinneo,
749 Fifth Ave
Paintings by Contemporary
American Artists.
Gallery open Evenings and Sundays.
Ginsburg & Levy, 397 Madison Ave.
Antique Furniture.
Glaenzer, Eugene, & Co., 705 Fifth
Ave. Antiques.
GORHAM CO., Fifth Ave. at 36th St.
Sculpture, Sundials, Fountains, Ec-
clesiastical Art. Chalices, Stained
Glass and Sacred Vessels. Gorham
Silver Tableware, Period Silver, Sil-
ver Loving Cups and Trophies.
Advertisement Page XIV
Greater N. Y. Slide Co., 209 W. 48th
St. Lantern Slides.
Guerry, Prosper, 360 West 55th St.
Restorer.
Haas, Joseph, 127 E. 59th St. Frames.
Haas, Julius G., 522 W. 157th St.
Pictures, Frames.
Hammacher, Schlemmer & Co., 133
Fourth Ave. Tools.
Hanfstaengl, E. F., 153 W. 57th St.
Modern Paintings, Batiks, Imported
Reproductions.
Harlow, Arthur H., «& Co., 712 Fifth
Ave. Etchings, Engravings, Paint-
ings.
Hartmann, M, H., 39 E. 28th St. Ar-
tists' Materials.
Hawkes, Joseph, 662 Sixth Avenue.
Photographer, maker of Lantern
Slides.
Healey, Sumner, 785 Madison Ave.
Antiques.
Heaton, Butler & Bayne, 437 Fifth
Ave. Stained Glass.
Heinigke & Smith, 26 E. 13th St.
Stained Glass.
Helburn. William, 418 Madison Ave.
Publisher Architectural Books.
Herter Looms, The, 841 Madison Ave.
American Textiles, Tapestries, etc.
Hudson Forwarding and Shipping Co.,
24 State St.
INTERNATIONAL STUDIO, Inc.,
786 Sixth Ave.
Publishers of "The International
Studio," monthly magazine of art.
Subscription $6.00; single copies 60
cents. Advertising rates on appli-
cation.
James Dudley, 617 Lexington Ave.
Oriental Art.
Jarnow & Co., 13 University Place.
Mirrors, Frames.
JULEY, PETER A., 219 E. 39th St.
Photographer to the National Acad-
emy of Design, Art Students'
League, Architectural League, Water
Color Societies, and most of New
York's best known Artists.
Kaldenberg's, F. W., Sons, 95 Fifth
Avenue. Ivory Carvings.
Kelekian, Dikran, 709 Fifth Ave. Ori-
ental Antiques.
640
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
New York City — Continued
Kendall Studios, 2 E. 23d St. Paint-
ings Photographed.
Kennedy & Co.. 613 Fifth Ave. Etch-
ings, Engravings.
Keppel, Frederick, & Co., 4 E. 39th St.
Etchings, Engravings.
Keuffel & Esser Co., 127 Fulton St.
Drawing Materials.
Kingore, H. Grant, 668 Fifth Ave.
Paintings.
Klrby-Champeau, Inc., 2 E. 23d St.
Gallery lighting.
Klackner, George C, 7 W. 28th St.
Modern Paintings and Prints.
KLEINBERGER GALLERIES, INC.,
725 Fifth Ave., between 56th and
57th Sts.
Paintings by the Primitives,
ITALIAN
DUTCH AND FLEMISH
Advertisement Page IV
KNOEDLER, M., & CO., 556 Fifth
Ave. at 45th St.
Oil Paintings by Modern and Old
Masters, select Water Colors,
choice Engravings and Etchings,
Artistic Framing, Regilding, Paint-
ings Cleaned and Restored.
Advertisement Poge I
Kouchakji Freres, 707 Fifth Ave.
Oriental Antiques.
KRAUSHAAR, C. W.,
Art Galleries
680 Fifth Avenue New York
Paintings, Etchings and Bronzes
Lamb, J. & R.. 25 Sixth Ave. Ecclesi-
astical and Memorial Art.
LANDAU (TONI) PHOTOGRAPHIC
CO., 1 East 45th Street.
Reproductions de Luxe from both
Old and Modern Masters in color or
black and white, framed or unframed.
Etchings, Lithographs, Block Prints.
Lans Curiosity Shop, 554 Madison
Ave. Antiques.
Laurent, Robert, 106 Columbia Heights,
Brooklyn. Hand carved frames.
Laurier, Joseph, 7th Ave, S.W. cor.
11th St. Artists' Materials.
Lawlor, Frederick A., 238 Madison
Ave. Antiques, Objects of Art.
Lebrun, L., 48 W. 46th St. Frames.
Lemcke & Buechner, 30 East 20th St.
Art Books.
LESCH, RUDOLF, 13 West 42d St.
Highly Artistic Reproductions of Old
and Modern Masters of All Nations
in the Exact Coloring of the Original.
Each 25 to 40 cents and upward.
Lewis & Simmons, 612 Fifth Ave.
Antiques.
LEVY, JOHN,
559 Fifth Avenue,
Modern Paintings
Advertisement Page XII
Little Gallery, The. 4 E. 48th St.
Crafts, Exhibitions and Salesroom.
Long Sang Ti & Co., 323 Fifth Ave.
Chinese Curios.
LOUIS XIV ANTIQUE CO., INC.,
9 East 55th St. C. V. Miller.
Paintings, Brocades, Silks, Velvets,
Banners, Chinese Carvings, Por-
celains, Chinzes, Jewels, Costumes,
Laces, Tapestries.
McAllister-Keller Co., 176 Fulton St.
Lantern Slides.
MACBETH GALLERY, 450 Fifth Ave.
at 40th St.
AMERICAN PAINTINGS.
Advertisement Page II
Madison Galleries, 106 W. 57th St.
Paintings.
Malcom Gallery, 114 E. 66th St.
Exhibitions.
MEDALLIC ART CO.,
137 East 29th St.
Medals, Plaquettes, Galvanos, In-
signias. Reproductions of all plaster
models, perfectly made.
Meder, Ferdinand, 950 Broadway. Old
Prints, Portraits.
Melillo, A. F., 265 Canal St. Paintings,
Bindings.
METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART.
Fifth Ave. at 82d St.
Catalogues, Photographs, Color
Prints, Casts, and Post Cards of
Works of Art. Send for circulars
giving full description and prices.
Middelkoop, Frans, 507 Madison Ave.
Dutch Antiques.
Milch, D., 131 W. 41st St. Frames.
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
641
MILCH GALLERIES (E. and
Milch, Inc.), 108 West 57th St.
American Paintings and Sculpture.
Etchings, Framing. Special Exhibi-
tions during the Season.
Milch & Sm.alls, 939 Madison Ave.
Frames, Pictures.
New York City — Continued
A.
(See Louis XIV Antique
Miller, C. V.
Co.)
Minassian, Kirkor, 18 East 57th St.
Antiques.
Monif, R. Khan, 28
Persian Antiques.
East 61st St.
MONTROSS GALLERY, 550 Fifth
Ave., above 45th St.
PAINTINGS, SCULPTURE,
WORKS OF ART.
Advertisement Page
III
Mussmann, Robert B., 144 W. 57th St.
Paintings, Etchings, Frames.
NEWCOMB-MACKLIN & CO.,
233 Fifth Ave., New York
Distinguished Picture Frames,
Antique Mirrors
Decorative Specialties
Galleries, Salesrooms and Factory
State and Kinzie Streets, Chicago
Nonnenbacher & Co., 34 W. 36th St.
Mirrors, Frames.
Oberwalder's Sons, Charles, 716 Madi-
son Ave. Paintings.
Of. George F.,
Frames.
Olivotti, A., & Co.
Objects of Art.
Palette Art Co., The, 327 Fifth Ave.
Artists' Material, Frames.
274 Madison Ave.
, 867 Madison Ave.
Parish-Watson,
Chinese Art.
560 Fifth Ave.
Early
St.
Partridge, Frank, 6 W. 56th
English and Chinese Antique.
Plaza Art Rooms, Inc., (Edward P.
O'Reilly), 5 and 7 E. 59th St. Auc-
tion Sales.
Prang Co., 30 Irving Place. Art Pub-
lishers, Supplies.
Price, Frederic Newlin, 607 Fifth Ave.
American Paintings.
Ralston, Louis, 4 E. 46th St. Modern
Paintings.
Rehn, F. K. M., 6 W. 50th St. Ameri-
can Paintings.
Reinhardt, Henry & Son, 606 Fifth
Ave. Paintings.
Reinthal & Newman. 59 West 19th St.
Pictures, wholesale only.
Reynolds. Fred. 154 East 38th St.
Printer of Etchings.
Riley Optical Instrument Co., 40 W.
20th St. Stereopticons. Lantern
Slides, Moving Picture Machines.
Robinson, James. 721a Fifth Ave.
Old Silver, Antiques.
ROHLFS, HENRY D. G., JR.,
991 and 944 Fulton St., Brooklyn.
Gallery of Fine Arts.
HIgh-Grade American Art.
Roman Bronze Works, Inc., 275 Green
St., Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
Rose, L A., 31 E. 33d St. Frames
Rosenbach Co., 273 Madison Ave.
Objects of Art, Paintings, Prints.
ROUGERON, M. J., 94 Park Ave.
Restoration of Paintings.
Studio founded 1840.
Established in New York 1907.
Russell, Thomas Henry, 607 Fifth Ave.
American Paintings.
Saito, G. F.
antiques.
Sarti. Lucchesi & Co
Plaster Casts.
Satinover Galleries,
Old Paintings.
48 E. 57th St. Chinese
113 E. 34th St.
27 W. 56th St.
SCHULTHEIS CO., HENRY,
Paintings by American and Foreign
Artists. Framing, Prints.
142 Fulton St., Near Broadway.
SCHWARTZ GALLERIES,
Publishers and Importers
Modern Paintings and Prints
14 East 46th Street.
SCOTT & FOWLES,
667 Fifth Avenue.
Paintings.
Advertisement Page VII
642
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
New York City — Continued
(ARNOLD), REY .
SELIGMANN,
CO.,
7 West 36th St.
Paris, 23 Place Vend6me.
High Class Ancient Works of Art
Selig-mann, (Jacques) & Co.
Avenue. Antiques.
705 Fifth
Steel
Senft, Gustave, 503 Fifth Ave
Die Engraving,
Sherk Brothers, 297 Fulton St.,
Brooklyn. Paintings, Fraining, Re-
storing.
& Son, 40 E. 45th St.
Silo, James P.
Auctions.
Slater, Edwin C, 118 E. 59th St.
Carved wood and composition frames.
Sloog, Maurice, 713 Madison Ave.
Prints, Manuscripts, Books of refer-
ences.
51 W. 10th
Smith, H. A. Hammond,
St. Restoring.
Smith, Herbert M., 110 William St.
Insurance of works of Art.
Snedeker, Milton Corp., 2 State St.
Foreign forwarders.
Soltmann, Inc., E. G., 202 E. 42 St.
Drawing Materials, Compo Board.
Spanish Antique Shop, 768 Madison
Ave.
Stechert. G. E.. & Co., 151 W. 25th St.
Art Books and Periodicals.
Sterling Bronze Co., 18 E. 40th St.
Strauss, J. H., 275 Fifth Avenue.
Modern Paintings, Frames.
Sunwise Turn 51 East 44th St. Books
Pictures. Sculpture, Druet Prints,
Omega Textiles.
Suval, Philip, 746 Madison Ave. Pic-
tures, Frames.
Symons, Henry, 56 W. 45th St.
Antique Furniture, Textiles, etc.
Thomason, Frederic B., 64 Wall St.
Insurance.
Thompson, Lewis M., 29 Broadway.
Rare Books, Paintings, Prints,
Chinese water colors, Indian photo-
graphs.
Stained
Fifth Ave. at 37th St.
Tiffany Studios, 46 W. 23d St
Glass.
Tiffany & Co.
Sculpture.
Tooth, Arthur & Sons, 709 Fifth Ave.
18th Cent. Portraits, Paintings by
Barbizon School.
TRASK, JOHN E. D.,
52 East 53d Street.
American Paintings and Bronzes.
Truesdell, Winfred Porter, 154 E. 38th
St. Print publisher.
Vernay, Arthur S., 12 E. 45th St. An-
tiques.
Wadsworth, Howland & Co., Inc., 101
Park Ave. Artists' Materials.
Walpole Galleries,
Auctioneers.
12 W. 48th St.
WARWICK HOUSE, LTD.,
45 East 57th Street,
Antique Furniture
Tapestries Paintings
Wenzel, Paul, 31 E.
tectural Books.
12th St. Archi-
Weston Galleries, 622 Lexington Ave.
Old Masters.
Weyhe, E., 710 Lexington Ave. • Art
Books, Prints.
Wildenstein & Co., 647 Fifth Ave.
Old and Modern Paintings.
Williams, Jno., Inc.,
Bronze Foundry.
556 W. 27th St.
Williams,
Prints.
Max, 538 Madison Ave.
Winsor & Newton,
Artists' Materials.
31 E. 17th St.
Wyanoak Publishing Co.. The. 136 W.
52d St. Photographic Reproductions.
Yamanaka & Co., 680 Fifth Ave.
Japanese and Chinese Objects.
Yandell, Charles R., & Co., 450 Madi-
son Ave. Leather.
YOUNG, HOWARD,
620 Fifth Ave., near 50th St. Impor-
tant Examples by American and
Foreign Masters.
Advertisement Page X
CALIFORNIA
Berkeley
Swasey, H.. S., 2291
Paintings, Prints.
Shattuck Ave.
Los Angeles
CANNELL & CHAFFIN, INC.,
720 West Seventh St.
PAINTINGS
Prints, Antiques, Objects of Art.
Duncan, Vail Co., 732 S. Hill St.
tures. Frames, Supplies.
Pic-
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
643
Los Angeles — Continued
Green's 825 South Hill St. Objects of
Art.
Hoover Art Company, 6321 Hollywood
Boulevard. Paintings, Photographs,
Prints, Frames.
Kamps, F. H., 744 South Hill St.
Artists' Materials.
Kanst Art Gallery. 826 S. Hill St.
Paintings, Frames, Exhibitions.
Little, A. E., & Co., 426 S. Broadway.
Pictures, Frames, Objects of Art.
Rausom, W. E., 1722 Fourth Ave.
Objects of Art.
Royar, U. S., & Co., 516 S. Hill St.
Pictures, Frames, Artists' Materials.
Oakland
Saake, E. J., 531 Thirteenth St.
Paintings, Objects of Art.
San Diego.
Orr, Frank C, 1157 Fourth St. Pic-
tues, Frames, Supplies.
Smith's Art Store, 1250 Fifth St.
Objects of Art.
Vail, E. J., & Co., 2235 Fillmore St.
Paintings, Prints, Frames.
Vickery, Atkins & Torrey. 550 Sutter
St. Paintings, Frames, Oriental Art.
Worden, Willard E., 312 Stockton St.
Photogfiraphs, Paintings, Frames.
COLORADO
Colorado Springs
Craftwood Shops, R. L. Boutwell, di-
rector. Crafts, Paintings, Frames.
Grimwood's 24 N. Tejon St. Pic-
tures, Frames, Pottery.
Hardy's Art Store, 16 North Tejon
St. Paintings, "OfHcial" Gallery in
Colorado Springs for the Taos Art-
ists' Society.
Denver
Boutwell, Cyrus, 201 16th St. Paint-
ings, Prints, Frames.
Dow Art Co., 1623 Welton St. Paint-
ings, Frames, Pottery.
Meininger, H. R., 409 16th St. Artists'
Materials.
San Francisco
Ansbro, M. C, 165 Post St. Paintings,
Prints.
Bentz, Nathan, & Co., 570 Sutter St.
Oriental Antiques.
Clayes, Miss, 284 Post St. Oriental
Art Objects.
Curtis, H. Taylor, 359 Sutter St.
Salesrooms, Paintings, Antiques.
Courvoisier, E. B.' 315 Sutter St.
Paintings, Frames, Supplies.
Elder, Paul & Co., 239 Post Ave.
Books, Pictures and Art Objects.
Falvy, A., 578 Sutter St. Antiques.
Freeman Art Co., 386 Sutter St.
Helgesen, R. N., 345 Sutter St. Paint-
ings, Objects of Art.
Gump, S. & G. Co., 246 Post St.
Paintings, Antiques.
Marsh, G. T. & Co., 400 Post St.
Oriental Art.
Meiji, The, Grant Ave. near Bush St.
Oriental Art.
Print Rooms, 540 Sutter St. Paint-
ings, Prints.
Rabjohn & Morcom, 230 Post St.
Paintings, Reproductions, Frames,
Supplies.
Sanborn, Vail & Co., 557 Market St.
Pictures, Frames, Supplies.
CONNECTICUT
Hartford
Moyer, Curtis H., 105 Pratt St. Pic-
tures, Frames, Objects of Art.
Wiley, L. A., & Sons. 732 Main St.
Paintings, Prints, Frames, Packing
and Shipping.
Waterbury
Curtis Art Co., 25 W. Main St. Paint-
ings, Prints, Frames, Reproductions.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Wasfilngton
Jane Bartlett, 1337 Connecticut Ave.,
N. W. Crafts.
Brooke, Mrs. M. E., 730-15th St., N. W.
Frames, Crafts.
Buckingham, C. O., 723 Tenth St.,
N. W. Supplies.
Gift & Craft Shop, 1228 Connecticut
Ave., N. W.
Hays, Fred C. & Co., Inc.. 1237 Q St..
N. W. Pictures, Frames.
Hisada, 1143 Connecticut Ave. Ori-
ental Paintings.
Jarvis, Charles B., 1309 G St., N. W.
Pictures, Frames.
Little Art Shop, Inc., 622 F St., N.W.
Muth, George F., and Co., Inc., 710
Thirteenth St., N. W. Artists' and
Draftsmens' Supplies.
644
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
Washington, D. C. — Continued
Niepold, John W., & Son, 913 F St.,
S. W. Pictures, Frames, Antiques.
Rare Print Shop, 1614 I St., N. W.
Paintings, Prints, Frames.
Sherratt's Art Store, 608-13th St.,
N. W.
Studio Shop, 1725 L St., N. W.
Veerhoff Galleries, 1320 F St., N. W.
Paintings, Prints, Frames.
GEORGIA
Atlanta
Goodhart-Tompkins Co., 83 Peachtree
St. Gift Shop.
ILLINOIS
Aurora
Stolp's Art Shop, 22 Island Ave.
Pictures, Frames, Artists' Materials.
Chicago
Ackermann, Arthur & Son, Inc., 408 S.
Michigan Ave. Rare prints, paint-
ings.
Albert Rouillier Art Galleries, 410
South Michigan Blvd. Etchings.
Anderson Art Galleries, 426 S. Michi-
gan Ave. Paintings.
Marshall Field & Co. Paintings,
Prints, Frames. Exhibitions.
NEWCOMB, MACKLIN & CO.,
N. W. cor. State and Kinzie Sts.
Frames, Mirrors, Cornices and
Decorative Specialties.
Northern Picture Frame Co., 1816
West Fulton St.
O'BRIEN ART GALLERIES
670 North Michigan Boulevard,
Chicago. Paintings, Etchings, Mez-
zotints, Antique Furniture.
Paintings Cleaned and Restored.
Practical Drawing Co. Art Publishers.
Prang Company, 1922 Calumet Ave.
Publishers, Art Books, Supplies.
Reinhardt, Henry & Son, 536 S.
Michigan Ave. Paintings.
THURBER ART GALLERIES,
75 East Washington St., Chicago.
Robert H. Doran, Pres.
Harry L. Engle, Sec.
American and Foreign Paintings.
Paintings cleaned and restored.
Rockford
Norris, H. F., Art and Gift Shop, 221
East State St.
BRASOR ART STORE,
5607 Broadway.
Paintings, Etchings, Mezzotints, and
Woodblocks. Highest grade Frames.
Candlesticks, Book-ends, Hand
painted Screens, Pottery, and high
grade Bric-a-Bac.
Bryden, F. A. & Co., 217 S. Wabash
Ave. Pictures, Frames.
Carson, Pirie, Scott & Co., State,
Madison and Wabash Ave. and 1
South State St. Pictures, Frames.
Devoe and Raynolds Co., Inc., 14-16
W. Lake St. Artists' Material.
Dunbar, Thomas Whipple, Kinzie and
North State Sts. American Paint-
ings.
Fritts, D. H., & Co.. 414 N. Wood St.
Mouldings, Frames.
Hempstead, Joseph L., 4 E. Ohio St.
Etchings, Photogravures.
Ho Ho Shop (Bess B. Dahlquist,
Prop.), 673 North Michigan Blvd.
Crafts, Antiques.
Mages, George C, Co., 1750 Fulton
St. Frames, Mouldings, Pictures,
Supplies.
INDIANA
Indianapolis
Lieber. The H., Co., 24 W. Washing-
ton St. Paintings, Etchings, Frames.
L3^man Bros., 223 East Ohio St.
Frames, Mouldings, Supplies.
Lafayette
Foster Shops, The. 116 N. 3d St. Pic-
tures, Frames, and Gift Articles.
Terra Haute
Kadel's Art Shop, 125 S. 7th St.
tures. Frames, Supplies.
Plc-
lOWA
Cedar Rapids
Morris Sanford Co. Prints, Frames.
Des Moines
Odd Shop (Miss Weaver and Miss
Tupper), 805 Locust St. Prints,
Paintings, Objects of Art.
Iowa City
University Bookstore, 2 S. Clinton St.
Pictures, Frames.
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
645
KANSAS
McPherson
Smalley, Carl J., Paintings, Prints,
Frames.
LOUISIANA
New Orleans
Antique Dome, 403 Royal St. An-
tiques, Paintings.
Parish Art Store, Common at Univer-
sity Place. Pictures, Frames,
Artists' Materials.
Marx Art Store, 228 Royal St. Pic-
tures, Frames.
Newcomb Pottery, Audubon Place.
Waldhom Co., 343 Royal St. Antique
Furniture, Jewelry, Objects of Art.
MAINE
Portland
Laing, Adam M.. & Son, 134 Spring
St. Pictures, Frames.
Thompson Art Co.. 151 Brackett St.
Photo-crafters, Pictures, Frames.
MARYLAND
Baltimore
Bendann. David. 105 E. Baltimore St.
Frames, Paintings, Bronzes.
Benson, C. J. & Co., Charles and
Franklin Sts. Objects of art.
Dulany-Vernay Co., 339 N. Charles
St. Prints, Frames, Supplies.
Furst Bros. & Co., 38 Hopkins PI.
Pictures, Mirrors, Frames.
Hirshberg Art Co., 418 N. Howard
St. Prints, Frames, Artists' Sup-
plies.
Jones (W, E.), Art Galleries, Inc., 330
N. Charles St. Pictures, Frames,
Bronzes.
Knipp, John C, & Sons, 343 North
Charles St. Paintings, Etchings.
Limerick, J. Arthur Co., 960 North
Howard St, Bronzes.
Lycett, 317 N. Charles St. Prints,
Paintings, Frames.
Pitt, Paris C, 912 N. Charles St. Old
and Modern Paintings, Antiques.
Purnell Art Co., 407 N. Charles St.
Paintings, Etchings, Antiques.
Schon, Carl, 109 W. Saratoga St. Art
Jewelry.
Vogt & Holmes, 329 North Charles St.
Paintings, Sculpture, Engravings.
MASSACHUSETTS
Ashland
Nutting, "Wallace. Prints.
Boston
Arts and Crafts Society, 9 Park St.
Blgelow, L. A., 11 Bromfleld St. Pic-
tures, Paintings, Antiques, Jewelry.
Boston Sculpture Co., 400 Boylston St.
Casts.
Brooks, Reed, Gallery, 19 Arlington St.
Paintings, Etchings, Antiques.
CARRIG-ROHANE SHOP
394 Boylston St., Boston.
H. Dudley Murphy, Designer.
Original Carved Frames of the
Highest Class. Each Frame Espe-
cially Designed for the Picture,
Caproni. P. P.. & Bro.. 1914 Washing-
ton St. Casts.
Cobb, C. E., Irving-Casson-Davenport
Co., Copley Sq. Exhibitions.
Curtis & Cameron, Pierce Bldg.. Cop-
ley Sq. Copley Prints, Reproduc-
tions of American Art.
Dartmouth Gallery, 168 Dartmouth St.
Paintings, Objects of Art.
Doll & Richards. 71 Newbury St.
Paintings, Bronzes, Frames, Exhibi-
tions.
Foster Bros., 4 Park Sq. Prints, Re-
productions, Frames.
Gill, James D., 372 Boylston St.
American Paintings.
Goddard, James B., 30 Huntington
Ave. Paintings, Frames, Japanese
Objects.
Goodspeed's Book Shop, 5a Park St.
Rare and Historical Prints, Etch-
ings, Woodcuts.
Grace Home's Gallery, 146 Stuart St.,
Trinity Court. Paintings, Sculpture.
Lawrence, Amos, 85 Chestnut St. An-
tiques.
Leonard & Company, 48 Bromfleld St.
Auction Sales.
Medici Society, 755 Boylston St. Medici
Print Reproductions of the Great
Masters.
Robey, French Co., 38 Bromfleld St.
Pictures, Frames.
Schervee Studios, 356 Boylston St.
Etchings, Frames.
Stedman & Wilder. 103 Newbury St.
Hanging, Packing.
V O S E, R. C. and N. M.
394-398 Boylston St., Boston
High-Class Paintings
American, Barbizon,
Modern Dutch. Early English.
Restoring, Gilding and Framing.
Established 1841.
Wadsworth, Howland & Co., Inc., 139
Federal St. Artists' Materials,
Yamanaka & Co., 456 Boylston St.
Oriental Objects of Art.
646
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
Cambridge, Mass.
Hammett, J. L., Co., Kendall Sq.
Industrial Art Supplies.
Canton
Hatfield, J. H., 15 Beaumont St.
Artists' Materials.
East Gloucester
Grace Home's Gallery, 1 Eastern
Point Road. Sculpture, Etchings,
Exhibitions.
Inc., 101 Ferry St.
Lantern Slides,
Maiden
GramstorfC Bros.
Reproductions,
Frames.
Perry Pictures Co. Reproductions of
the World's Masterpieces.
Provincetown
Herring-, John Chester, 373 Commercial
St. Paintings, Etchings, Handi-
crafts.
Newton
UNIVERSITY PRINTS, THE
11 Boyd St., Newton.
Over 3,000 subjects of Painting,
Sculpture and Architecture. Half-
tone Reproductions and Lantern
Slides for Art S^:udy. School and
College orders our specialty.
North Attleboro
Herring, John Chester, 469 Broadway.
Paintings, Prints, Crafts.
Springfield
Miller, J. H., Co., Inc., 21 Harrison
Ave. Paintings, Frames.
Taber-Prang Art Company. Repro-
ductions, Frames.
Taunton
Reed & Barton. Bronze.
Sault Ste. Marie
Young's Photo, Gift and Art Shop, 544
Ashmun St. Photographs, Pictures,
Frames.
MINNESOTA
Minneapolis
Beard Art Galleries, The. Tenth and
Nicollet Sts. Paintings, Etchings,
Engravings, Frames.
St. Paul
St. Paul Art and Gift Shop, 354 Min-
nesota St. Pictures, Prints, Frames.
MISSOURI
Kansas City
Hug & Sarachek Art Galleries, lOllA
Grand Ave. Paintings, Prints,
Frames.
St. Louis
Dietrich Art Galleries, 4341 Olive St.
Paintings.
Healy, Francis D., 4516 Olive St.
Paintings, Frames.
McCaughen & Bur, 909 Locust St.
Pictures, Frames, Restoring.
NEWHOUSE, M. A., & SON,
4398 Olive St., St. Louis.
Art Importers, Original Water Color
and Oil Paintings,
Hand Carved Frames
Noonan-Kocian Co., 10th & Locust St.
Paintings, Frames, Objects of Art.
Wacha & Co., 4398 Olive St. Pictures,
Frames.
Weber & Co.. 825 Washington Ave.
Artists' Supplies.
MICHIGAN
Detroit
Detroit Photographic Co., 332 Wood-
ward Ave.
Hanna, James E., & Bros., David
Whitney Bldg. Pictures, Frames.
O'Leary, William, & Co., 2540 Wood-
' ward Ave. Paintings, Etchings,
Frames.
Wayne Publishing Co., 1042 Cass Ave.
Art Publishers.
NEBRASKA
Lincoln
Miller & Paine, Inc., 13th and O Sts.
Pictures, Frames.
Omaha
Darling, Milton, 1810 Farnam St.
Pictures, Frames.
NEW JERSEY
Elizabeth
Campbell Art Company, 1144 Eliza-
beth Ave. Pictures in Color.
Grand Haven
Japana Specialty Co., Old engravings.
Mezzotints, Artists' Supplies.
Grand Rapids
Hefner, Jacob, Metz Bldg. Pictures,
Frames.
Irvington
Talens & Son, 1091 Clinton Ave.
Artists' Materials.
Newark
Keer's Sons, Frederick, 917 Efroad St.
Paintings, Frames. Prints.
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
647
NEW YORK
Albany
Cadby Bros., 31 Maiden Lane. Pic-
tures, Pottery, Frames.
Glenn, J. A., 76 Columbia St. Photo-
graphs, Lantern Slides,
Binghamton
Bump, Austin S., 180 Washington
St. Paintings, Frames, Supplies.
Buffalo
Benson, George W., 81-83 Allen St.
Antiques, Frames, Handicrafts.
Brodericlc Galleries, 436 Virginia St.
Uid and Modern Paintings, Prints,
Bronzes.
Meibohm, Carl H., 326 Connecticut St.
Pictures, Frames.
Sevin, Theodore, 327 Franldin St.
Paintings, Frames.
Ithaca
Smith, E. F., State St. Pictures,
Frames.
New York City. See page 637.
Rochester
Bailey, George, 8 Caledonia Ave. Pic-
tures, J^'rames, Antiques.
Brodhead, George H., 150 East Ave.
Pictures, Frames, Antiques.
Syracuse
Hendriclcs, Francis Co., Inc., 116 E.
Fayette St. Pictures, Frames, Sup-
plies.
Thompson Publishing Co., 232 W. Jef-
ferson St. and 12a Walton St. Blue
prints for illustration of history and
literature.
Varney Art Store, 481 S. Salina St.
Pictures.
Utica
Cadby Bros., 234 Genesee St. Pic-
tures, Pottery, Frames, Artists'
Supplies.
OHIO
Cincinnati
Closson, A. B., Jr., & Co., 110 West
4th St. Pictures, Supplies, Frames.
Traxel Art Co., 132 W. 4th St. Pic-
tures, Jb'rames, Supplies.
Rookwood Pottery.
Cleveland
Gage, George E., 2258 Euclid Ave.
Paintings, Etchings, Bronzes. ,
Columbus
Roessler, Lee, 109 So. High St. Pic-
tures, Frames, Materials.
Dayton
Barlow, John H., 227 S. Main St. Pic-
tures.
Toledo
Mohr Art Galleries, 915 Madison Ave.
Pictures, Frames.
OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City
Yunt Art and Gift Shop, Broadway at
First St. Paintings, Frames,
PENNSYLVANIA
Harrlsburg
Saltzgiver's Art and Antique Store,
223 N. 2d St. Paintings, Frames,
Antiques.
Philadelphia
Arts and Crafts Guild, 237 So. Eleventh
St.
Barr, J. E., & Co., 1124 Walnut St.
Old Prints, Boolcs, Autographs.
Campbell, William J., 1731 Chestnut
St. Old Portraits, Prints.
Davis & Harvey, 910 Walnut St.
Paintings, Auction Sales.
Farr, Daniel H., 1626 Walnut St.
Paintings, Objects of Art.
Faser, Christian, 203 So. Watts St.
Restorer.
Florentine Art Plaster Co., 2210 Chest-
nut St. Casts.
Forsythe & Co., 922 Walnut St.
Frames.
Freeman, Samuel T. & Co., 1519 Chest-
nut St. Auctions.
Kane, Franli D., 234 N. 13th St.
Frames, Pictures.
McClees, J. E., & Co., 1507 Walnut St.
Pictures, Prints, Frames.
Newman, Adolph, 1732 Chestnut St.
Pictures.
PHILADELPHIA ART GALLERIES,
S. E. Cor. 15th and Chestnut Sts.,
Reed H. Walmer, Auctioneer.
Public Sales of Art, Literature and
Furniture. Collections Appraised
and Catalogued.
Rosenbach Company, 1320 Walnut St.
Objects of Art, Paintings, Prints.
Ross, H. L., 14 S. 18th St. Frames.
Staton Bros., 5402 Germantown Ave.
Prints, Restoring, Frames.
Taws, Henry M., 920 Arch St. Sup-
plies.
Walz & Co., Edward, 1622 Chestnut St.
Pictures, Frames.
Weber, F., Co., Inc., 1125 Chestnut SL
and 1220 Buttonwood St. Supplies.
Weil, J. H., & Co., 1300 Arch St.
Drawing Materials.
648
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
Philadelphia, Pa. — Continued
Williams, Brown & Earle, 918 Chest-
nut St. Drawing Materials, Lantern
Slides.
Pittsburgh
Gillespie, J. J., & Co., 422 Wood St.
Paintings, Engravings, Frames.
Knight & White, 201 Union Arcade.
Paintings, Mezzotints, Rugs.
Wunderley Art Galleries. 512 Wood St.
Paintings, Etchings, Frames.
RHODE ISLAND
Providence
Crooker Co., 230 Weybosset St. Pic-
tures, Objects of Art.
Davidson, David, 57 Whitmarsh St.
Prints, Frames, New England His-
torical Photographs.
Miller, Frank W., 121 Angell St.
Plaster reproductions.
Tilden-Thurber Co., 292 Westminster
St. Pictures, Frames.
TENNESSEE
Nashville
Frank, A., & Co., 3rd Ave., N. Pic-
tures, Frames, Supplies.
TEXAS
Austin
Bradford, C. A., & Co., 705 Congress
Ave.
Downie, Janet, 906 Trinity St. Pic-
tures, Prints.
Jordan Co., 615 Congress Ave.
Miller, C. M., 807 Congress St. Pic-
tures, Artists' Supplies.
University Co-operative Society, 2210
Guadalupe St. Artists' Supplies.
Ye Qualitye Shoppe, 1104 Colorado St.
Paintings, Prints, Crafts.
Dallas
Campbell Glass & Paint Co., 1215 Elm
St. Pictures, Frames, Artists' Mate-
rials.
Colonial Gift Shop and Tea Room, 303
Marvin Bldg.
Costura Shop, 1016 Elm St.
O'Connor & Goldberg, 1405 Elm St.
Oriental Art Co., 1312 Elm St.
PRACTICAL DRAWING CO.,
1911 Bryan Street, Dallas,
Chicago, Atlanta.
Publishers of Practical Drawing and
Practical Writing for public schools.
Dealers in School Art Materials.
Rookwood Pottery Co., Field St.,
Sanger Bros.
Fort Worth
Campbell Glass Paint Co., 108 Houston
St. Artists' Supplies.
Collins Art Co., 110 Houston St. Paint-
ings, Frames, Supplies.
Dixie Shop, 111 East 7th St.
Fair, The, Fifth and Houston Sts.
Norvell's 600 Houston Ct. Antiques,
Crafts.
Galveston
Maurer Studio, 418-23rd St.
Purdy Brothers. Pictures, Frames,
Supplies, Exhibitions.
Wittig Art Store, 2015 Ave "E."
Houston
Bute, James & Co. Reproductions,
Frames, Supplies.
Munn, W. C, & Co. Pictures.
Randolph Paint Co. Pictures, Frames,
Supplies.
San Antonio
Collins Co., 110 E. Houston St.
Photographs.
Doyle Decorating Co., 102 West Com-
merce St.
Fox Co., 209 Alamo Plaza. Prints,
Frames.
Hummert, Fred., 517 East Houston St.
Waco
Cameron & Co., William, 624 Austin
Ave.
Thompson, E. E., 404 Austin Ave.
UTAH
Ogden
Moore, Felix, Art Shop, 2464 Washing-
ton Ave.
Salt Lake City
Gift Shop, 8 South Main St. Crafts,
Jewelry.
Intermountain Art Co., 336 South Main
St. Pictures, Casts, Frames.
McConahay, W. M., 64 South Main
St. Paintings, Sculpture, Jewelry.
Savage, C. R., 12 South Main St.
Frames, Artists' Supplies.
White House Drapery Co., 45 South
Main St. Pictures, Frames.
VIRGINIA
Richmond
Richmond Art Company, Grace and
First Sts. Pictures, Frames.
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
649
Richmond, Va. — Continued
Young's Art Shop, 415 East Franklin
St. Paintings, Prints, Frames.
WEST VIRGINIA
Huntington
Abbott, D. E., & Co. Frames, Paint-
ings.
WASHINGTON
Seattle
Seattle Art Co.. 1423 Third Ave.
Prints, Frames, Supplies.
Spokane
Graham, John W., Co., 707 Sprague
Ave. Pictures, Frames, Supplies.
WISCONSIN
Milwaukee
Bresler, F. H., Co. Galleries, 423 Mil-
waukee St. Prints, Paintings, Por-
celains, Art Furniture.
Dunbar, Thomas Whipple, 2819 Dun-
bar PI. American Paintings.
CLASSIFIED TRADE LIST OF ADVERTISERS
AMERICAN PAINTINGS
New York City
AINSLIE, GEORGE H., 615 Fifth
Ave.
DUDENSING GALLERIES, 45 W. 44th
St.
FEARON GALLERIES (Walter P.
Fearon), 25 W. 54th St.
FERARGIL GALLERIES (F. N. Price
and T. H. Russell), 607 Fifth Ave.
FOLSOM GALLERIES, 104 W. 57th St.
KNOEDLER, M., & CO., 556 Fifth Ave.
LEVY, JOHN, 559 Fifth Ave.
MACBETH GALLERY, 450 Fifth Ave.
MONTROSS, N. E., 550 Fifth Ave.
ROHLFS, HENRY D. G., Jr., 944 Ful-
ton St., Brooklyn.
TRASK, JOHN E. D., 52 E. 53rd St.
YOUNG, HOWARD, 620 Fifth Ave.
AMERICAN PAINTINGS, EARLY
New York City
EHRICH GALLERIES, 707 Fifth Ave.
LEVY, JOHN, 559 Fifth Ave.
MACBETH GALLERY, 450 Fifth Ave.
ANTIQUES
New York City
CLAPP & GRAHAM CO., 420 Madison
Ave.
DEMOTTE of Paris, 8 E. 57th St.
FRENCH & CO., 6 E. 56th St.
MILLER, C. v., 9 E. 55th St.
WARWICK HOUSE, LTD., 45 E. 57th
St.
APPRAISING
New York City
AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION,
6 E. 23rd St.
FEARON GALLERIES (Walter P.
Fearon), 25 W. 54th St.
AUCTIONS
New York City
AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION, 6 E.
23rd St.
ANDERSON GALLERIES, Park Ave.
and 59th St.
Pennsylvania
PHILADELPHIA ART GALLERIES,
S. E. Cor. 15th and Chestnut Sta.
BRONZES
New York City
GORHAM COMPANY. Fifth Ave. and
36th St.
KNOEDLER, M.. & CO., 556 Fifth Ave.
MACBETH GALLERY, 450 Fifth Ave.
MONTROSS, N. E., 550 Fifth Ave.
CHINESE ANTIQUES
New York City
DEMOTTE of Paris, 8 E. 57t1j St.
FARMER, EDWARD I., INC., 16 E.
56th St.
DRAWINGS
FEARON GALLERIES (Walter P.
Fearon), 25 W. 54th St.
ECCLESIASTICAL ART
New York City
GORHAM COMPANY, Fifth Ave. and
36th St.
650
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
ETCHINGS AND ENGRAVINGS
New York City
BUTLER, D. B., & CO., 601 Madison
Ave.
FRIDENBERG, ROBERT, 22 W. 56th
St.
KRAUSHAAR, C. W., 680 Fifth Ave.
KNOEDLER. M. & CO., 556 Fifth Ave,
MONTROSS, N. E.. 550 Fifth Ave.
EXHIBITIONS
New York City.
AINSLIE. GEORGE H., 615 Fifth Ave.
GORHAM COMPANY, Fifth Ave. and
36th St.
KLEINBERGER, 725 Fifth Ave.
LEVY, JOHN, 559 Fifth Ave.
KNOEDLER, M.. & CO., 556 Fifth Ave.
MACBETH. WILLIAM, 450 Fifth Ave.
MONTROSS, N. E., 550 Fifth Ave.
SCOTT & FOWLES, 667 Fifth Ave.
YOUNG, HOWARD, 620 Fifth Ave.
EXPERTISING AND APPRAISING
New York City
ARLINGTON GALLERIES, 274 Madi-
son Ave., between 39th and 40 Sts.
EHRICH GALLERIES, 707 Fifth Ave.
FEARON GALLERIES (Walter P.
Fearon), 25 W. 54th St.
KLEINBERGER, 725 Fifth Ave.
KNOEDLER, M. & CO., 556 Fifth Ave.
MACBETH GALLERY, 450 Fifth Ave.
FOREIGN PICTURES
New York City
DEMOTTE of Paris, 8 E. 57th St.
KLEINBERGER GALLERIES, F., 725
Fifth Ave.
KNOEDLER, M., & CO., 556 Fifth Ave.
LEVY, JOHN, 559 Fifth Ave.
SCOTT & FOWLES, 667 Fifth Ave.
YOUNG, HOWARD, 620 Fifth Ave.
FRAMES
New York City
BUTLER, D. B. & CO.. 601 Madison
Avenue.
KNOEDLER, M., & CO., 556 Fifth Ave.
NEWCOMB-MACKLIN & CO.,' 233
Fifth Avenue.
Chicago, III.
NEWCOMB, MACKLIN CO., State
and Kinzie Sts.
Massachusetts
CARRIG-ROHANE SHOP, 394 Boyl-
ston St., Boston.
GARDEN FURNITURE
New York City
ELMORE STUDIOS, 3 W. 28th St.
GLASS, STAINED
New York City
DEMOTTE of Paris, 8 E. 57th St.
GORHAM CO., Fifth Ave. and 36th St.
GILDING
New York City
BUTLER, D. B., & CO.. 601 Madison
Avenue.
LANTERN SLIDES
Massachusetts
UNIVERSITY PRINTS. Newton.
LIGHTING FOR PICTURES
New York City
PRINK, L P., 439-43 Tenth Ave., at
24th St.
MATERIALS FOR ARTISTS
New York City
DEVOE & RAYNOLDS CO., INC.,
101 Fulton St.
Texas
PRACTICAL DRAWING CO., Dallas.
School Art Materials.
MEDALS
New York City
GORHAM CO., Fifth Ave. and 36th St.
MEDALLIC ART CO., 137 E. 29th St.
OBJECTS OF ART
New York City
CONSIGNMENT ARTS, INC. (A. J.
Halow, Pres.), 222 W. 59th St.
DEMOTTE of Paris, 8 E. 57th St.
FRENCH & CO., 6 E. 56th St.
GORHAM COMPANY, Fifth Ave. and
36th St.
Los Angeles, Cal.
CANNELL & CHAFFIN, INC., 720
W. Seventh St.
OLD MASTERS
New York City
DEMOTTE of Paris, 8 E. 57th St.
EHRICH GALLERIES, 707 Fifth Ave.
FEARON GALLERIES (^Walter P.
Fearon), 25 W. 54th St.
KLEINBERGER GALLERIES, F.,
725 Fifth Ave.
KNOEDLER. M., & CO., 556 Fifth Ave.
SCOTT & FOWLES, 667 Fifth Ave.
SELIGMANN (ARNOLD), REY &
CO., 7 W. 36th St.
PACKING AND SHIPPING
New York City
BUDWORTH, W. S.. & SON. 424 W.
52d Street.
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS
651
PAINTINGS
New York City
AINSLIE, GEORGE H., 615 Fifth Ave.
ARLINGTON GALLERIES, 274 Madi-
son Ave., bet. 39th and 40th Sts.
BABCOCK, E. C., 19 E. 49th St.
DEMOTTE of Paris, 8 E. 57th St.
DUDENSING GALLERIES, 45 W. 44th
St.
EHRICH GALLERIES, 707 Fifth Ave.
FEARON GALLERIES (Walter P.
Fearon), 25 W. 54th St.
GALLERIE INTIME (Anne Pinneo),
749 Fifth Ave.
KLEINBERGER GALLERIES. 725
Fifth Ave.
KNOEDLER, M. & CO., 556 Fifth Ave.
KRAUSHAAR, C. W., 680 Fifth Ave.
LEVY, JOHN, 559 Fifth Ave.
MACBETH GALLERY, 450 Fifth Ave.
MILCH GALLERIES, 108 W. 57th St.
MONTROSS, N. E., 550 Fifth Ave.
SCOTT & FOWLES, 667 Fifth Ave.
SCHULTHEIS CO., HENRY 142 Ful-
ton St., near Broadway.
YOUNG, HOWARD, 620 Fifth Ave.
Illinois.
THURBER ART GALLERIES, 75 E.
Washington St., Chicago.
Massachusetts
VOSE, R. C. & N. M., 394 Boylston
St., Boston.
Missouri
NEWHOUSE, M. A. & SON, 4398 Olive
St., St. Louis.
PHOTOGRAPHERS OF PAINTINGS
New York City
JULEY, PETER A., 219 E. 39th St.
PICTURES, PRINTS
New York City
BUTLER. D. B., & CO., 601 Madison
Avenue.
SCHWARTZ, SAMUEL, SONS & CO.,
14 E. 46th St.
Illinois
O'BRIEN, M. & SON, 334 So. Michi-
gan Blvd., Chicago.
PRINT PUBLISHERS
Massachusetts
UNIVERSITY PRINTS, THE,
11 Boyd St., Newton.
Texas
PRACTICAL DRAWING PUBLISH-
ING COMPANY. Dallas.
PUBLISHER, BOOKS OF ART
DEMOTTE of Paris, 8 E. 57th St.
REPRODUCTIONS OF PAINTINGS
New York City
LESCH. RUDOLF, 13 W. 42d SL
RESTORERS
New York City
BUTLER, D. B., & CO., 601 Madison
Avenue.
ROUGERON, M., 94 Park Ave., at 40th
St.
TAPESTRIES
New York City
DEMOTTE of Paris, 8 E. 57th St.
FRENCH & CO., 6 E. 56th St.
WARWICK HOUSE, LTD., 45 E. 47th
Street.
TEXTILES
DEMOTTE of Paris, 8 E. 57th St.
PHOTOGRAPHS
New York City
LANDAU (TONI) PHOTOGRAPHIC
CO., 1 E. 45th St.
METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART
Fifth Avenue at 82d St.
MONTROSS. N. E., 550 Fifth Ave.
WATER COLORS
New York City
DUDENSING GALLERIES, 45 W. 44th
St.
FEARON GALLERIES (Walter P.
Fearon), 25 W. 54th St.
MONTROSS, N. E., 550 Fifth Ave.
Ind
ex
This index is arranged by "cities and forms a cross reference to the main body of the
book where reports are grouped by States. There are also cross references under the
following heads: Aid for Artists, Architecture, Circulating Exhibitions, Open Exhibitions,
Federations, Galleries, Graphic Arts, Handicrafts, Libraries, Municipal Art, National,
School Arts, Schools of Art, Sculpture, and Western Societies. These headings are in
italic caps.
Each society is entered under the city where the office of the secretary is located;
under the name of the State or under National when the residence of the secretary
changes from year to year. The name of the city is omitted from the title of the
societies in the index, but the full official title (without the article) is used in the body
of the book.
The special articles in volumes I to XVIII are listed in this index; these titles are in
italics. Societies which were entered in Volumes I to X, but which have been discon-
tinued or which, for one reason or another, are not in Volume XVIII, will be found in
the index of Volume XI, with volume and page of the last entry.
PAGE
ABILENE, TEX.— Simmons College 220
ADA, OHIO— Ohio Northern University 213
Esthetic Training, Its Development in the Elementary Schools. By James P. Haney,
VI, p. 9.
AID FOR ARTISTS—
Boston, Mass. — Stuart Club 132
Cincinnati, O. — Three Arts Club 1€4
New York, N. Y.—
Art Alliance 147
Artists' Aid S'ociety 148
Artists' Fund Society 149
Art Workers Club for Women 148
League of New York Artists 152
Studio Club of New York 158
Three Arts Club 159
Whitney Studio Club 159
ALABAMA State Federation of Women's Clubs 96
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 99
ALBANY, N. Y.—
Institute and Historical and Art Society 160
University of the State of New York 160
ALFRED, N. Y.— New York State School of Ceramics 206
AMERICAN ACADEMY IN ROME 91
AMERICAN ART DEALERS ASSOCIATION; Vol. XVII, p. 103.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF MUSEUMS 91
AMERICAN BOOKPLATE SOCIETY 92
AMERICAN CIVIC ASSOCIATION 92
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF ARTS 77
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS. 92
AMERICAN NUMISMATIC ASSOCIATION 93
AMERICAN SCENIC AND HISTORIC PRESERVATION SOCIETY 94
AMERICAN SOCIETY OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS 94
ANDERSON, IND.—
Anderson Art Association 116
Art Club 116
ANDOVER, MASS.— John-Esther Gallery, Abbott Academy 31
ANN ARBOR, MICH.—
Art Association 137
University of Michigan 202
ARCHJEOLOGICAL INSTITUTE OF AMERICA (Chapters under cities) 94
ARCHITECTURAL SOCIETIES—
American Institute of Architects (Chapters under cities) 92
Architects Diplomes par le Gouvernement Frangais; Groupe Americain 157
Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture 96
Avery Architectural Library 150
Beaux-Arts Architects, Society of Beaux-Arts Architects 158
Boston Architectural Club 129
Boston Society of Architects 130
Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences 47
Chicago Architectural Club Ill
Cincinnati Architectural Club 163
Collegiate Schools of Architecture, Association of 96
Columbia University, Alumni Association of the School of Architecture 150
Indiana Society of Architects 115
653
654 INDEX
ARCHITECTURAL SOCIETIES— Continued
Indianapolis Architects' Association 117
Indianapolis Architectural League 117
Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Architectural Society 131
New York, Architectural League of 147
Ohio State Association of Architects 163
Ohio State University Architectural Club, Columbus 166
Pittsburgh Architectural Club 175
Rochester Society of Architects 162
Rotch Traveling Scholarship, Boston 131
Saint Louis Architectural Club 142
T Square Club 174
Tacoma Society of Architects 184
Topiarian Club of Harvard University 133
Utah Institute of Architects; Vol. XVII, p. 221.
Washington University Architectural Society, St. Louis 143
ARCHITECTURAL SCHOOLS, XI, p. 380.
ARIZONA State Federation of Women's Clubs 96
ARKANSAS State Federation of Women's Clubs 96
ARTS AND CRAFTS. (See HANDICRAFTS.)
Arts and Crafts in the United States. By H. Percy Macomber; XIII, p. 407.
ASSOCIATION OF ART MUSEUM DIRECTORS 95
ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGIATE SCHOOLS OF ARCHITECTURE 96
ASSOCIATION OF PICTURE PUBLISHERS 96
ASSOCIATIONS AND SOCIETIES 77
ATHENS, GA. — Art Association 109
ATLANTA, GA.—
Art Association 109
Georgia Chapter, American Institution of Architects 92
Schools 192
ATTICA, IND.— Attica Art History Club; Vol. XVII, p. 131.
ATTLEBORO, MASS.— Public Library 129
AUBURN, ALA.— Alabama Polytechnic Institute 187
AUBURNDALE, MASS.— Lasell Seminary 199
AUCTION SALES OF DRAWINGS 287
AUCTION SALES OF PAINTINGS 241
Sales of the year in each volume since 1898.
AUCTION SALES OF PRINTS 290
AUCTION SALES OF SCULPTURE 320
AURORA, ILL.— Art League 110
AUSTIN, TEXAS—
Art League 180
Elisabet Ney Museum 73
Texas Fine Arts Association 73
University of Texas 220
BALDWIN, KAN.— Baker University 196
BALTIMORE, MD.—
Art Commission 126
Arundel Club 126
Archaeological Society 94
Art Club of Baltimore City College 126
Chapter American Institute of Architects 127
Charcoal Club 127
Friends of Art 127
Handicraft Club of Baltimore 127
Johns Hopkins University Museum 30
Maryland Historical Society 127
Maryland Institute 30
Maryland Institute Alumni Association 128
Municipal Art Society 128
Museum of Art 30
Peabody Institute 30
Rinehart Sculpture Fund 128
School Art League of Baltimore 128
Schools 198
Six of Baltimore, The 128
Walters Gallery 31
Water Color Club 127
BANGOR, ME.—
School of the Bangor Society of Art 197
Society of Art 125
BAR HARBOR, ME.— Jesup Memorial Library 125
BATTLE CREEK, MICH.— School of Applied Art 202
BAY CITY, MICH.— Art Club; Vol. XVII, p. 159.
BAYONNE, N. J.— Woman's Club 145
BEDFORD, IND.— Ladies of the Round Table 116
BELOIT, WIS.— Art Museum of Beloit College 75
INDEX 655
BERKELEY, CALIF.—
California School of Arts and Crafts 187
Delta Epsilon Art Honor Society; Vol. XVII, p. 111.
University of California 187
Bibliography of American Art and American Artists; XI, p. 400.
BINGHAMTON, N. Y.—
Broome County Historical Society, Art Gallery, and Museum 56
Public Library 160
Society of Arts and Crafts 160
BIRMINGHAM, ALA.—
Alabama Art League 99
Atelier of the Y. M. C. A 187
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 92
Public Library 99
BLOOMINGTON, IND.—
Art Association; Vol. XVII, p. 132.
Indiana Library Art Club 116
Indiana LTniversity 116
BOISE, IDAHO— League of Idaho Artists; Vol. XVII, p. 123.
BOOKS OF THE YEAR: I to VIII, inclusive.
BOOTHBAY HARBOR, ME.—
Commonwealth Art Colony 125, 197
Snell Summer Class 197
BOSTON, MASS.—
Archaeological Society 94
Architectural Club 129
Art Club 130
Art Commission of the City of Boston 129
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 92
Children's Art Centre 31
Copley Society of Boston 130
Gardner Collection 31
Group, The 130
Guild of Boston Artists 131
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Architectural Society 131
Massachusetts Normal Art School Alumni Association 129
Museum of Fine Arts 32
National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, Massachusetts Chapter.. 131
Public Library 131
Rotch Traveling Scholarship 131
St. Botolph Club 132
Schools 199
Settlements Museum Association 31
Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities 132
Society of Architects 130
Society of Arts and Crafts 132
Society of Landscape Architects 130
Society of Water Color Painters 130
Stuart Club 132
Water Color Club 130
BOULDER, COL.— Un-versity of Colorado 190
BOURNE. MASS.— Old Colony Union 132
BOWLING GREEN. O.— State Normal College 213
BRIDGEPORT, CONN.— Art League 104
BROCKTON, MASS.—
Municipal Gallery 132
Public Library 132
Woman's Club 132
BROOKLINE, MASS.
Civic Society 133
Fitzgerald Art Gallery ] . . . 33
Public Library I33
BROWNWOOD, TEXAS— Daniel Baker College ..'. 220
BRUNSWICK, ME.—
Bowdoin Museum of Fine Arts 29
Walker Art Building 29
BUFFALO, N. Y.—
Albright Art Gallery 56
Archaeological Society .' ' 94
Arts Club 160
Chapter, American Institute of Architects . . . . 160
Fine Arts Academy _ ' 55
Grosvenor Library ' _ igi
Guild of Allied Arts 161
Pan-American Exposition; IV, p. 166.
School of the Albright Art Gallery 206
656 INDEX
BUFFALO, N. Y.— Continued
Society of Artists 161
School Art Association 161
BUZZARD'S BAY, MASS.— Old Colony Union 132
CALIFORNIA—
Engineers' and Architects' Association of Southern California 99
Print Makers 101
Southern California Chapter, American Institute of Architects 99
State Federation of Women's Clubs 96
CALIFORNIA, PA.— Southwestern State Normal School 216
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.—
Harvard University Z3
Classical Antiquities Museum 34
Fogg Art Museum 33
Germanic Museum 34
Robinson Hall 34
Schools 200
Semitic Museum 34
Topiarian Club 133
CANADA— Museums in; XIII, p. 278.
CANAAN, CONN.— White School of Photography 190
CARMEL-BY-THE-SEA, CALIF.—
Club of Arts and Crafts 100
Summer School of Arts 187
CEDAR CITY, UTAH— Branch Agricultural College 222
CEDAR FALLS, lA.— State Teachers College '. 195
CEDAR RAPIDS, I A.— Cedar Rapids Art Association 121
CERAMICS—
Chicago Ceramic Art Association; Vol. XVII, p. 125.
Indiana Keramic Club 117
Jersey City Keramic Club 146
Kansas City Keramic Club; Vol. XVII, p. 165.
Minneapolis, Minn. — Keramic Club 139
New York Keramic Society 152
Pittsburgh, Pa. — Duquesne Ceramic Club; Vol. XVII, p. 213.
CHAMPAIGN, ILL.— (5^^ Urbana.)
CHARLESTON, ILL.— Art Association 110
CHARLESTON, S. C—
American ' Association of Museums 91
Carolina Art Association 1 78
Carolina Art Association Sketch Club; XVII, p. 217.
Carolina Arts and Crafts 178
Charleston Museum 72
Gibbes Memorial Art Building 178
CHARLESTOWN, W. VA.— Art Association; Vol. XVII, p. 224.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA.—
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 93
Mclntire School of Fine Arts 222
CHATHAM, MASS.— Summer Classes 201
CHAUTAUQUA, N. Y.— School of Arts and Crafts 206
CHESTER, PA.— Alfred O. Deshong Memorial 169
CHESTER SPRINGS, PA.— Summer School of the Pennsylvania Academy 216
CHEYENNE, WYO.— Art Association 185
CHICAGO, ILL.—
Antiquarian Society, The 110
Archaeological Society 94
Architectural Club Ill
Art Commission of Chicago 110
Art Institute of Chicago 21
Art Institute Alumni Association 110
Art Service League 110
Art Student's League 110
Artists' Guild Ill
Arts Club Ill
Burnham Library 23
Business Men's Art Club Ill
Ceramic Art Association; Vol. XVII, p. 125.
Commission for Encouragement of Local Art 112
Cors Ardens 112
Englewood Woman's Club 112
Ferguson Monument Fund 112
Friends of American Art 113
Illinois Chapter, American Institute of Architects 92
Municipal Art Commission 113
Municipal Art League of Chicago 113
Palette and Chisel Club 113
INDEX 657
CHICAGO, ILL.— Continued
Public Library Ill
Public School Art Society Ill
Renaissance Society 113
Ryerson Art Library _ . . . . 23
Schools 192
Society of Artists 112
Society of Etchers 112
Society of Miniature Painters 112
Svenska Klubben 113
Technic Arts League 113
Tuesday Art and Travel Club 114
University of Chicago, Museums 25
CHICKASHA, OKLA.— College for Women 215
CINCINNATI, O.—
Archaeological Society 94
Architectural Club 163
Art Club 164
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 1 64
Craf ters 1 64
Lyric Art Gallery; Vol. XVII, p. 198.
MacDowell Society 1 64
Museum Association 60
Municipal Art Society 164
Schools 213
Three Arts Club 164
Woman's Art Club 164
CIVIC. (See Municipal.)
CLAREMONT, CALIF.— Pomona College 187
CLEVELAND, O.—
Archseological Society 94
Art Association 165
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 165
City Planning Commission of Cleveland 165
Municipal Art Gallery; Vol. XVII, p. 199.
Museum of Art 61
Portrait Artists 165
Print Club 166
Private Collections; I, p. 185.
Schools 214
School of Art 165, 214
School of Art Alumni Association 165
Society of Cleveland Artists 165
Woman's Art Club 166
COLLEGE ART ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA 96
COLLEGE ART INSTRUCTIONS; Directory of; XIII, p. 436.
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS— Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas 220
COLORADO—
Archasological Society 95
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 103
State Federation of Women's Clubs 96
COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO.—
Academy of Fine Arts 190
Archaeological Society 95
Broadmoor Art Academy 103, 190
COLUMBIA, MO.— University of Missouri 204
COLUMBIA, S. C— Art Association 178
COLUMBUS, O.—
Architectural Club, Ohio State University 166
Art Association 166
Chapter, American Institute of Architects , 166
Columbus Art League , 166
Gallery of Fine Arts 166
Pen and Pencil Club 167
Public Library 167
Schools 214
COMMISSIONS, State and Municipal Art Commission. (See Municipal.)
CONCORD, MASS.— Art Association 133
CONNECTICUT—
Academy of Fine Arts 105
ArchcTological Society 95
Arts Association 1 04
Chapter, American Institute of Architects .• 1 04
State Capitol Commission of Sculpture 105
State Federation of Women's Clubs f 96
Copyright Law, International; I, P. 71.
658 INDEX
CORNISH, N. H.— Studios of Augustus Saint-Gaudens 44
CORVALLIS, ORE.— Oregon State Agricultural College 215
CRAFTS, SCHOOLS OF; XI, p. 384.
CRAFTSMEN, Who's Who Among; Vol. XVII, p. 398.
CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND.— Art League 116
DALLAS, TEX.—
Art Association 180
Schools 221
Woman's Forum 180
DAVENPORT, lA.—
Academy of Sciences 121
Public Library 121
Tri-City Art League 121, 195
DAYTON, O.—
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 167
Museum of Arts 63
DEALERS, Who's Who Among Art Dealers 637
Classified Trade List of Advertisers 649
DECATUR, ILL.—
Art Institute 26
James Milliken University 193
DEERFIELD, MASS.— Society of Deerfield Industries 133
DE KALB, ILL.— Northern Illinois State Normal School 193
DELAWARE State Federation of Women's Clubs 96
DEL MONTE, CALIF.— Del Monte Gallery 100
DENTON, TEX.— Schools 221
DENVER, COLO.—
Archaeological Society 95
Art Association 103
Art Commission 103
Atelier Denver 190
Colorado Chapter, American Institute of Architects 92
Colorado Museum of Natural History 15
Denver Academy of Art 190
Public Library 104
Students' School of Art 190
Design. By Col. C. W. Earned; VIII, p. 13.
DESIGN, SCHOOLS OF; XI, p. 383.
DES MOINES, lA.—
Association of Fine Arts 121
Des Moines College 195
Public Library 121
DETROIT, MICH.—
Archaeological Society 95
Institute of Arts 37
Michigan Chapter, American Institute of Architects 93
Scarab Club 138
Schools 203
Society of Arts and Crafts 138
Society of Women Painters 137
DIRECTORIES—
Architects; XVII, p. 353.
Art Museum Workers; XIII, p. 431.
College Art Instruction; XIII, p. 436.
Craftsmen; XVII, p. 398.
Dealers, Who's Who Among 637
Illustrators, List 625
Lecturers and Writers; XIII, p. 450.
Magazines of Art 231
Painters, Sculptors and Illustrators 329
Press List 233
Schools 187
Sculptors, List 621
Studio Buildings; VI, p. 452.
Writers and Lecturers; XIII, p. 450.
Who's Who Among Art Dealers 637
Who's Who in Art 329
Who's Who Among Craftsmen; XVII, p. 398.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA—
Public Library 108
State Federation of Women's Clubs 96
DOYLESTOWN, PA.— Bucks County Historical Society 170
DUBLIN, N. H.— School of Painting 205
DUBUQUE, lA.—
Art Association 122
Carnegie-Stout Public Library 122
DUXBURY, MASS.— Art Association 133
INDEX 659
EASTERN SOCIETIES—
Eastern Arts Association 96
EAST GLOUCESTER, MASS.—
Gallery on the Moors 133
Summer Classes 201
EAST LAS VEGAS, N. M.— New Mexico Normal University 206
EASTPORT, ME.— Art Association 126
EDENBORO, PA.— State Normal Art School 216
EDMOND, OKLA.— Central State Normal School 215
EDITORIAL BOARD 7
ELKHART, IND.— Eckelman Art Gallery 26
ELMIRA, N. Y.— Arnot Art Gallery 57
ENID, OKLA.— Fine Arts Club 168
ERIE, PA.— Art Club of Erie 170
ETCHERS, WHO'S WHO IN ART.
Etching Societies. (See Graphic Arts.)
EUGENE, ORE.— State University of Oregon 215
EUROPE. {See Paris).
EVANSVILLE, IND.— Art League; Vol. XVII, p. 132.
EXHIBITIONS CIRCULATING—
Albany, N. Y. — State Education Department 160
Baltimore, Md.— The Six 128
Indiana Circuit Exhibition 115
Minnesota State Art Commission 139
Nanuet, N. Y. — ^Painters and Sculptors 161
New York, N. Y.— American Water Color Society 147
National Sculpture Society 154
Society of Beaux-Arts Architects 158
Society of Illustrators 158
Society of Men Who Paint the Far West 158
Society of Painters of New York 158
Northampton, Mass. — Forbes Library 135
Utah Art Institute 182
Washington, D. C. — American Federation of Arts 77
Library of Congress, Print Department 108
EXHIBITIONS OPEN TO ALL. Work passed upon by Jury.
Connecticut —
Hartford — Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts (Paintings) 105
New Haven — Paint and Clay Club ■. 106
District of Columbia —
Washington — Corcoran Gallery of Art (Paintings) 17
Society of Washington Artists (Paintings) 108
Washington Water Color Club 108
Illinois —
Chicago — Art Institute (Oils, Water Colors, Architecture, Crafts) 21
Artists' Guild (Crafts, Paintings) Ill
Maryland — ■
Baltimore^Charcoal Club 127
Massachusetts — ■
Boston — Art Club 130
Guild of Boston Artists 131
Society of Arts and Crafts 132
Worcester — Art Museum (Paintings) 36
Michigan-
Detroit — Society of Arts and Crafts 138
Scarab Club 138
Minnesota —
Minnesota State Art Commission (Paintings, Sculpture, Crafts) 139
Missouri —
Saint Paul Institute 140
St. Louis — Artists' Guild 142
New York City — •
American Society of Miniature Painters 147
American Water Color Society 147
Architectural League of New York 147
MacDowell Club (Groups) l52
National Academy of Design 153
National Arts Club 154
National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors 154
National Sculpture Society 154
New York Society of Craftsmen 155
New York Water Color Club 156
Society of Illustrators 158
New York —
Buffalo— Buflfalo Society of Artists 161
660 INDEX
EXHIBITIONS OPEN TO ALL— Continued
Ohio-
Cincinnati — Museum Association (Paintings, Sculpture) 60
Pennsylvania —
Philadelphia — Art Club (Paintings, Sculpture) 170
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (Oils, Water Colors, Architec-
ture, Sculpture, Miniatures) 67
Plastic Club (Groups) 174
Pittsburgh — Carnegie Institute (Oils, Water Colors, etc.) 69
EXPOSITIONS^
Alaska- Yukon Pacific (Seattle, 1909); VIII, p. 105.
Anglo-American (London, 1914); XI, p. 351.
Appalachian (Knoxville, 1900); VIII, p. 105.
Buenos Aires (1910); VIII, p. 106.
Decorative Art (Turin, 1902); IV, p. 256.
Greater America (Omaha, 1899); II, p. 33.
Lewis and Clark (Portland, Ore., 1905); V, p. 245.
Louisiana Purchase (St. Louis, 1904); V, p. 255.
Panama-Pacific (San Francisco, 1915); XII, p. 57.
Pan-American (Buffalo, 1901); IV, p. 166.
Paris International (1900); III, p. 9.
Rome (1911); VIII, p. 107.
Santiago (1910); VIII, p. 106.
South Carolina Interstate (Charleston, 1902); IV, p. 172.
Southern California-Panama (San Diego, 1915); XII, p. 55.
Trans-Mississippi (Omaha, 1898); I, p. 321.
Venice (1909); VIII, p. 107.
FALL RIVER, MASS.— Art Club 133
FARGO, N. D.— Fine Arts Club 163
FEDERATIONS-^
American Association of Museums 91
American Civic Association 92
American Federation of Arts 77
American Institute of Architects 92
American Numismatic Association 93
American Society of Landscape Architects 94
Archaeological Institute of America 94
College Art Association 96
Collegiate Schools of Architecture, Associations of 96
Federation of Art Societies, Toledo 168
General Federation of Women's Clubs 96
New York Fine Arts Federation , 151
Pennsylvania, Women's State Federation of 169
State Art Societies {See under State).
First Century and a Half of American Art. By C. H. Hart; I, p. 9.
FITCHBURG, MASS.— Public Library 134
FLORIDA State Federation of Women's Clubs 96
FORT WAYNE, IND.— Art Association 116
FORT WORTH, TEX.—
Art Association 73
Museum of Art 73
Painters' Club 180
Schools 221
FRANKFORT, IND.— Art Association 116
FREDERICK, MD.— Art Club 128
FRESNO, CALIF.— Fresno State Normal School 188
FRIENDS OF ART SOCIETIES—
Baltimore Friends of Art 127
Chicago Friends of American Art 113
Indianapolis Friends of American Art 117
One Hundred Friends of Pittsburgh Art 175
Friends of the Local Artists, St. Louis 142
San Diego Friends of Art 102
GALLERIES — (Clagsified by name.) See also Libraries and Historical Societies.
Albright Art Gallery, Buffalo. N. Y 56
Annmary Brown Memorial, Providence 71
Arnot Art Gallery, Elmira, N. Y 57
Baltimore Museum of Art 30
Barnard Cloisters, New York 47
Beloit College Museum, Beloit, Wis 75
Berkshire Athenaeum, Pittsfield, Mass 34
Boston Museum of Fine Arts 32
Bowdoin Museum of Fine Arts, Brunswick, Me 29
Brooks Memorial, Memphis, Tenn 72
INDEX 661
GALLERIES — Continued
Broome County Historical Society 55
Bronx Society of Arts and Sciences, New York 49
Brooklyn Museum, New York ' 47
Bruce Art Museum, Greenwich, Conn 16
Butler Art Institute 65
Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, Pa 69
Charleston Museum \\ 72
Chicago Art Institute 21
Chicago University Museum 25
Children's Art Centre, Boston 3I
Cincinnati Museum Association 60
City Art Museum, St. Louis 42
Cleveland Museum of Art 61
Colorado Museum, Denver, Colo IS
Comparative Museum of Art, San Francisco, Calif 15
Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts 166
Converse Art Gallery, Norwich 17
Cooper Union Museum for the Arts of Decoration, New York SO
Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C 17
Cornell Museum of Classical Archaeology 57
Crocker Art Gallery, Sacramento, Calif 14
Currier Gallery of Art, Manchester, N. H 45
Dayton Museum of Arts 63
Decatur Art Institute 26
Delgado Museum of Art, New Orleans, La 28
Del Monte Gallery 100
Deshong Memorial, Chester, Pa 169
Des Moines Public Library 121
Detroit Institute of Arts i7
de Young Memorial Museum, San Francisco 14
Drexel Institute Museum, Philadelphia, Pa 171
Dwight Art Building, South Hadley, Mass 35
Dyckman House, New York City SO
Eckelman Art Gallery, Elkhart, Ind 26
Elisabeth Ney Museum, Austin, Texas 73
Essex Institute, Salem, Mass 35
Everhart Museum, Scranton, Pa 70
Farnsworth Art Building. Wellesley, Mass 36
Ferry Museum, Tacoma, Wash 75
Fitzgerald Art Museum, Brookline, Mass 33
Fogg Museum. Cambridge. Mass 33
Fort Worth Museum of Art 73
Gallery on the Moors, East Gloucester, Mass 133
Gardner Collection, Boston, Mass 31
Germanic Museum, Cambridge, Mass 34
Gibbes Memorial, Charleston. S. C 178
Golden Gate Museum, San Francisco, Calif 14
Green Bay, Wis., Museum 75
Grosvenor Library, Buffalo 161
Hackley Gallery of Art, Muskegon, Mich 40
Harvard LTniversity Classical Antiquities 34
Herkscher Park Art Museum, Huntington, N. Y 57
Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis, Ind 26
Hillyer Art Gallery, Northampton, Mass 34
Hispanic Society of America, New York, N. Y 51
Independence Hall, Philadelphia, Pa 66
Indianapolis Public Library 117
Iowa University Museum of Art, Iowa City 28
Jarves Collection, New Haven. Conn 17
John-Esther Gallery, Andover. Mass 31
Johns Hopkins University Museum 30
Tumel Mansion, New York 55
"Kansas City Art Institute HI
Lavton Art Gallery, Milwaukee, Wis 75
Leiand Stanford, Jr.. Memorial Museum 15
Lenox Gallery, New York 54
Lininger Art Gallery, Omaha 44
Linton-Surget Art Hall, New Orleans 28
Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation, Ovster Bay, N. Y 58
Lyric Art Gallery, Cincinnati; Vol. XVII, n. 198.
Los Angeles Museum of History, Science and Art 13
Louisiana State Museum, New Orleans 29
Maine State Building, South Poland 126
Maryland Institute, Baltimore 30
Memorial Art Gallery. Rochester 58
662 INDEX
GALLERIES— Continued
Merrick Free Art Gallery, New Brighton, Pa 66
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, N. Y ,', si
Milwaukee Art Institute 75
Minneapolis Institute of Arts 40
Minnesota Academy of Science Museum, Minneapolis .* 42
Montclair Art Museum ] , 45
Morgan Memorial, Hartford, Conn !'.!!!!!!.' 16
Municipal Art Gallery, Oakland, Calif 13
National Gallery of Art, Washington,i D. C . . . , ] 19
Nelson Gallery of Art, Kansas City \ ,,', 42
Newark Museum 45
New Britain Institute 106
New Mexico Museum, Santa Fe .".'.**.*.'.' 46
Newport Art Association ". 1 76
New York Historical So.ciety 54
New York Public Library, Art Dept 54
Oakland Public Museum 13
Omaha Public Library and Museum 44
Parrish Art Museum, Southampton, N. Y 59
Peabody Institute, Baltimore 30
Peabody Museum, Salem, Mass.; Vol. XVII, p. 33.
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia 67
Pennsylvania Museum of Industrial Art, Philadelphia 67
Pennsylvania University Museum, Philadelphia 68
Philadelphia Museum of Art 68
Philipse Manor Hall, Yonkers 163
Poland Spring Art Gallery 126
Portland (Ore.) Art Association 66
Prendergast Library Association, Jamestown, N. Y 161
Princeton University Museum of Historic Art, Princeton, N. J 46
Providence Athenaeum 177
Ranney Library and Museum, State University, Iowa City, la 28
Reading Public Museum and Art Gallery 70
Rhode Island School of Design, Providence 71
Richmond, Ind., Public Art Gallery 119
Saint-Gaudens Studios, Cornish, N. H 44
Saint Johnsbury Athenaeum 74
Saint Paul Institute Gallery 140
San Diego Museum 14
San Francisco Art Association 102
San Francisco Museum of Art 15
Semitic Museum, Cambridge 34
Simmons Collection, Portland, Me 29
Slater Museum, Norwich, Conn ._ 17
Smith, George Walter Vincent, Collection, Springfield, Mass 35
Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C 19
Southwest Museum. Los Angeles. Calif 13
Stanford, Thomas Welton. Art Gallery IS
Staten Island Institute of Arts and Sciences 55
Stuart Gallejy, New York 54
Sweat Memorial Museum, Portland Me 29
Syracuse Museum of Fine Arts 59
Taylor Art Building, Vassar College 58
Telfair Academy of Arts and Sciences, Savannah, Ga 20
Toledo Museum of Art 64
Trumbull Gallery, New Haven, Conn 17
Valentine Museum, Richmond, Va 74
Wadsworth Athenjeum, Hartford, Conn 16
Walker Art Building, Brunswick, Me 29
Walker Art Gallery, Minneapolis 42
Walters Gallery, Baltimore 31
Washington State Museum 74
Wichita Art Gallery 123
Wiscons-n Historical Society, Madison. 185
Wood Art Gallery, Montpelier, Vt 74
Workingman's Institute Art Gallery, New Harmony, Ind 27
Worcester Art Museum 36
Yale School of Fine Arts, New Haven, Conn 17
GALVESTON, TEX.—
Art League 181
School Art League: Vol. XVII, p. 220.
GENERAL FEDERATION OF WOMEN'S CLUBS 96
GEORGIA—
Chapter American Institute of Architects . . 1 ^09
State Federation of Women's Clubs «. 96
INDEX 663
GIFTS AND BEQUESTS; IV, p. 271.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.—
Art Association of Grandi Rapids 138
Public Library ..!.."!!,'!.'!.*!,"!! 1 3S
School of Arts and Industry !*.*.!*.*.'.!! 203
GRAPHIC ARTS—
American Institute of Graphic Arts ] 47
California Print Makers '.'.'.'.'. 101
California Society of Etchers [[ 102
Chicago Society of Etchers '...'.'. 112
Cleveland Print Club 166
Collection of Prints (important ones) —
Boston Museum of Fine Arts 32
Cambridge — Fogg Museum '....'.'.'.'.'. 33
Chicago — Art Institute [ 21
Indianapolis — ^Herron Art Institute .'.'.*.*.*,* 26
New York — Brooklyn Museum 47
Metropolitan Museum of Art * * ] . 51
Public Library 54
Washington — Library of Congress 108
Society of Iconophiles 158
GREAT FALLS, MONT.—
City Planning Commission I43
Woman's Club; Vol. XVII. b. 168.
GREELEY, COLO.— State Teachers' College 190
GREEN BAY, WIS.—
Kellogg Public Library 184
Museum 75
GREENCASTLE, IND.— Art Club 116
GREENSBURG, IND.— Department Club; Vol. XVII, p. 133.
GREENWICH, CONN.—
Bruce Museum 16
Society of Artists 104
GROTON, MASS.— Lowthorpe School of Landscape Architecture 201
GUNNISON, COLO.— State Normal School 190
HANDICRAFTS SOCIETIES—
Baltimore, Handicraft Club of 127
Binghamton Society of Arta> and Crafts 160
Boston Society of Arts and Crafts 132
Buffalo Guild of Allied Arts 161
Carmel Club of Arts and Crafts 100
Carolina Arts and Crafts, Charleston 178
Chicago Artists' Guild Ill
Chicago Technic Arts League 113
Columbus — Arts and Crafts Dept., Pen and Pencil Club 167
Crafters, Cincinnati 164
Deerfield Industries, Society of 133
Detroit Society of Arts and Crafts of 138
Duquesne Ceramic Club, Pittsburgh; Vol. XVII, p. 213.
Hartford Arts and Crafts Club 105
Hartford Keramic Art Club 105
Haverhill, Arts and Crafts Society of 134
Hingham Society of Arts and Crafts 134
Jersey City Keramic Art Club 146
Keramic Society of Greater New York 152
Louisville Handicraft Guild 123
Melrose, Society of Arts and Crafts of; Vol. XVII, p. 155.
Minneapolis Keramic Club 139
New Orleans Arts and Crafts Club 124
New York Society of Craftsmen 155
Norwell Society of Arts and Crafts 135
Old Colony Union, Bourne, Mass 132
Peterborough, Handicraft Workers of 145
Philadelphia, Arts and Crafts Guild of 171
Portland (Me.) Society of Arts and Crafts 126
Columbian Arts and Crafts League, Portland 126
Portland (Ore.) Arts and Crafts Society 169
Providence, Handicraft Club of 177
Pueblo Arts and Crafts Society 1 04
Rockford Art Guild 114
Salt Lake Citv Associated Craftsmen 181
San Diego Art Guild 102
Seabright Crafts 103
Virginia League of Fine Arts and Handicrafts 183
Washington Handicraft Guild; Vol. XVII, p. 120.
664 INDEX
HARTFORD, CONN.—
Archaeological Society 94
Art Club 105
Art Society 1 04
Arts and Crafts Club 105
Connecticut Academy of the Fine Arts [ 105
Connecticut State Capitol Commission of Sculpture 105
Keramic Art Club 105
Morgan Memorial I6
Municipal Art Society 105
Schools 191
Wadsworth Atheneum 16
HAVERHILL, MASS.— Arts and Crafts Society 134
HENDERSON, KY.— Art League 123
HINGHAM, MASS.— Society of Arts and Crafts 134
HISTORICAL SOCIETIES—
American Antiquarian Society 137
American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society 94
Antiquarian Society of the Art Institute of Chicago 110
Broome County Historical Society, Art Gallery and Museum 56
Bucks County Historical Society 170
Litchfield Historical Society - 105
Maryland Historical Society 127
Mattatuck Historical Society 107
New England Antiquities, Society of the Preservation of 132
New York Historical Society 54
Pennsylvania, Historical Society of 172
Princeton University, Museum of Historic Art of 46
Wisconsin, State Historical Society of 224
History of Art as a College Discipline; by T. Lindsey Blayney; VII, p. 23.
History of Art, The Value of Teaching the; by George M. Chase; VIII, p. 22.
HOLLYWOOD, CALIF.— Art Association 100
HONOLULU, H. I.— University of Hawaii 192
HOUSTON, TEX.—
Art League 181
William M. Rice Institute of Arts and Sciences 221
HUNTINGTON. N. Y.— Herkscher Park Art Museum 57
HUNTINGTON, W. VA.— Marshall College 223
IDAHO State Federation of Women's Clubs 96
ILLINOIS—
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 109
State Federation of Women's Clubs 96
ILLUSTRATORS, Who's Who in Art 329
List of Illustrators 625
Illustrators, Society of 158
INDEPENDENCE, MO.— Archaeological Society 95
INDIANA—
Archaeological Society 95
Circuit Exhibition 115
Indiana Society of Architects 115
Indiana Society of Sculptors 115
State Fair Art Gallery 115
State Federation of Women's Clubs 96
State Library 115
State Teachers' Association 116
INDIANA, PA.— State Normal School 216
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.—
Architects Association 117
Architectural League 117
Art Association 26
Friends of American Art 117
Herron Art Institute 26
Indiana Artists' Club 117
Indiana Keramic Club 117
Memorial Art Commission 117
Portfolio Club 117
Public Library 117
School of the John Herron Art Institute 194
Sketching Club 118
Study Club 118
Woman's Department Club 118
Industrial Art, A Plea for. By William Sloane Coffin; VIII, p. 15.
Industrial Development; Art Education an Important Factor. By Halsey C. Ives;
VI, p. 13.
INDEX 665
INDUSTRIAL ART SCHOOL; XI, p. 385.
IOWA—
Archaeological Society 94
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 120
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
IOWA CITY. lA.—
Fine Arts Association 122
Museum of Art and Archaeology 28
Ranney Library and Museum 28
State University 195
University of Iowa Museum of Art and Archaeology 28
Investments, Paintings, Prints and Art Objects a^. By Flcrence N. Levy; X, p. 35.
ITHACA, N. Y.—
Cornell University, Museum of Classical Archaeology 57
College of Architecture 207
JACKSON, MICH.—
Art Association 138
Public Library 138
JACKSON, MISS.—
Belhaven College 204
Mississippi Art Association 141
JACKSONVILLE, ILL.— Illinois Woman's College 194
JAMESTOWN, N. Y.— James Prendergast Library Association 161
JANESVILLE, WIS.— Art League 184
JEFFERSON CITY, MO.— Art Club: Vol. XVII, d. 164.
JENKINTOWN, PA.— Beechwood School of Fine Arts 216
JERSEY CITY, N. J.—
Arts Club of Jersey City 146
Free Public Library 145
Keramic Art Club 146
KALAMAZOO, MICH.— Western State Normal School 203
KANSAS— State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
KANSAS CITY, MO.—
Archaeological Society 94
Art Institute 141
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 141
Keramic Club; Vol. XVII. d. 165.
Nelson Gallery of Art 42
Kansas Citv Art Institute School 204
KENTUCKY— State Federation of Women's Clubs '97
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 123
KEWANEE, ILL.— Public Library 114
KNOXVILLE, TENN.—
Appalachian Exposition; IX, p. 163.
Art Museum; VI, p, 176.
Nicholson Art League; Vol. XVII, p. 218.
University of Tennessee 219
KOKOMO, IND.— Woman's Deoartment Club 118
LA CROSSE. WIS.— Art Association 184
LAFAYETTE, IND.—
Art Association 118
Art Club 118
Purdue University 194
LAFAYETTE, LA.— Southwestern Louisiana Industrial Institute 197
LACUNA BEACH, CALIF.—
Art Association 1 00
West Coast Arts 100
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE—
American Society of Landscape Arc'iitects 94
Boston Society of Landscape Architects 130
Minnesota Society of Landscape A.cliitects 1 39
New York Society of Landscape Architects 155
Pacific Coast Chapter, American Society of Landscape Architects 98
LANSING, MICH.— State Library 138
LAS VEGAS, N. M.— New^ Mexico Normal University 206
LAWRENCE, KAN.—
Kansas Art Association 122
University of Kansas, School of Fine Arts 196
LEBANON, IND.— Florentine Club 118
LECTURERS—
Directory of Professional Lecturers and Writers; XIII, p. 450.
LEXINGTON, KY.—
University of Kentucky 196
Woman's Club of Central Kentucky -. 123
666 INDEX
LIBRARIES HAVING GALLERIES—
Attleboro Public Library 129
Avery Architectural Library, New York '...'.'..'......'. 150
Binghamton Public Library '..'.'....'.'.'. 160
Birmingham Public Library !.!!.'!!!!!'. 99
Boston, Public Library of the City of !!!.**.' 131
Brockton Public Library ......'..'. 132
Brookline Public Library !.,... 133
Brown, James V., Library, Williamsport, Pa ....'....'.'. 176
Carnegie-Stout Free Public Library, Dubuque, la [ . . 122
Chicago Public Library 1 1 1
Columbus Public Library 167
Congressional Library, Washington, D. C ,'. 108
Davenport Public Library 121
Denver Public Library * . 104
Des Moines Public Library 121
District of Columbia Public Library 108
Fairbanks Memorial Library, Terre Haute, Ind 120
Fitchburg Public Library 134
Flower Memorial Library, Watertown, N. Y 162
Forbes Library, Northampton, Mass 135
Fort Worth Carnegie Library 73
Grand Rapids Public Library 138
Grosvenor Library, Buffalo 161
Indianapolis Public Library . 117
Jackson Public Library 138
Jersey City Free Public Library 145
Jesup Memorial Library, Westport, Conn 107
Jesup Memorial Library, Bar Harbor, Me 125
Kellogg Public Library, Green Bay, Wis 184
Kewanee Public Library 114
Long Beach Public Library 100
Louisville Free Public Library 123
Lyme Public Library 106
Lynn Public Library 134
Maiden Public Library 134
Marion, Ind., Public Library 118
Michigan State Library, Lansing 138
Milton Public Library 134
Minneapolis Public Library 139
Nashville Carnegie Public Library 179
Nevins Memorial Hall and Library, Methuen, Mass 134
Newark Free Public Library and Museum 45
New Bedford Free Public Library 135
New York Public Library 54
New York Society Library 156
Nutley Free Public Library 146
Oakland Free Library; Vol. XVII, p. 113.
Oklahoma City Carnegie Library 168
Omaha Public Library and Museum 44
Oregon (III.) Public Library 114
Peck Library, Norwich, Conn 17
Philadelphia, Free Library of 171
Portland (O.) Library Association 169
Prendergast Library Association, Jamestown, N. Y 161
Providence Athenaeum 177
Ranney Library and Museum, Iowa City, la 28
Redwood Library, Newport 177
Ryerson Library, Art Institute of Chicago 93
Saint Louis Public Library 143
Saint Paul Public Library 140
Seattle Public Library 183
Sedalia Public Library 143
Shelbyville Carnegie Public Library 119
Skaneateles Library Association 59
Springfield (Mass.) City Library Association 136
Tipton Public Library 120
Utica Public Library 1 62
Woburn Public Library 136
Worcester Free Public Library 137
LIBRARIES ON ART; III, p. 211.
LINCOLN, NEB.—
Nebraska Art Association 144
University of Nebraska 205
LINDSBORG, KAN.—
Bethanv College 1 96
Smoky Hill Art Club 122
INDEX 667
^
LITCHFIELD, CONN.— Historical Society 105
Needle and Bobbin Club 105
LOGAN, UTAH— Utah Agricultural College ! * ! 222
LOGANSPORT, IND.— Art Association 118
LONDON, ENGLAND— Anglo-American Exposition; XI, p. 351.
LONG BEACH, CALIF.— Public Library 100
LOS ANGELES. CALIF.—
Archaeological Society 95
California Art Club " 1 qq
California Water Color Society 101
Ebell Club 101
Engineers' and Architects' Association of Southern California 99
Friday Morning Club 101
Municipal Art Commission ' 101
Museum of History, Science and Art 13
Print Makers 101
Schools 188
Southern California Chapter, American Institute of Architects 92
Southwest Museum 13
Ten Painters' Club; Vol. XVII, p. 113.
LOUISIANA—
Art Teachers' Association 124
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 124
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
LOUISVILLE, KY.—
Art Association 123
Artists' League; Vol. XVII. p. 141.
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 92
Handicraft Guild 123
School of Art 197
University of Louisville 197
LOWELL, MASS.—
Textile School 201
LYME, CONN.—
Art Association 106
LYNCHBURG, VA.—
Art School 222
Randolph-Macon Woman's College 222
Woman's Club 183
LYNN, MASS.—
Art Club 134
Public Library 134
McKim, Charles F.; VII, p. 9.
Mcpherson, KAN.— High School Art Department 122
MACON, GA.— Art Association 109
MADISON, WIS.—
Art Association 184
State Historical Society of Wisconsin 185
University of Wisconsin 223
MAGAZINES OF ART 231
MAINE—
Teachers' Association 125
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
MALDEN, MASS.— Public Library 134
MANCHESTER, N. H.—
City Library 144
Currier Gallery of Art 45
Institute of Arts and Sciences 145, 205
MANHATTAN, KAN.— Kansas State Agricultural College 196
MANSFIELD, PA.— State Normal School; XVII, p. 256.
MARION, IND.—
Department Club 118
Public Library 118
MARTINSVILLE, IND.— Monday Afternoon Art Club 119
MARYLAND— State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
MASSACHUSETTS—
Art Commission 1 29
Board of Education 129
Library Art Club 129
Normal Art School 129
Normal Art School Alumni Association 129
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
MATTOON, ILL.— Art Club 114
66^ INDEX
MEADVILLE, PA.— Art Association 170
MELROSE, MASS.— Society of Arts and Crafts; XVII, p. 155.
MEMPHIS, TENN.—
Art Association 1 79
Junior Art Association 178
Brooks Memorial 72
MENOMONIE, WIS.— Stout Institute 223
Methods of Using Art Museums; XII, p. 15.
METHUEN, MASS.— Nevins Memorial Hall and Library 134
MIAMI, FLA.— Blue Dome Fellowship; XVII, p. 122.
Woman's Club; XVII, p. 122.
MICHIGAN—
Chapter American Institute of Architects. 137
State Federation of Women's Clubs '. 97
MILLERVILLE, PA.— State Normal School 216
MILLS, CALIF.— Mills College 188
MILTON, MASS.— Public Library 134
MILTON-ON-HUDSON, N. Y.— Elverhoj Summer School 207
MILWAUKEE, WIS.—
Art Commission 185
Art Institute 75
Layton Art Gallery 75
Schools 224
State Historical Society 185
Wisconsin Painters and Sculptors 185
MINIATURE PAINTERS—
American Society of Miniature Painters 147
Chicago Society of Miniature Painters 112
Pennsylvania Society of Miniature Painters 173
School of Miniature Painting 207
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.—
Attic Club oi Minneapolis 139
City Art Commission; Vol. XVII, p. 161.
Institute of Arts 40
Minnesota Academy of Science Museum 42
Minnesota Chapter, American Institute of Architects 93
Minnesota College Art Society 140
Minnesota State Art Society 139
Public Library and Art Gallery 139
Schools 203
Society of Architects 139
Society of Fine Arts 40
Scandinavian Art Society of America 140
Minneapolis Keramic Club 139
Veterans 140
Walker Art Gallery 42
Woman's Club 140
MINNESOTA—
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 139
Chapter, American Society of Landscape Architects 139
State Art Commission 139
State Art Society 139
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
MISHAWAKA, IND.— Woman's Club; Vol. XVII, p. 135.
MISSISSIPPI—
Art Association 141
State Federation of Women's Club 97
MISSOURI — State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
MOLINE, ILL.— (5'^^' Davenport.)
MONTANA — State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
MONTCLAIR, N. J.—
Art Association ^ 45
Museum 45
MONTEREY, MASS.— Berkshire Summer School 201
MONTPELIER, VT.—
Wood Art Gallery 74
MUNCIE, IND.—
Art Association; Vol. XVII, p. 135.
Art Students' League 119
MUNICIPAL ART—
Baltimore —
Art Commission of the City 126
Municipal Art Society 128
INDEX 669
MUNICIPAL ART— Continued.
Boston — (
Art Commission of the City 129
Art Commission, Commonwealth of Massachusetts 129
Chicago —
Art Commission 110
Municipal Art Commission 113
Municipal Art League of Chicago 113
Cincinnati — Municipal Art Society 164
Cleveland —
City Planning Commission 165
Municipal Gallery; Vol. XVII, p. 199.
Connecticut Commission of Sculpture 105
Denver — Art Commission of Denver 103
Great Falls — City Planning Commission 143
Hartford— Municipal Art Society 105
Indianapolis Memorial Art Commission 117
Los Angeles, Calif. — Municipal Art Commission 101
Massachusetts Art Commission 129
Milwaukee Art Commission 185
Minneapolis — Art Commission; Vol. XVII, p. 161.
Minnesota State Art Commission 139
Nashville — Art Commission 1 79
New Haven, Conn. — Municipal Art Commission 106
New York City —
Art Commission 148
Art Commission Associates 1 48
Civic Club 150
Municipal Art Society of New York 152
Scenic and Historic Preservation; Society 94
Philadelphia-
Art Jury 170
City Parks Association 171
Fairmount Park Art Association 171
Pittsburgh Art Commission 1 74
Richmond, Ind. — Public Art Gallery 119
Richmond, Va. — Art Commission 182
St. Louis —
Civic League 142
Municipal Art Commission 142
Salt Lake City, Utah — Civic Art and Planning Commission 182
Washington —
American Civic Association 92
Commission of Fine Arts 98
Mural Painting in the United States; IX, p. 13.
JVEURFREESBORO, TENN.— Schools 219
MUSEUM WORKERS, Directorv of; XIII, p. 431.
MUSEUMS (For list see Galleries) 13
Museums in Our Smaller Cities, Importance of Art. By Robert W. de Forest;
X, p. 11.
MUSKEGON, MICH.— Hackley Art Gallery 140
MUSKOGEE, OKLA.— Art Association 168
MYSTIC, CONN.— Art Association 106
NANUET, N. Y.— Painters and Sculptors 161
NASHVILLE, TENN.—
Archaeological Society 95
Art Association 1 79
Art Commission 1 79
Centennial Club 179
Club of Designers 179
East Nashville Woman's Clubs 1 79
Park Commission 180
Schools 219
Tennessee State Fair 179
NATIONAL SOCIETIES—
American Academy in Rome 91
American Academy of Arts and Letters 91
American Art Dealers' Association; Vol. XVII, p. 103.
American Association of Museums 91
American Bookplate Society 92
American Civic Association 92
American Federation of Arts 77
American Institute of Architects 92
American Numismatic Association 93
American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society 94
670 INDEX
NA TIONAL SOCIETIES— Continued.
American Society of Landscape Architects 94
American Society of Miniature Painters \[[ I47
Archaeological Institute of America .....'. 94
Art Alliance of America !!,'!!.'..*!.'.','!! 147
Association of Art Museum Directors [[[ 95
Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture 96
Association of Picture Publishers * 95
Association of the Alumni of the American Academy in Rome 91
College Art Association 96
Commission of Fine Arts ,[,[ 98
Eastern Arts Association 96
General Federation of Women's Clubs \\\\ 96
Mural Painters I53
National Academy of Design 1 53
National Arts Club 1 54
National Association of Portrait Painters 154
National Institute of Arts and Letters 98
National Gallery of Art 19
National Sculpture Society 1 54
Pacific Coast Chapter, American Society of Landscape Architects 98
Pictorial Photographers of America 98
Print Publishers' Association of America 98
Western Arts Association 99
NEBRASKA—
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 144
Federation of Women's Clubs 97
NEVADA — Federation of Women's Clubs 97
NEWARK, N. J.—
Art League; Vol. XVII, i). 171.
Fawcett School of Industrial Art 205
Free Public Library 45
Museum Association 45
NEW BEDFORD, MASS.—
Architectural Atelier , 201
Public Library 135
Society of Fine Arts 135
Swain Free School of Design 135, 201
Textile School 201
NEW BRIGHTON, PA.— Merrick Free Art Gallery, Museum; and Library 66
NEW BRITAIN, CONN.— New Britain Institute 106
NEW CANAAN, CONN.— Society of Artists 106
NEW HAMPSHIRE—
Practical Arts Club 144
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97 .
NEW HARMONY, IND. — Art Gallery and Museum of the Workingmen's Institute. 27
NEW HAVEN, CONN.—
Jarves Collection •••_••; 17
Municipal Art Commission of New Haven 1 06
Paint and Clay Club -. 106
Trumbull Collection 17
Yale School of the Fine Arts 17, 106, 191
NEW JERSEY—
Archaeological Society 95
Chapter, American Institute of Architects . 145
State Federation of Women's Clubs '. . 97
NEW MEXICO— Federation of Women's Clubs 97
NEW ORLEANS, LA.—
Art Association 124
Arts and Crafts Club 124
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 93
Delgado Museum of Art 28
Fine Arts Club of New Orleans 124
Linton-Surget Art Hall 28
Louisiana State Museum 29
Newcomb College 124
Public Library 125
Quartier Club 125
Schools 197
NEWPORT, R. I.—
Art Association 176
School of Art Association 219
Redwood Library and Athenaeum 177
INDEX 671
NEW ROCHELLE. N. Y.—
Art Association 161
Public Library 161
NEWSPAPERS HAVING ART NOTES • '.;'.'.'.'. 233
NEW YORK STATE—
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
State University * 160
Teachers' Association 159
NEW YORK CITY—
Allied Artists of America 146
Allied Arts Association of Brooklyn 146
American Academy of Arts and Letters 98
American Fine Arts Society 146
American Institute of Architects, Chapter of 155
American Institute of Graphic Arts 147
American Museum of Natural History 47
American Numismatic Society 47
American Painters, Sculptors and Gravers -. 155
American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society 94
American Society of Miniature Painters 147
American Water Color Society 147
Archaeological Society 95
Architectural League of New York 147
Art Alliance of America 147
Art Center 147
Art Commission 148
Art Commission Associates 148
Art Directors Club 148
Art in Trades Club 148
Art Workers' Club for Women 148
Artists' Aid Society 148
Artists' Fund Society 149
Association for Culture 149
Avery Architectural Library 150
Barnard Cloisters 47
Beaux-Arts Architects 158
Beaux-Arts Institute of Design 207
Brooklyn Allied Arts Association of 146
Bronx Society of Arts and Sciences 49
Brooklyn Chapter American Institute of Architects 149
Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences 47
Brooklyn Museum 47
Brooklyn Society of Artists 149
Brooklyn Society of Etchers 149
Brooklyn Society of Miniature Painters 149
Brooklyn Water Color Club 149
Camera Club 150
Century Association 150
Chaloner Prize Foundation 150
City Club 150
Civic Club 150
Columbia University 150
Avery Architectural Library 150
Alumni Association of the School of Architecture, Columbia University 150
Fine Arts Endowment; Vol. XVII, p. 178.
Institute of Arts and Sciences 151
Pulitzer Art Scholarship 151
Cooper Union 50
Dyckman House, Park and Museum 50
Federation of Women's Clubs 97
Fine Arts Federation of New York 151
French Institute in the United States 153
Grolier Club 151
Guild of American Painters 151
Guild of Bookworkers 151
Guild of Free Lance Artists of the Authors' League of America 151
Hispanic Society of America 51
Historical Society 54
Illustrators, Society of 158
Jumel Mansion 55
Junior Art Patrons of America 152
Keramic Society of Greater New York 152
Kit-Kat Club; Vol. XVII, ?. 181.
Lazarus Scholarship, XIII, p. 53.
League of New York Artists 152
Les Anciens de I'Academie Julian 152
672 INDEX
NEW YORK CITY— Continued
Long Island Painters 152
Lotos Club 152
MacDowell Club 152
Massachusetts Normal Art School Alumni, Chapter of 155
Metropolitan Museum of Art 51
Municipal Art Society 152
Mural Painters 153
Museum for the Arts of Decoration 50
Museum of French Art 153
National Academy Association 153
National Academy of Design 153
National Academy of Design, Members from its foundation; X, p. 393.
National Arts Club 154
National Association of Portrait Painters 154
National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors 154
National Institute of Arts and Letters 98
National Sculpture Society 154
Needle and Bobbin Club 154
New Society of Artists 155
New York Society of Craftsmen 155
Painter-Gravers 156
Pen and Brush Club 156
People's Art Guild 156
Print Department, Public Library 54
Private Collections; I, p. 228.
Public Library — Astor, Lenox, Tilden Foundation 54
Salmagundi Club 156
School Art League 157
School Crafts Club 157
Schools 207
Societe des Architects Diplomes par le Gouvernment Francais 157
Society of American Antiquarians 157
Society of American Artists 157
Society of American Fakirs 158
Society of American Painters, Sculptors and Gravers. See New Society of Artists.
Society of Animal Painters and Sculptors 157
Society of Beaux-Arts Architects 158
Society of Keramic Arts 155
Society of Iconophiles 158
Society of Illustrators 158
Society of Independent Artists 158
Society of Landscape Architects, Chapter of 155
Society Library 156
Society of Men Who Paint the Far West 158
Society of Painters of New York 155
Staten Island Institute of Arts and Sciences 55
Studio Club of New York 158
Three Arts Club 159
Union League Club 159
Washington Headquarters Association 55
Water Color Club 156
Whitney Studio 159
Whitney Studio Club 159
Wolfe Art Club 159
NORFOLK, VA.— Society of Arts 183
NORMAL ART SCHOOLS; XI, p. 386.
NORMAL, TENN.— West Tennessee State Normal School 220
NORMAN, OKLA.—
Beaux-Arts : 168
University of Oklahoma 215
NORTH AMERICA— Museum in; XIII, p. 278.
NORTHAMPTON, MASS.—
Forbes Library 135
Hillyer Art Gallery 34
Smith College Art Gallery 34
NORTH CAROLINA—
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 163
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
NORTH DAKOTA Federation of Women's Clubs 97
NORWELL, MASS.— Norwell Society of Arts and Crafts 135
NORWICH, CONN.—
Art School 191
Converse Art Building 17
INDEX 673
NORWICH, CO'NN.— Continued.
Free Academy 17
Slater Memorial Museum 17
NOTRE DAME, IND.— University of Notre Dame 195
NUMISMATIC—
American Numismatic Association (with Chapters) 93
American Numismatic Society 47
Springfield Coin Club 136
NUTLEY, N. J.— Free Public Library 146
OAKLAND, CALIF.—
Art Association 13
Free Library; Vol. XVII, p. 113.
Municipal Art Gallery 13
©BERLIN, O.—
Art Association 167
Allen Memorial Art Building 64
Oberlin College 64, 214
OBITUARIES 225
OGUNQUIT, ME.— Summer Schools 198
OHIO—
State Association of Architects 163
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
OKLAHOMA— State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA.—
Art League 168
Association of Oklahoma Artists 168
OMAHA, NEB.—
Greater America Expositiop; II, p. 33.
Art Guild 144
Friends of Art Association; Vol. XVII, p. 169.
Lininger Art Gallery 44
National Art Gallery; V, p. 230.
Public Library and Museum 44
Society of Fine Arts 44
Trans-Mississippi Exposition; I, p. 321.
OREGON—
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 168
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
OREGON, ILL.— Public Library 114
OXFORD, O. — Branch of Cincinnati Archaeological Society 95
OYSTER BAY, N. Y.— Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation 58,211
PACIFIC COAST CHAPTER. AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF LANDSCAPE
ARCHITECTS 98
PADUCAH, KY.— Woman's Club 123
PAINTERS, Who's Who in Art 329
PAINTINGS SOLD AT AUCTION 241
PARIS, FRANCE—
American Art Association of Paris 185
American Art Students' Club 186
American Students Club 186
International Club for Women Students 186
International Exposition, 1900; III, p. 9.
Paris Society of American Painters 186
PARIS, KY.— Bourbon Art Club 124
PASADENA, CALIF.—
Music and Art Association 101
Stickney Memorial School of Art 189
PAULS VALLEY, OKLA.— Art Club; Vol. XVII, p. 204.
PENDLETON, IND.— Art Association 119
PENNSYLVANIA-
Archaeological Society 95
Delaware County Art and Manual Training Associates 169
Public Instruction, Vocational Division 169
State Federation of Pennsylvania Women 169
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
PEORIA, ILL.—
Bradley Polytechnic Institute 194
Society of Allied Arts 114
PERU, IND.— Art Club 119
PERU, NEB.— Fortnightly Art Club 144
674 INDEX
PETERBOROUGH, N. H.—
Edward MacDowell Memorial Association 145
Handicraft Workers of Peterborough ; . . 145
PHILADELPHIA, PA.—
Alumnae of the Philadelphia School of Design for Women 170
Art Alliance 173
Art Club of Philadelphia .' . . . 170
Art Jury 170
Arts and Crafts Guild of Philadelphia 171
Associated Artists 171
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 173
City Parks Association 171
Drexel Institute of Art, Science and Industry Museum 171
Fairmount Park Art Association 171
Fellowship of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts 172
Free Library of Philadelphia 171
Fountain Society 173
Graphic Sketch Club; Vol. XVII, p. 208.
Historical Society of Pennsylvania 172
Independence Hall 66
Museum of Art 68
Numismatic and Antiquarian Society 172
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts 67
Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Art 67
Alumni Associations 172
Associate Committee of Women 1 72
Pennsylvania Society of Miniature Painters 173
Plasfic Club 174
Print Club 174
Schools 216
Sketch Club 173
Society of Arts and Letters 173
T Square Club 174
University of Pennsylvania Museum 68
Water Color Club 174
Wilstach Gallery 174
PICTORIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS OF AMERICA 98
PIEDMONT, CALIF.— School of Arts and Crafts 189
PITTSBURGH, PA.—
Archaeological Society 95
Architectural Club 175
Art Commission 1 74
Art Society of Pittsburgh 175
Associated Artists of Pittsburgh 175
Beaux -Arts Salon 175
Carnegie Institute 69
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 175
Duquesne Ceramic Club; Vol. XVII, p. 2 13.
One Hundred Friends of Pittsburgh Art 175
Schools 218
Teachers' Art Club 176
PITTSFIELD, MASS. — Berkshire Athenaeum and Museum 34
PORTLAND, ME.—
Columbian Arts and Crafts League 126
School of Fine Arts 198
Simmons Collection 29
Society of Art 29
Society of Arts and Crafts 126
Sweat Memorial Museum 29
PORTLAND, ORE.—
Archaeological Society 95
Art Association 66
Arts and Crafts Society 1 69
Lewis and Clark Exposition; V, p. 245.
Library Association 169
Oregon Chapter, American Institute of Architects 93
Schools 215
POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y.— Vassar College, Taylor Art Building 58
PRESS LIST 233
PRICES, RECORD OF YEAR 234
PRINCETON, N. J.— University Art Museum 46
PRINT PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA 98
Prints Sales of; IV, p. 98.
Prizes Awarded Annually; V, p. 126.
INDEX 675
PROVIDENCE, R. I.—
Annmary Brown Memorial 71
Art Club 177
Art in Trades Club; Vol. XVII, p. 215.
Athenaeum 177
Handicraft Club 177
Rhode, Island Chapter, American Institute of Architects 93
Rhode Island School of Design 71, 219
Alumni Association 177
Museum 177
Water Color Club 177
PROVINCETOWN, MASS.—
Art Association 135
Beachcombers' Club 135
Sail Loft Club 135
Summer Schools 202
Public Schools, Art in the. By James P. Haney, I, p. 55.
PROVO, UTAH—
Art Service Club 181
Brigham Young University 222
PUBLISHERS—
Association of Picture Publishers 96
Print Publishers' Association 98
PUEBLO, COLO.—
Archaeological Society 95
Arts and Crafts Society 104
PULLMAN, WASH.— State College of Washington 223
READING, PA.— Public Museum and Art Gallery 70
RHODE ISLAND—
Archaeological Society 95
Association of Teachers of Drawing and Manual Arts 176
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 176
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
RICHMOND, IND.—
Art Association 119
RICHMOND, VA.—
Archaeological Society 95
Valentine Museum 74
Virginia League of Fine Arts and Handicrafts 183, 222
ROCHESTER, N. Y.—
Archaeological Society 95
Art Club 162
Athenaeum and Mechanics Institute 212
Industrial Exposition 162
Memorial Art Gallery 58
Picture Painters' Club 162
School of Fine and Applied Art 162
Society of Architects 162
ROCKFORD, ILL.—
Art Guild 114
Rockford College 194
ROCK ISLAND, ILL.— {See Davenport).
ROCKPORT, MASS.— Summer School 202
ROME, ITALY—
American Academy in Rome 224
International Exposition of Art and History at Rome; IX, p. 251.
SACRAMENTO, CALIF.—
California Museum Association 1.4
Crocker Art Gallery 14
Kingsley Art Club 101
SAINT JOHNSBURY, VT.— Athenaeum 74
SAINT JOSEPH, MO.—
Art League 141
SAINT LOUIS, MO.—
Archaeological Society 94
Architectural Club 142
Art Alliance ^- 141
Art League '• 143
Art Students Association 141
Artists' Guild 142
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 142
City Art Museum 42
676 INDEX
SAINT LOUIS, MO.— Continued.
City Club of Saint Louis 142
Civic League of Saint Louis 142
Friends of the Local Artists [ 142
Louisiana Purchase Exposition; V, p. 255.
Municipal Art Commission 142
Public Library 143
Saint Luke Art Society 143
Schools 204
Two-by-Four Society 143
Washington University, Architectural Society 143
SAINT PAUL, MINN.—
Archaeological Society 94
Artists' Society 140
Public Library 140
Saint Paul Institute 140
SAINT PETERSBURG, FLA.— Florida Art School 192
SALEM, MASS.—
Essex Institute 35
Peabody Museum; Vol. XVII, p. 33.
State Normal School 202
SALES OF DRAWINGS AT AUCTION 287
SALES OF PAINTINGS AT AUCTION 241
Sales of the year in each volume since 1898.
SALES OF PRINTS AT AUCTION 290
SALES OF SCULPTURE AT AUCTION 320
SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH—
Associated Craftsmen 181
Civic Art and Planning Commission 182
Fine Arts Society of Utah 181
Industrial Arts Club 182
Institute of Utah Architects 182
University of Utah 222
Utah Art Institute 182
Utah Educational Association 1 82
SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS— Art League 181
SAN DIEGO, CALIF.—
Academy of Art; XVII, p. 228.
Archaeological Society 94
Art Guild 102
Friends of Art 102
San Diego Museum l4
Southern California-Panama Exposition, 1915; XII, p. 55.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.—
Archaeological Society 94
Architectural Club 189
Art Association 1 02
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 102
Comparative Museum of" Art 15
Golden Gate Park Museum 14
M. H. de Young Memorial Museum 14
Museum of Art 15
Panama-Pacific Exposition; XII, p. 57.
Schools 189
Society of Etchers 102
SANTA BARBARA, CALIF.— Normal School of Manual Arts 189
SANTA CRUZ, CALIF.— Art League 102
SANTA FE, N. M.—
Archaeological Society 95
Museum of New Mexico 46
School of American Research 206
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y.— Skidmore School 212
SAUGATUCK, MICH.— Summer School of Chicago Art Institute 203
SAVANNAH, GA.— Telfair Academy of Arts and Sciences 20
Scholarships Awarded Annually; V, p. 126.
SCHOLARSHIPS under special Endowments—
Chaloner 150
Lazarus; XIII, p. 53.
Pulitzer 151
Rinehart; XV, p. 108.
Rotch 131
SCHOOLS, Tabulated with instructors; VIII, p. 42.
SCHOOLS OF ART 187
INDEX (ill
SCHOOLS CLASSIFIED—
Academic; XI, p. 378.
Architectural; XI, p. 380.
Crafts; XI, p. 384.
Design; XI, p. 383.
Evening; XI, p. 378.
Industrial; XI, p. 385.
Normal; XI, p. 386.
Summer; XI, p. 378.
SCHOOL ARTS SOCIETIES—
Baltimore School Art League 128
Buffalo, School Art Association of 161
Chicago Art Students' League 110
Chicago Public School Art Society Ill
College Art Association 97
Delaware County Art and Manual Training Associates 169
District of Columbia Public School Art League lOS'
Eastern Arts Association 96
Louisiana Art Teachers' Association 124
Maine Teachers' Association 125
Massachusetts Board of Education Art Department 129
Massachusetts Normal Art School Alumni Association 129
McPherson, Kan., High School Art Department 122
Muncie Art Students' League 119
New Hampshire Practical Arts Club 144
New York City, School Arts League of 157
New York City, School Crafts Club of 157
New York State Teachers' Association, Art Section 159
New York State University 160
Pennsylvania Department of Public Instruction 169
Pittsburgh Teachers' Art Club of 176
Rhode Island Association of Teachers of Drawing and Manual Arts 176
Seattle Art Students' League; Vol. XVII, p. 223.
Springfield Board of Art Advisors 115
Utah Educational Association 181
Washington Public School Art League 108
Washington (Ind.), School Art League 120
Western Arts Association 99
Williamsport Public School Art League 176
Worcester Public School Art League 137
SCRANTON, PA.—
Everhart Museum of Natural History, Science and Art 70
School of Illustration and Design 218
SCULPTORS, Who's Who in Art 329
List of Sculptors 621
SCULPTURE SOCIETIES—
Academy at Rome Scholarships; XIII, p. 53.
Ferguson Monument Fund 112
Indiana Society of Sculptors 115
National Sculpture Society 154
Rinehart Scholarship; XV, p. 108.
Sculpture Unveiled; VI, p. 118.
SEABRIGHT, CALIF.— Seabright Crafts 103
SEATTLE, WASH.
Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition; VIII, p. 105.
Archaeological Society 95
Art Club 183
Fine Arts Society 183
Public Library 183
Schools 223
Seattle Art Students' League; Vol. XVII, p. 223.
State Chapter, American Institute of Architects 93
State Museum 74
Washington State University 223
SEDALIA, MO.— Public Library 143
SEYMOUR, IND.— Art League 119
SHELBYVILLE, IND.—
Carnegie Public Library 119
Coterie; Vol. XVII, p. 136.
SHERMAN, TEXAS— Schools 221
SILVERMINE, CONN.— Group of Artists 106
SIOUX FALLS, S. D.— Art Society 178
SKANEATELES, N. Y.— Barrow Art Gallery 59
Library Association 59
678 INDEX
SLIPPERY ROCK, PA.— State Normal School 218
SOCIETIES AND ASSOCIATIONS 91
SOUTH AMERICA— Museums in; XIII, p. 279.
SOUTHAMPTON, L. I.—
Parrish Art Museum 59
SOUTH BEND, IND.—
Progress Club 119
SOUTH CAROLINA—
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 178
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
SOUTH DAKOTA— Federation of Women's Clubs 97
SOUTH HADLEY, MASS.—
Dwight Art Memorial 35
Mt. Holyoke College 35
SOUTH POLAND, ME.— Poland Spring Exhibition 126
SOUTHERN SOCIETIES—
Engineers and Architects of Southern California 99
Southern California Chapter, American Institute of Architects 93
Southwest Museum 13
SOUTH WHITNEY, IND.— Fine Arts Club 120
SPOKANE, WASH.— Art Association of Spokane; Vol'. XVII, p. 223.
SPRINGFIELD, ILL.—
Art Association 115
Board of Art Advisors 115
SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
Art Club 136
Art League 136
Art Museum 35
City Library Association 136
Coin Club 136
Smith, George Walter Vincent, Collection 35
SPRINGFIELD, S. D.— State Normal School 219
STANFORD UNIVERSITY, CALIF.—
Leland Stanford, Jr., University 189
Thomas Welton Stanford Art Gallery 15
Leland Stanford, Jr., Museum 15
STATE AND MUNICIPAL ART COMMISSIONS CONVENTION; XIII, p. 66.
STATE ART SOCIETIES—
Minnesota State Art Society 138
Utah Art Institute 182
STATE COLLEGE, PA.— Pennsylvania State College 70, 218
STOCKBRIDGE, MASS.—
Exhibition 136
Laurel Hill Association 136
STUDIO BUILDINGS, A Directory of; VI, p. 452.
SYRACUSE, N. Y.—
Archaeological Society 95
Museum of Fine Arts 59
Syracuse University Fine Arts College 212
TACOMA, WASH.—
Ferry Museum 75
Fine Arts Association 184
Society of Architects 184
State Historical Society 184
TAMPA, FLA.— Students' Art Club 109
TAOS, N. M.— Society of Artists 146
Tariff^ on Art; XI, p. 413.
TEACHERS' ASSOCIATIONS. (See School Arts).
TENNESSEE— , ^, ,
State Federation of Women s Clubs -i »u
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 178
TERRE HAUTE, IND.—
Art Association l^J(
Departmental Club |^^
Fairbanks Memorial Library 1^^
State Normal School 1^^
TEXAS
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 180
Fine Arts Association • 73
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
INDEX 679
THERMOPOLIS, WIS.— Women of the West; Vol. XVII. p. 225
TIPTON, IND.— Art Association ...-. 120
TOLEDO, O.—
Archaeological Society 95
Artklan !...*......!!!!*.*. 167
Athena Society ............*.'.' 167
Chapter, American Institute of Architects !'.!'.!'. 167
Federation of Art Societies 168
Museum of Art 64
School of the Museum of Art . 214
Tile Club ! ... 168
TOPEKA, KAN.—
Art Guild 122
Washburn College 196
TRENTON, N. J.— School of Industrial Arts 146,206
TUCSON, ARIZ.— Art Association 99
TURIN, ITALY — International Exposition of Modern Decorative Art; IV, p. 256.
TWO RIVERS, WIS.— Ladies of the Round Table 185
UNIVERSITY, N. D.— University of North Dakota 213
URBANA, ILL.—
University of Illinois, Department of Architecture, Art and Design 194
UTHA—
Art Institute 182
Educational Association 181
Institute of Architects 1 82
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
UTICA, N. Y.— Public Library 162
VALPARAISO, IND.—
University 195
Woman's Club ; 120
VERMONT— Federation of Women's Clubs 97
VINCENNES, IND.—
Fortnightly Club 120
VIRGINIA—
Art Commission 182
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 182
Federation of Women's Clubs 97
WACO, TEXAS— Art League 181
WALLA WALLA, WASH.— Archzeological Society 95
WARRENSBURG, MO.— State Teachers' College 205
WASHINGTON STATE—
Archaeological Society 95
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 183
State Federation of Women's Clubs 97
WASHINGTON, D. C—
American Civic Association 92
American Federation of Arts 77
American Institute of Architects 92
Archaeological Institute of America 94
Archaeological Society of Washington 107
Art and Archaeological League; Vol. XVII, p. 120.
Arts Club 107
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 108
Commission of Fine Arts 98
Corcoran Gallery of Art 17
Handicraft Guild; Vol. XVII, p. 120.
Library of Congress 108
Library of District of Columbia 108
National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, Washington Chapter... 108
National Gallery of Art 19
Private Collections; I, p. 406.
Public Schoolt Art League 108
Schools 191
Smithsonian Institution 19
Society of Fine Arts 108
Society of Washington Artists 108
LTnited States National Museum 19
Water Color Club 108
WASHINGTON, IND.— School Art League 120
WATERBURY, CONN. — Mattatuck Historical Society 107
WATERTOWN, N. Y.—
Flower Memorial Library 162
680 INDEX
WELLESLEY, MASS.—
Farnsworth Museum, Wellesley College 36
Wellesley College 202
WEST CHESTER, PA.— State Normal School 218
WESTERN SOCIETIES—
Society of Men Who Paint the Far West 158
Southwest Museum 13
Western Arts Association '. 99
Women of the West; Vol. XVII, p. 225.
WESTERVILLE, O.— Otterbein University 214
WESTPORT. CONN.— Morris K. Tesup Memorial Library 107
WEST VIRGINIA— Federation of Women's Clubs 97
WHO'S WHO AMONG ART DEALERS 637
WHO'S WHO IN ART (Painters, Sculptors, Illustrators) ; '. 329
WHO'S WHO AMONG CRAFTSMEN; Vol. XVII, p. 398.
WICHITA, KAN.—
Art Gallery 123
Fairmont College 196
Twentieth Century Club of Wichita 123
WILLIAMSPORT, PA.—
James V. Brown Library 176
Public School Art League 176
WILMINGTON, DEL.—
Samuel Bancroft, Jr., Collection 107
Society of Fine Arts 107
WINCHESTER, IND.— Art Association; Vol. XVII, p. 137.
WISCONSIN—
Archaeological Society 95
Chapter, American Institute of Architects 184
Federation of Women's Clubs 97
Historical Society 185
Painters and Sculptors 185
WOMEN'S CLf/S 5— General Federation of Women's Clubs, Art Committee 96
WOBURN, MASS.— Public Library 136
WOODSTOCK, N. Y.—
Art Students' League of New York, Summer School 213
WORCESTER, MASS.—
American Antiquarian Society ^ 137
Art Museum 36
Free Public Library 137
Public School Art League ^ 137
Saint Wulstan Society 137
School of the Worcester Art Museum 202
WRITERS—
Directory of Professional Writers and Lecturers; XIII, p. 450.
WYOMING— Federation of Women's Clubs 97
Year in Art 9
YONKERS, N. Y.—
Art Association 163
Philipse Manor Hall 163
School of Design 213
YORK, PA.— Art Club 176
YOUNGSTOWN, O.— Butler Art Institute 65, 215
BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY
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